Jesus the Messiah: a survey of the life of Christ
Books | 21/11/2011 @ 1:17
Robert Stein provided survey of the life of Christ, which is understandable and yet unabridged. In very sharp bird's eye view he confronts strongest positions of bible criticism, balancing between their errors and bringing very adequate, exact and unembroidered answers.
I can recommend this book with enthusiasm due to Stein's zeal and sense for the reality and the truth.
Author: Robert H. Stein
Published by InterVarsity Press, USA in 1996
USA ISBN: 978–0–8308–1884–6,7
UK ISBN: 978–0–85111–750–8
… Ernst Käsemann read a paper in which he pointed out that making an absolute distinction between the “historical” Jesus and the Christ of faith was ultimately a form of docetism (an early Christian heresy that denied the true humanity of Jesus Christ).
…
The original quest emphasizes a discontinuity between the Jesus of “history” and the Christ of the Gospels and sought to free the “real Jesus” from the Christ of the church and the creeds. The new quest, on the other hand, sought to find continuity between them.
(p. 12)
Any research on the life of Christ that eliminates at the beginning the possibility of the supernatural will always produce a “historical Jesus” who is by definition radically different from the Christ of the Gospels.
…
What the world critically needs is a Savior, but only a supernatural Jesus can be a Savior.
(p. 13)
Where one starts one's investigation determines the result one will obtain.
(p. 17)
We are firmly convinced that what happens in space and time is subject to the general laws of motion, and that in this sense, as an interruption of the order of Nature, there can be no such thing as ‘miracles’ (What is Christianity? [New York: Putnam, 1901] pp. 28–29).
(p. 19)
A miracle is a violation of the laws of the “laws of nature.”
The “laws of nature” are inviolable.
Therefore, a rational person is never justified in believing that a miracle actually happened.
Since our present experience is nonmiraculous, our interpretation of the past must be nonmiraculous.
There is certain wholeness about the Jesus who preached the arrival of the kingdom of God, who ate with tax collectors and sinners, who healed the sick and raised the dead, who died sacrificially on the cross and rose triumphantly from the dead. This wholeness produces an overall portrayal of Jesus of Nazareth that is convicting to a sympathetic reader of the Gospels. Attempts to strip the supernatural from Jesus' life can only produce Jesus so radically different that he is unrecognizable and his impact on history unexplainable.
(p. 24)
Within the Antiquities are two important references to Jesus. The most famous is called the “Testimonium Flavianum”:
About this time there lived Jesus, a wise man, if indeed one ought to call him a man. For he was one who wrought surprising feats and was a teacher of such people as accept the truth gladly. He won over many Jews and many Greeks. He was the Messiah. When Pilate, upon hearing him accused by men of the highest standing amongst us, had condemned him to be crucified, those who had in the first place come to love him did not give up their affection for him. On the third day he appeared to them restored to life, for the prophets of God had prophesied these and countless other marvelous things about him. And the tribe of Christians, so called after him, has still to this day not disappeared. (18.3.3 [18.63–64])
(p. 29)
Most of the material, however, arose from later Jewish-Christian debates and appears to be apologetic in nature.
(p. 32)
The Gospel of Thomas consists of a collection of 114 sayings. Some of them repeat almost verbatim the saying found in our Gospels; some are similar to our Gospel sayings but have an interesting twist of addition. Others are quite strange and betray a clear Gnostic bent: …
(p. 37)
This Mark-like Gospel was made into a heretical Carpocratian version of Mark, which then reworked into our Mark. To build such a cmplicated system upon an eighteenth-century addition to a printed work that no one but the discoverer has actually seen is building a great deal on an exceptionally weak foundation.
(p. 40)
Our survey of the noncanonical Christian sources ultimately turns out to be rather negative.
… we find less information about Jesus of Nazareth than we might expect.
(p. 41)
There are six positive criteria: multiple attestation; multiple forms; Aramaic linguistic phenomena; Palestinian environmental phenomena; dissimilarity; divergent patterns from developing tradition. The primary negative criteria number three: the tendencies of the developing tradition, environmental and contradiction of authentic sayings.
(p. 47)
The Gospel of Thomas may contain various agrapha, but that cannot be demonstrated.
(p. 49)
Our present calendar is the work of a sixth-century Scythian monk named Dionysius Exiguus, who obviously erred by at least four years.
(p. 52)
Thus Jesus must have been born no later than between March 12 and April 11 in 4 B. C.
(p. 52)
Thus we can date Jesus' birth at least forty-one days earlier than Herod's death, assuming that the wise men came to Herod on the day of his death. It is unlikely, however, that one can fit the visit of the wise men to Herod, their visit to Jesus in Bethlehem, and Herod's discovery of his having been tricked (Mt 2:1–12) into a single day.
(p. 53)
Thus even apart from the question of divine inspiration, it is probably wisest at this point to acknowledge the difficulty of what Luke says but to hold off calling this a clear error. Perhaps in the future additional evidence may become available that will explain the present difficulty.
(p. 55)
… Jesus began his ministry in approximately A. D. 28.
(p. 58)
… most frequent argument against raised virginal conception is that too many other parallels exist in ancient literature to allow us to take the Christian account seriously.
(p. 65)
Paganism simply does not have accounts of virgin births.
…
The more closely they are compared, the clearer becomes the stark contrast between them.
(p. 65)
There was just reason on Rome for the saying “Better Herod's swine
than his son
.”
(p. 72)
Shepherds were generally considered dishonest (b. Sanhedrin 25b). They were unclean according to the law. Their presence at the birth of Jesus was recorded by Luke to show his readers that the good news of the gospel is for the poor, for sinners, for outcast, for people like these shepherds.
(p. 75)
The latter criticism should be taken seriously. The essence of the Christmas story is not that Mary conceived as a virgin. Nor is the Christmas story a sentimental ode to motherhood.
(p. 79)
Luke simply says that the Holy Spirit came upon Mary and overshadowed her through all this. Through his protection the offspring would be holy, the Son of God (Lk 1:35).
…
The Son of God did not come into existence through a virginal conception. The Son of God was, is and always will be. The virginal conception was simply the means by which God brought about the incarnation of his Son.
(p. 79)
The importance of confessing or denying the virginal conception lies not in its christological consequences.
…
TO deny in was obviously to reject the Bible as an infallible rule of faith. In this respect the question “Do you believe the virgin birth?” served as a kind of twentieth-century shibboleth (Judg 12:6) testing a person's view of the Bible.
(p. 80)
Still another factor that argues for the normalcy of these silent years is the unbelief of Jesus' family and community. Unlike the stories found in the Infancy Gospel of Thomas (see chapter two under “Extrabiblical Sources”), there was no cemetery in Nazareth devoted to the victims of Jesus and no major sparrow problem that would have led his family (Jn 7:5) or community (Mk 6:4) to believe in his unique divine calling and relationship to God.
…
Jesus' sinlessness was something known to God alone.
(p. 82)
In A.D. 27 or 28 a strangely dressed man appeared near the southern end of the Jordan River.
…
In Jesus' understanding John the Baptist fulfilled the role of the returning Eliah (Mk 9:11–13)
(p. 91)
Both John and Qumran were priestly in descent, stressed the need of repentance, had a similar though not identical “baptism,” proclaimed a similar judgment on the Pharisees, were ascetic in their lifestyle and lived in the wilderness. Even more striking, however, was that they both had the same biblical passage as their theme verse: “A voice cries out ‘In the wilderness prepare the way of the LORD, make straight in the desert a highway for our God’” (Is 40:3; compare Mk 1:3 and 1QS 8:12–14).
(p. 95)
He who later would invite people to take up a cross and follow him (Mk 8:34) made just such a commitment at his baptism.
(p. 98)
“My child, when you come to serve the Lord, prepare yourself for testing” (Sirach 2:1)
(p. 103)
It was not a temptation to immorality or sin in the traditional sense. It was rather a testing as to the kind of Messiah Jesus would be.
…
Was messiahship an excuse for privileges or a responsibility for serving?
(p. 106)
Context and substance of the Old Testament quotation does not involve performing a sign before people in order to gain a hearing.
(p. 107)
With the kingdoms of the world given to him he could rid the world of hunger, war, injustice, poverty and so on. A “crossless solution” would resolve such problems, and it would do so with no need of great suffering on his part. On the other hand, if the basic need of the world involved forgiveness, reconciliation with God and salvation from future judgment, then such a “victory” by Jesus would be a shallow one. “For what does it profile a man, to gain the whole world and forfeit his life?” (Mk 8:36 RSV).
(p. 109)
Also among the disciples were a traitor (the tax collector Matthew) and a Zealot revolutionary (Simon). The fact that they could coexist side by side for an extended period reveals how Jesus can change the hearts of natural enemies and bring reconciliation ad peace.
(p. 118)
According to some scholars, Jesus thought that history was soon to end and that therefore he could not have planned for a “church” and “apostles” to lead it. Yet it would seem wiser to reverse this reasoning and conclude that because Jesus did choose and train twelve disciples he envisioned a period of time before the ultimate consummation of all things.
(p. 121)
People were so mesmerized that they forgot about their basic necessities of life. The miracles of the feeding of the five thousand (Mk 6:30–44) and four thousand (Mk 8:1–10) were necessary partly due to his great ability as a teacher.
(p. 124)
The confusion caused by the presence of both the “already” and the “not yet” is aggravated by our tendency to understand “kingdom” as a static, spatial entity.
…
On the other hand, if he understood the term kingdom dynamically as involving God's “reign,” then it could include both a present and a future. This is in fact the way the Old Testament and New Testament understand this term (compare Mt 6:33; 20:20–21; Lk 10:9; 17:21; 19:12–15; 23:42).
Maintaining the balance between the “already” and the “not yet” of the kingdom of God is critical. When the tension between them is lost and one aspect is emphasized at the expense of the other, two major errors arise. To lose sight of “not yet” leads to spiritual triumphal enthusiasm that is ultimately doomed to siapointment and disillusionment. The fallen character of this world and our sinful nature will see to that. On the other hand, to lose sight of the “already” leads to defeatism and a defensive mentality that thwarts the spreading of the gospel throughout the world. Kept in proper perspective, Jesus' teaching leads to an optimistic and aggressive evangelism as well as an awareness that in this life we are still “strangers and foreigners on the earth” (Heb 11:13).
(p. 130–131)
Jesus invited his followers to see and experience God not as some “Unmoved Mover,” “First Cause” of “The Force” but as a heavenly Father who cared for and loved them (Mt 6:25–34).
(p. 133)
Those teachings stem from the moral character of God himself.
(p. 138)
Now it is seen as never before what it means to love outcasts, sinners and enemies.
…
The call to forgive is carried out in the realization that they have been forgiven and receive continual forgiveness (Lk 11:4).
…
Shortly the Spirit would come (Jn 16:5–15), and in his presence the ethic of the kingdom would be lived out with a new heart and a new power (Rom 8:2–5). Thus the ethic of the kingdom, like the kingdom, itself, is realized in the “already.”
…
The same God was worshiped in both, although a new intimacy was apparent in the use of the title Abba.
…
Paradoxically the ethic Jesus taught was both the same and different, old and new!
(p. 139–140)
Jesus revealed his own understanding of who he was in three ways: by his actions, through his speech and by the titles he used or accepted.
(p. 142)
Thirty-four separate miracles are performed by Jesus in the Gospel accounts. Along with these are fifteen Gospel texts that refer to Jesus' miracle-working activity. In addition, we have other accounts in which Jesus is the recipient of a miraculous act, such as the virginal conception, the events surrounding his baptism and transfiguration, his resurrection and his ascension.
One cannot read the Gospel accounts without the question arising, “Who is this man who is master of nature, disease and even death?” In Jesus' actions people saw a bold claim to a unique authority. Even as the prince dressed as a pauper unconsciously revealed who he was by his behavior, so Jesus, despite his modest dress and occupation, revealed his understanding of who he was by his actions.
(p. 143)
Heaven or hell, bliss or damnation—one's eternal destiny is determined by the acceptance or rejection of him (Mt 10:32; 11:6; Mk 8:34–38; 9:37)! In the person of Jesus one is confronted with salvation or judgment.
…
In light of all this, one cannot avoid the question “Who is this who thinks that the world revolves around himself? A deranged egomaniac? A false prophet? Or can it be that this is indeed the King of kings and Lord of lords?”
(p. 145)
He did not simply predict the destruction of the temple; he brought it about (Mk 15:29). Thus the title “prophet” is both correct and yet inadequate. Unlike the prophets of old, the authority of Jesus' words lay not in “Thus saith the Lord” but in “Truly, I say to you.”
(p. 146)
Attempts to portray Jesus as a social reformer or political activist lose sight of this dimension. They focus almost totally on horizontal concerns dealing with one's “neighbor.”
(p. 151)
With regard to the Last Supper, Jesus referred to his death as achieving human forgiveness (Mt 26:28) and sealing the new covenant. This teaching would provide the nucleus from which the church's later interpretation of the meaning of Jesus' death would develop.
(p. 153)
The harshness of Jesus' rebuke is a guarantee of the historicity of the incident.
(p. 162)
However, there is no hint anywhere in this text or in the rest of the New Testament that this leadership role was passed on in perpetuity to a successor of any sort.
(p. 164)
Just as it is foolish to build a large theological practice on a single, confusing reference to baptism for the dead in 1 Corinthians 15:29, so it is unwise to build a large ecclesiastical framework in this single reference to Peter as the rock.
(p. 165)
On the mountain Jesus was transfigured before his disciples. This English term translates the Greek metamorphóté (Mk 9:2). Jesus experienced a supernatural transfiguration. Naturalistic explanations, such as the sun breaking through the clouds and shining brightly upon Jesus' white garments, will not do. Jesus' garments became dazzling white (Mk 9:3), but the appearance of his face also changed (Lk 9:29).
…
Thus whereas Moses in his encounter with God on Mount SInai radiated God's glory (Ex 34:29, 30, 35), Jesus on this occasion radiated a foretaste of his own future glory.
(p. 169)
Mark understood transfiguration as fulfilling Jesus' statement “Truly I tell you, there are some standing here who will not taste death until they see that the kingdom of God has come with power” (Mk 9:1).
…
It would appear, therefore, that both 2 Peter and the Gospel writers understood the transfiguration as a glimpse of the future splendor of the Son of Man at his glorious return.
Still another possible interpretation is that the transfiguration was a manifestation of the preexistent glory of the Son of God.
(p. 171)
… More important, however, is the error of seeking to build tabernacles equally for Jesus, Eliah and Moses. The latter greats of the Old Testament were servants, not “sons.”
…
The command “Listen to him” was a rebuke of Peter and the disciples. They had to understand and accept Jesus' teaching concerning the messianic role.
(p. 173)
What Peter had confessed was now verified by the divine Voice. Jesus was not Eliah, Moses, a prophet or John the Baptist. The Voice affirmed Peter had said. Jesus was the Messiah/Christ, the beloved Son of God. This implied that he had no equals.
(p. 176)
The Gospel writers want us to understand that Jesus consciously sought to enter Jerusalem not on foot, as other pilgrims did, but in this specific manner.
(p. 179)
For some of his followers who made up the crowd, Jesus was not a mere pilgrim coming to Jerusalem, but “the” Pilgrim, their Teacher, their Master and Lord.
…
For Jesus this entry was indeed messianic in nature. Intentionally he arranged for an unridden colt to be prepared for him. Its virginal nature indicates that the colt would serve a special use. It was fit for Israel's King. Intentionally he entered the holy city in fulfillment of Zechariah 9:9, for he was Israel's Messiah.
(p. 181)
For Jesus the triumphal entry was a carefully orchestrated messianic act.
…
In majesty he rode on—to die!
…
At the trial, when witnesses were sought to condemn Jesus and justify Roman political action, no mention was made of the triumphal entry. Clearly in the minds of Rome and the Jewish leadership this event was not understood as a messianic claim or challenge.
(p. 184)
As we shall see, Mark “sandwiched” the cleansing of the temple (Mk 11:15–19 between the cursing of the fig tree (vv. 12–14 and 20–25) so that his readers would understand that the “cleansing” was not simply an act of purification or reformation but one of judgment.
(p. 185)
… the selling of sacrificial animals and the exchanging of money could be seen as an attempt by the priesthood to make the temple more “user friendly.” From a different perspective, however, it could be seen as the transformation of the temple from a place of worship to a kind of priestly bazaar. Far from assisting the animals, their refuse, their cries and so on detracted attention from the God-ordained purpose of the temple.
(p. 189)
The incident was probably on a smaller scale than a simple reading of the Gospels might suggest.
(p. 191)
… as in the fetching of the colt (see chapter thirteen, under “The Event As Understood by Jesus”), the arrangement for Jesus to eat the Passover with his disciples in this “upper room” (Mk 14:15 RSV) appears preplanned.
(p. 199)
The question of how to reconcile the Gospel accounts of the Last Supper remains unresolved. It would appear for several reasons, however, that the meal Jesus ate with his disciples on the night of his betrayal was indeed the Passover.
(p. 203)
Elsewhere Jesus spoke of himself as a vine, a door, the good shepherd and so on without intending that these metaphors should be understood literally.
(p. 207)
If the disciples literally believed that they were being told to drink blood, one would have expected them to protest strongly. One need only recall Peter's protest in Acts 10:9–16 when he was commanded to eat nonkosher meat to see how difficult it would have been for the disciples to drink real blood.
(p. 210–211)
The biblical accounts emphasize Jesus' great torment at this time.
…
It is hard to imagine that the Gethsemane tradition is fictional in origin. Who would have created such an account in the early church?
(p. 215)
Believers who walk through the valley of the shadow have God's assurance and promise: “I will never leave you or forsake you” (Heb 13:5). Jesus knew, however, that he “would become accursed” during the very hour he needed God most.Nowhere do the horror and tragedy of sin become more evident than in Jesus' anguished cry from the cross, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Mk 15:34).
(p. 217)
There is good reason Christians tend not to name their children Judas.
…
… thirty pieces of silver was not a great sum of money; it was the price of slave (compare Ex 21:32 and Zech 11:13).
(p. 218)
Jesus states, “The hour has come” (God has brought about the hour); “the Son of Man is betrayed into the hands of sinners” (God is giving his Son over to sinners through Judas's betrayal) (Mk 14:41; compare Jn 12:27). The verbs in this verse are examples of “divine passives”—the use of the passive voice to avoid using God's name out of reverence.
(p. 219)
In no society and at no time in history have “traitors” ever been admired.
…
To have accompanied Jesus, to have shared his cup, to have eaten the Passover meal with him, and then to betray him—this was indeed an unspeakable act. And history will forever remember Judas Iscariot for it.
(p. 221)
Luke's reason for recording this incident is clear: Herod provides a second ruler's verdict that Jesus was innocent (Lk 23:15).
(p. 232)
Can we accept as proof that Jesus must have received a fair trial before the Sanhedrin the fact that the rules in the tractate Sanhedrin demand it?
(p. 236)
… we should not succumb to some politically correct desire to rewrite the Gospel accounts in order to refute this charge. We cannot rewrite what took place in the past. The Gospel accounts clearly portray the Jewish leaders of Jesus' day as being involved in his death.
(p. 238)
The shape of cross took varied forms: the traditional cross, or crux immissa, in which the vertical beam extended above the horizontal one (like a lower-case t), the crux commissa, which looked like a capital T (the horizontal beam rested on the vertical one), and the crux decussata, or crooked cross, which looked like an X.
(p. 242)
The most commonly described cause of death is asphyxiation, but that cannot be proven. Bodily exhaustion, no doubt, also played a role.
Crucifixion is one of most abominate forms of torture and execution that the world has ever seen. It is so horrible that only Christians speak positively of it, and that is only because of the redemption Jesus achieved by means of it.
(p. 245)
All these theories require unbelievable error and confusion on the part of those involved in Jesus' death. It is hard to imagine that those who desperately wanted Jesus killed were confused about his appearance and could be so easily mistaken.
(p. 258)
… “on the third day,” “after three days,” “in three days,” “three days ago” and “for three days and three nights” are all expressions the biblical writers used to designate the same period of time.
(p. 260)
… the problem of number of women present at the tomb is not a major one, as long as we do not force John (one), Matthew (two) and Mark (three) to mean that only the women they mention were there.
(p. 261)
The proclamation in Jerusalem that Jesus was alive and risen from the dead meant that his dead body no longer lay in the tomb. It had been transformed from corruption to incorruption.
…
All they [Jews] would have needed to do to discredit the early Christian proclamation was to produce the body of Jesus.
…
The fact that the witnesses to the empty tomb were women, whose witness was disallowed among the Jews, makes the fabrication of this account unlikely
(p. 264)
The ascension of Jesus furthermore points out that Jesus' return is not capable of being demythologized into some abstract or abuse sociological movement or event.
…
The “Life of Jesus” is incomplete. It awaits that day when he will return to share messianic banquet with his followers (Mk 14:25). For those who follow and love him, that is a day prayed and longed for.
(p. 276)
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