Showing posts with label Christology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christology. Show all posts

The Significance for Christology of the Quest of the Historical Jesus

1. Introduction
The primary and the significant question in Christology is ‘Who is Jesus’. This fundamental question is a starting point when the scholars and theologians explore and investigate the identity of Jesus of Nazareth. The questions surrounding his divinity, death and resurrection have all been part of this scholarship. The quest for learning and comprehending more about the Jewish man who lived two thousand years ago in the regions of Galilee, and whose life and faith have changed humanity in a way that nobody has ever done, is very important for Christians.

Understanding and knowing the historical Jesus, the culture and traditions in which he lived and more significantly the Jewish backgrounds that he comes from is very significant, even compulsory for Christianity. Above all, to understand what scholars say about Jesus is a part of Christological exploration in order that we come to faith in him. It is so right, I think, when Donald Senior says that the more we want to know about Jesus, the more we need to know about his world of persons, places, concerns, the world in which he lived his entire life.[1] For this aim, I would like to explore the three prominent quests of historical Jesus since the first quest from Reimarus until the third quest. This present essay, then, will draw what is significant for Christology from the three quests of the historical Jesus before summing up the final thought.

2. The Three Quests for the Historical Jesus
2.1. The First Quest: Reimarus to Schweitzer
2.2. The Second Quest: Kasemann to Schillebeeckx
2.3. The Third Quest

3. The Significance for Christology of the Quest of the Historical Jesus

4. Conclusion
I would like to conclude this simple essay by emphasizing of the necessity the quest for Christological study for Christian faith as N. T. Wright says the first and foremost reason for grappling with the historical question of Jesus is that we are made for God; for God’s Glory and we reflect his likeness. It means that we are called to find out who the true and living God by taking the risk of looking at Jesus himself. So our debates in recent times are so important because they are debates about God himself.

Bibliography

The Significance for Christology of the Quest of the Historical Jesus

1. Introduction
2. The Three Quests for the Historical Jesus

3. The Significance for Christology of the Quest of the Historical Jesus
After unpacking the ‘key points’ from each quest above, the question should be posed now; what is the significance for Christology of the Quest of the Historical Jesus? A well known bible scholar N.T. Wright discloses the answer, “…the historical quest for Jesus is a necessary and nonnegotiable aspect of Christian disciples and that we in our generation have a chance to be renewed in discipleship and mission precisely by means of this quest”.[16] He, then, emphasizes that ‘we shall only discover who the true and living God actually is if we take the risk of looking at Jesus himself. The contemporary debates about Jesus, therefore, are so important because they are also debates about God himself. For us now who live in the twenty first century it is very important to remind ourselves that Jesus Christ in whom we believe had his identity questioned and debated. The proclamation about Jesus we have today is the result of the interpretation that has been made on the same person that is Jesus of history.

It seems that views and studies have for the most part been mistaken but questions, investigations; discussions about the historical Jesus were necessary and valid. Reimarus in his work says that these questionings were necessary “to shake European Christianity out of its dogmatism so that it might face the new challenge of discovering who Jesus actually was and is, and who God actually was and is”. No matter how limited this type of quest would be, it would make an impact on other scholars in their study. The understanding of the Jesus in history and the Christ proclaimed in the gospels and the Church is enhanced. Our faith in the Christ of faith would not be whole if we leave out the human image of the man who lived in history. It takes one to know one. The knowledge of the human Jesus is grace for the human who professes the Christ of faith. This affirms that faith must stay focused on the identity of the Jesus who died for our sake and was raised up by God, with the earthly Jesus who walked the regions of Galilee.

The quest of Jesus has enriched our Christian identity. It has created a new vision, not just of Jesus but of God. Wright, therefore, says that ‘do not be afraid of the Quest. Quests have also acknowledged the continuity between the Jesus of history and the Christ of faith of today, which has taken into account the Jewishness of Jesus and traditions that have shaped his own identity and imagination. And most of all it has given light on how the New Testament traditions of which our faith today is built, have developed. Thomas P. Rausch is so right, I think, in his short conclusion of the chapter entitled “The Three Quests for the Historical Jesus” when he says that “for solidly grounded Christology, the historical Jesus is crucial. “Without it”, he adds, “Christian faith and its Christology remain open to the accusation of divinizing Jesus and falsifying his message from time to time”.[17]

4. Conclusion
Bibliography

Bibliography

<< Back to article

Bibliography:

Gleeson, Brian. Class Notes. Box Hill: Yarra Theological Union, 2008.

Loewe, P. William. The college Student’s Introduction to Christology. Collegeville: The Liturgical Press, 1996.

Rausch, P. Thomas. Who Is Jesus? An introduction to Christology. Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2003.

Senior, Donald. Jesus: A Gospel Portrait. New York: Paulist Press, 1992.

Wright, N.T. The Challenge of Jesus: Rediscovering Who Jesus Was and Is. Downers Grove, Inter Varsity Press, 1990.

Thoday, Kim. The third Quest for the historical Jesus: A case for its necessity and Relevance. Retrieved via internet, 29 September 2008, http://jmm.aaa.net.au/articles/12375.htm.


[1] Donald Senior, Jesus: A Gospel Portrait (New York: Paulist Press, 1992), 26.

[2] Thomas Rausch, Who is Jesus? An Introduction to Christology (Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press, 2007), 10.

[3] N.T. Wright, The challenge of Jesus: Rediscovering Who Jesus Was and Is (Downers Grove III: Inter Varsity press Academic, 1999), 19.

[4] Ibid.,

[5] Brian Gleeson, Lecture Notes: The Quest for Historical Jesus (Yarra Theological Union, 2008),16.

[6] N.T. Wright, The challenge of Jesus, 21.

[7] Thomas Rausch, Who Is Jesus, 13.

[8]Ibid.,

[9]Martin Kahler in her Ðer Sogennate Historische Jesus und der geshichtliche, Biblische Christus introduced a distinction that has become part of fundamental vocabulary of Christology. He distinguished both between “Jesus” and “Christ” and between historisch (historical) and geschichtlich (historic). The historical Jesus in his point of view refers to the man of Nazareth as can be known through historical research and the Christ of faith is the Jesus proclaimed by the first Christians, scriptures and the church.

[10] Brian Gleeson, Lecture Notes: 17.

[11] Ibid., 15.

[12] Thomas Rausch, Who Is Jesus?, 14.

[13] Kim Thoday, The third Quest for the historical Jesus: A case for its necessity and Relevance, (retrieved via internet, 29 September 2008, http://jmm.aaa.net.au/articles/12375.htm), 2.

[14] Thomas Rausch, Who Is Jesus?, 16.

[15] Ibid., 18.

[16] N.T. Wright The challenge of Jesus: Rediscovering who Jesus was and Is: IVP Academic Illinois, 1999.

[17] Thomas Rausch, Who Is Jesus?, 22.

Conclusion

1. Introduction
2. The Three Quests for the Historical Jesus
3. The Significance for Christology of the Quest of the Historical Jesus

4. Conclusion
I would like to conclude this simple essay by emphasizing of the necessity the quest for Christological study for Christian faith as N. T. Wright says the first and foremost reason for grappling with the historical question of Jesus is that we are made for God; for God’s Glory and we reflect his likeness. It means that we are called to find out who the true and living God by taking the risk of looking at Jesus himself. So our debates in recent times are so important because they are debates about God himself.

Bibliography

The Three Quests for the Historical Jesus

1. Introduction

2. The Three Quests for the Historical Jesus
2.1. The First Quest: Reimarus to Schweitzer
Herman Samuel Reimarus (1694-1768) had a career as an eminent professor of oriental Languages in Hamburg in northern Germany. His argument had been known after publishing his bundle of papers in the ‘fragments’ by G. E. Lessing. Reimarus acknowledges that the primary preaching of Jesus in the Gospel, particularly in the synoptic Gospels, is repentance. He, then, continues that this preaching was preparing for coming of the Kingdom of God. However Reimarus assumes that Jesus was not able to explore the meaning of the Kingdom of God. Its meaning, he presumed that depended on those who heard Him, in this context the Jewish people.

What was the aim of establishing the Kingdom of God? Reimarus asserts it was to draw the Jewish understanding about a new righteousness, which is to love God and their neighbors. His dying, in his point of view, was the result of his failure to do this and a feeling that God had abandoned him and he cried out on the cross “my God, my God, why have you forsaken me”? (Matt 27:46)[2] Reimarus, then, states that the disciples fabricated the Jesus story by saying that Jesus’ real kingdom was not in this world; with the purpose of keeping a good thing going they explained Jesus’ failure away.

In the resurrection issue, Reimarus argued that the disciples stole Jesus body and then they proclaimed that he had been raised from the dead, with the intention of securing their position. According to Reimarus, the story of Jesus had suffered; had died for the sins of humankind; had ascended into heaven and would come again in power and glory, was the scenario made up by the disciples. In conclusion, he emphasized that the aim of Jesus and the disciples was thoroughly different. Jesus, he says, wished to restore Israel and he was a failed religious and nationalistic revolutionary, while Christianity was the result not of Jesus’ intention, but of a fraud on the part of his disciples. The disciples were the one who created what became the Christian story.[3]

Reimarus writings have become a debatable issue between two groups which are known as Rationalist and supernaturalist.[4] The supernaturalists attempted to highlight two doctrines about the truth of the bible. Firstly, the Bible, in their point of view, is directly inspired by God. It is to say that God is principal author of the Bible and the human authors are as passive instruments who contributed the message from God. Secondly, because of the Bible is directly inspired by God it contains no mistakes of any kind. This group seems plunged into the traditional self-understanding of Christian faith. The rationalist group, on the other hand, is attempting to be at once Christian and modern. For this reason ‘while they were enthusiastic about they understood to be the teachings of Jesus’, what stuck in their craw were the NT miracle stories.[5]

The debate between rationalist and supernaturalist generated a series of books which discussed the life of Jesus. David Friedrich Strauss’s book entitled The Life of Jesus Critically Examined published in 1835 was one of the most famous. By exploring the Gospel narratives account by account, he seemed to question the supernaturalist case for its literal historicity, discredits the rationalist interpretation and placed his own position. The reason given for refusing the rationalist project was ‘their success comes with a price tag that they overlooked.’[6] Whereas he offers no comfort to the supernaturalist either, before exploring his position about this issue by saying that Reimarus’ point of view that Christianity was invented by the disciples was a big mistake. Strauss, however, recognizes that Reimarus questions were necessary to shake European Christianity out of Dogmatism.

The emergence of Schweitzer in the world of quest had brought the old quest to the end. In his discourse The Quest of the Historical Jesus, he rejected the liberal portrait about Jesus. Jesus in his point of view is not a modern man at all. Jesus was an apocalyptic preacher, he added. He argues that, ‘Jesus died a failure, disappointed in his mission of the apocalyptic establishment of the kingdom’.[7]

2.2. The Second Quest: Kasemann to Schillebeeckx
The second quest also known as the new quest was different from the previous quest (old quest) are has no longer burdened by the rationalist or secular presuppositions of the enlightenment. There were two outstanding scholars who had worked on the historical Jesus. Firstly, Ernst Käsemann, (1953) who was a New Testament professor at Tübingen in Germany as well as former student of Rudolf Bultmann and who gave a programmatic lecture at Marburg entitled “The Problem of the Historical Jesus”. [8] In reacting against Rudolf Bultman’s position, he said the problem of the historical Jesus was legitimate, necessary and possible by using the new methods of historical-critical scholarship, source criticism, form criticism, and redaction criticism.

Why was it legitimate? He emphasized that, with the invention of critical historical method, we do have various way of learning about Jesus. In doing so, he argues that we have the same basic intention as the evangelist. On the other hand, he argued that such a quest was necessary to keep Christian faith firmly tied to the life history of Jesus. Second, he mentioned that, a new quest is necessary. Accepting Kähler’s dichotomy[9] placed Christians in an unsustainable position. This is to say that ‘if the message about Jesus is centered completely on the Christ of faith, it can be assumed that this may be seen as a myth those human beings have concocted for themselves’.[10] Kasemann, then, argues that it is necessary to take up anew the question of continuity between the historical Jesus and the Christ of faith. There is the possibility of a new quest being raised because that most scholars have their own disposal research methods which were unavailable to the old quest.

Secondly, Edward Schillebeeckx the Belgian Dominican appeared at the end of the second quest. In his massive two-volume work, Jesus and Christ, he drew his theological point of view about the historical Jesus. Schillebeeckx explored how Jesus approached his death and useful for establishing what critical research is able to affirm about his life and ministry. His approach seems “hypercritical” because too dependent on the hypothesized multiple levels of the “Q” community. Schillebeeckx’s point of view, however, seems helpful for establishing a critical minimum in terms of the life and preaching of the historical Jesus. [11]

The New Quest has compared what could be learned about Jesus by the critical historical Method and the figure of Jesus as the Christ presented by the New Testament and Christian Tradition. Walter Kasper, then, summarizes three historical and theological principles of Kaesmann’s New Quest. In the first place he argues that in the new quest the Gospels contain more historical material than had previously been acknowledged. In the second place, he mentions that, in the new quest Christology remains focused on the identity of the exalted Lord with the earthly Jesus and the primacy of Christ before and after the church. On the other words, faith can not focus only on the kerygma of the early church. Finally he says that the new quest proceeds through the medium of the preaching of the kerygma, so that the historical Jesus is interpreted through it and at the same time the historical Jesus helps us to understand and to interpret the kerygma[12] in other words the history of Jesus becomes “source” to interpret the Kerygma.

2.3. The Third Quest
The third quest for the historical Jesus has emerged since in the early 1980s up to the present. It is quite distinguishable from the previous quest. The presence of the third quest is far more confident about being able to reconstruct the basic outline of Jesus’ ministry.[13] The fundamental aim of this quest was to investigate the historical world of Jesus. The scholars tended to discover the structure of a Galilean Family and social relationship, the influence of Greek culture and the impact of the Roman Domination. In doing so, the scholars did not only count on the literary source in scriptural exegesis but also used the true historical methods and sociological and anthropological approaches. John Meier and N.T. Wright were known as two underpinning figures in the appearance of the third quest. In A Marginal Jew, Meier asserts that to say that ‘Jesus acted as and was viewed as an exorcist and healer during his public ministry has as much historical corroboration as almost another statement we can make about the historical Jesus’.[14]

As a part of the third quest, there was a group of people that has characterized the so-called ‘the Jesus Seminar’ held in 1985 from the academic group which tended to discover ‘the real Jesus’ hidden behind the gospel and the doctrine of the Church. There were many discussions, debates and notions as a result of the seminar which was done twice a year. Their discussions, debates, however, stand on the scale of probability and personal understanding or interpretation about Jesus according to the Gospel. Robert Funk one of the most influential members argues that ‘the church has kept the faithful in ignorance’. Another significant figure from this group was John Dominic Crossan who defines ‘Jesus within a secular social and cultural matrix characterized by the class, social distinctions and political dynamic.’[15] He refuses the idea that Jesus calls Abba his Father. Jesus, for him, is no more than a Jewish cynic philosopher and ‘magician’ not miracle worker as it publicly known. Jesus was executed by the Romans not by the leaders of the Jews, and his body was eaten by the dogs and Christianity, he claims, knew nothing about Jesus’ passion.

3. The Significance for Christology of the Quest of the Historical Jesus
4. Conclusion
Bibliography