Mark has a marvellous story about Jesus and a fig tree. He tells of
a time when Jesus and the disciples are walking from Bethany to Jerusalem. Jesus
feels hungry and "noticing in the distance a fig-tree in leaf, he went
to see if he could find anything on it." Since it is not the season
for figs, there are none on the tree. Jesus is angered by the lack of figs
and curses the tree: "`May no one ever again eat fruit from you!' And
his disciples were listening." The group proceeds to Jerusalem where
Jesus goes into the temple and, still angry, drives out the money
changers, upsets their tables, turns over the seats of the pigeon sellers,
and cleans out all commercial activities in the temple. He then teaches
the crowd about the proper use of the temple. Early the next morning Jesus
and the disciples are walking back toward Bethany when they pass by
the fig tree. Peter says, "Rabbi, look, the fig-tree which
you cursed has withered," and indeed we are told, "the fig-tree
had withered from the roots up." Still later, on the Mount of Olives,
Jesus uses the fig tree in a lesson to his disciples about the Endtime that is coming. "`Learn a lesson from
the fig-tree. When its tender shoots appear and are breaking into leaf,
you know that summer is near. In the same way, when you see all this happening,
you may know that the end is near, at the very door. I tell you this: the
present generation will live to see it all.'"
First we see the fig tree in leaf. Then we see it withered and dead as
a result of Jesus' curse. And
then it is used by Jesus as an example in a parable about the Endtime. A hungry
Jesus has killed a fig tree because it had no fruit in a season when it
could not have fruit. What kind of story is this? What does it tell us
about this god-man? Here is the entry in The Interpreters' Bible:[1]
It is well to begin any consideration
of this story of the barren fig
tree with the frank recognition that
it is the least attractive
of all the narratives about Jesus. Luke omits it entirely, possibly
because he already has a parable of a
barren fig tree (Luke 13.6-9).
At any rate most scholars would
applaud his judgment, as shown
by the omission. There are two main
objections to taking the
story literally, as an exact record.
The first is the unfavorable
light in which it seems to put the
judgment, or common sense, of
Jesus; he could have
had no rational expectation of finding figs out
of season. The second is that the
miracle is quite "out of character"
with Jesus' mind and with
other miracles....Mark takes the story as
a proof of Jesus' power, but
that "proof" was on a level devoid of
moral and religious significance.
For teaching and preaching the church
has taken the story as a
symbolic representation of the truth that life without fruit is
worthless. ...The incident was taken
by many in the early church as
an acted parable of judgment on the
religion of Israel because of its
lack of ethical and spiritual
fruit....(emphasis mine).
This kind of apology raises several
interesting questions. Why should we applaud Luke's judgment for
omitting a story about Jesus? On the grounds that
the story casts Jesus in an "unfavorable light"? The implication here
is that any time we run into a story that casts the hero in an
"unfavorable light" we are justified in omitting the story. And
just what is an "unfavorable light"? Unfavorable from whose
point of view? If what we are told by Mark is the "least
attractive" of all the stories about Jesus, then how can that fact be justification for editing it out?
These would be justifications only if we are presenting propaganda, or in
today's terminology, a media image. A deeper epistemological question
arises: if the gospels are the source of all that we know about Jesus then
on what other grounds can we make judgments about his attractiveness or
lack of it? How can we justifiably pay attention only to those stories
that match some preconceived idea of what an attractive hero looks like?
Whose gospel is being proclaimed in a statement like the one about the
church using the story for symbolic and didactic purposes? I will argue
that misreading stories about Jesus is an industry. An industry that
started with Paul. Mark gives us
stories about Jesus and the message of Jesus. Paul gives us his message
about Jesus.
Consider the fig tree from a literary point of view. Jesus teaches his disciples about Endtime: "`Learn
a lesson from the fig-tree. When its tender shoots appear and are breaking
into leaf, you know that summer is near. In the same way, when you see all
this [a set of eschatological signs] happening, you may know that the end
is near, at the very door.'" Just as leaves signal spring and summer,
so do the signs of darkened sun and moon, falling stars and celestial
explosions signal Endtime, when the mighty Son of Man will arrive in "great power and
glory" and "gather his chosen." Jesus goes on to say, "I
tell you this: the present generation will live to see it all. (Mark
13.30) Because Endtime is imminent he warns his disciples to `Keep Awake.'
The specific signs that Jesus says will be present right before Endtime
also include these:
When you hear the noise of battle near
at hand and the news of
battles far away, do not be alarmed.
Such things are bound to
happen; but the end is still to come.
For nation will make war upon
nation, kingdom upon kingdom; there
will be earthquakes in many
places; there will be famines. With
these things the birth-pangs of
the new age begin. (Mark 13.7-9)
Some of these warnings seem to relate to the destruction of Jerusalem in the
first century of the common era, while some sound as if they warn of
the end of history. Mark, of course, writes after the Second Temple
destruction and would be in a position to know what was going to happen
after the time period covered in the narrative. Prophesying after the fact
is as good a "prediction" as one can get. In terms of valuable
predictors these signs just will not do. They are too vague to pick out
any particular time just because they pick out almost any time. What
generation goes by without experiencing widespread wars, natural
disasters, and famines? Taken as a literal prediction these words are just
useless. But from a narrative point of view they function to warn us as
readers of the impending doom of the final conflict in the life of
the hero, Jesus. Such ominous
signs are often found in works of art signalling a dramatic change in the
fortunes of the hero. Shakespeare has celestial storms in Julius Caesar
which work to heighten the tension in the play. Modern movies use thunder
storms or lightening flashes whenever the bad guy is about to show up.
"Keep Awake." Be prepared.
Endtime is approaching. Learn from the fig-tree
- not only that you can tell what season it is by the growth of the
tree, but also learn from that specific fig-tree, that one which one day
in leaf, was the next day dead. One day it was alive; the next day it was
dead. The moment of death for each one of us also is unknown. We know that
we will die but we know not the hour or the day.
The anger that Jesus exhibits by withering the fig tree and chasing the money lenders out of the
temple unites him with Old Testament prophets. They too exhibited anger,
whether it was Samuel chopping up Agag or Elisha killing
forty-two boys for ridiculing his bald head. Jesus is cut of the
same narrative material as Samuel, Elijah, Elisha, and
Ezekiel. He
performs miracles: he raises the dead, he casts out devils, he heals, and
he feeds mul- titudes with very little food. Like Ezekiel he is called the
Son of Man.
As Mark's narrative continues we see the climax of the cluster of images
that have to do with the fig tree. Anger first exhibited when a fig tree
did not have fruit on it for the hungry man-god to eat, will now be shown
one more time in the scene at the place called Gethsemane. There Jesus
asks Peter, James, and
John to wait
for him while he, overcome with "horror and dismay," goes on a way
up the path to pray. "Stop here, and stay awake" [emphasis God's],
he orders his disciples. Jesus goes on ahead and "threw himself on
the ground" and asks for the hour to pass him by. He comes back to
find his disciples asleep. In anger and disappointment he shouts,
"Were you not able to stay awake for one hour?" And then orders,
"Stay awake, all of you."
Yet a second time he goes off to pray and
when he returns they are asleep again. When asked why they could not stay awake, "they did not
know how to answer him."
The third time we sense a dramatic shift
in tone. Upon his return Jesus says
quietly, "Still sleeping? Still taking your ease? Enough. The hour
has come." (Mark 14.41)
Anger and frustration shown in the fig
tree story, the temple story, and in the
Gethsemane story are finally washed away by the prayer and by the act of
accepting his own death. "The hour has come." There is a quiet
resolution in that sentence. Acceptance has replaced anger and now Jesus can complete his destiny. Until one has
accepted one's own mortality, accepted death in a per- sonal and lucid
sense, one cannot live. Thus Jesus teaches us: there is life in death.
Death, as the poet Wallace Stevens reminds us, "is the mother
of beauty."
Most contemporary scholars agree that the
gospels were not written by eyewitnesses of the ministry of Jesus. Some would
argue that the reason for this is that Jesus never existed.[2]
The internal evidence is confusing and the external evidence is
sketchy. We simply do not know who
wrote them and when we speak of "Matthew,"
"Mark," "Luke," and
"John" we do so
only for convenience (and because of tradition); the actual names of the
evangelists are forever lost to us. The gospels were written in the period
between 70 and 100, forty years or more after the crucifixion, and we
believe that they originally circulated anonymously. The gospels of
Matthew, Mark, and Luke are usually called the synoptic gospels from the
Greek, synoptikos - seeing the whole together. The relationship among the
synoptic gospels is a complex one and 19th century scholars learned much
of the pattern of inter-relatedness from a careful reading and comparison
of the texts. B. F. Wescott, for example, calculated the percentages of
shared textual material and suggested that the narrative material is distributed
as follows:
Peculiar Shared
Mark 7%
93%
Matthew 42% 58%
Luke 59% 41%
John 92% 8%
Comparing the synoptics on the same event
can be revealing:
Then Jesus arrived at the Jordan from Galilee, and came
to John to
be baptized by him. John tried to dissuade him. `Do you come to
me?' he said; `I need rather to be
baptized by you.' Jesus replied,
`Let it be so for the present; we do
well to conform in this way with
all that god requires.' John then allowed him to come. After
baptism Jesus came up out of the water at once, and at that
moment heaven opened; he saw the Spirit
of God descending like a
dove to alight upon him; and a voice
from heaven was heard saying,
`This is my Son, my Beloved, on whom
my favour rests.' (Matt.
3.13-17)
It happened at this time that Jesus came from Nazareth in Galilee
and was baptized in the Jordan by John. At the moment
when he
came up out of the water, he saw the
heavens torn open and the
Spirit, like a dove, descending upon
him. And a voice spoke from
heaven: `Thou art my Son, my Beloved;
on thee my favour rests.
(Mark 1.9-11)
During a general baptism of the
people, when Jesus too had been
baptized and was praying, heaven
opened and the Holy Spirit
descended on him in bodily form like a
dove; and there came a
voice from heaven, `Thou art my Son,
my beloved, on thee my
favour rests.' (Luke 3. 21-22)
Looking at these passages closely we see
that Matthew and Mark can agree against Luke, and Mark and
Luke can agree against Matthew, but Matthew and Luke do not agree against
Mark. In Matthew and Mark Jesus came from
Galilee, but this is not mentioned in Luke. The voice from heaven says,
`Thou art my Son, my beloved, on thee my favour rests' in Mark and Luke,
but `This is my Son, my Beloved, on whom my favour rests' in Matthew. As
far as the order of events in the narrative is concerned Matthew and
Mark can agree against Luke and Luke and Mark against Matthew, but
Matthew and Luke never agree against Mark. This pattern is observable
throughout the gospels and leads to the hypothesis that the gospel of Mark
was written first and that Matthew and Luke have both used it as a source.
In addition sections of Matthew and Luke are so close verbally that they
must be using a common source, but that source cannot be Mark since he
does not have these sections. Compare for example:
When he saw many of the Pharisees and
Sadducees coming for
baptism he said to them: `You vipers'
brood! Who warned you to
escape from the coming retribution?
Then prove your repentance
by the fruit it bears; and do not
presume to say to yourselves, "We
have Abraham for our father." I tell you that God can
make
children for Abraham out of these stones here. Already the axe is
laid to the roots of the trees; and
every tree that fails to produce
good fruit is cut down and thrown on
the fire. (Matt. 3.7-10)
Crowds of people came out to be
baptized by him, and he said to
them: `You vipers' brood! Who warned
you to escape from the
coming retribution? Then prove your
repentance by the fruit it
bears; and do not begin saying to
yourselves, "We have Abraham
for our father." I tell you that
God can make children for Abraham
out of these stones here. Already the
axe is laid to the roots of the
trees; and every tree that fails to
produce good fruit is cut down
and thrown on the fire.' (Luke 3.7-9)
This common material is almost always
"teaching material." The constant appearance of parallel
passages in Matthew and Luke has led to the conclusion that they have
a source in common in addition to the gospel of Mark, a source consisting
of mostly "sayings" material. In addition they each have special
material unique to each writer. The common sources for Matthew and Luke
are thus believed to be Mark and some unknown manuscript called simply
"Q".[3] Each of
Matthew and Luke have special material that is unique to it. In addition
each writer can make a unique contribution by the way he chooses to tell
the story. One branch of biblical criticism (redaction criticism) suggests
that we should emphasize the contribution made by the final writer. Look
again at Mark 1.9-11 and Luke 3.21-22. In Luke's version all the emphasis is on
the descent of the spirit on Jesus. His baptism
has become one of the three circumstances (a general baptism, his baptism,
the fact that he was praying) that set the stage for the descent of the
spirit, whereas in Mark the baptism and the descent of the spirit are
equally significant.
Or, again, notice that Mark and Matthew mention the thieves who were crucified
with Jesus, but say
nothing of one of them being saved and one being damned. Luke, however,
tells us that one of the thieves asserts his belief at the final moment
and is saved. This has become the story most of us remember. Luke's
editorial emphasis has significantly changed the material presented
in Mark and repeated in Matthew.
The Old Testament takes the Hebrews through the Red Sea into
the wilderness and finally to the promised land, while the New Testament takes the individual from baptism into
the wilderness to the resurrection. The New Testament attempts through its stories to universalize
the nature of God while at the same time making the necessary covenant sign of baptism an individual and not a
societal agreement. For the Old Testament Hebrews there was the wilderness
and the promised land of milk and honey. For Paul and the first Christians there were hell
and heaven as the two conditions promised for those not chosen and those
chosen. The four gospels proclaim the constitutive rules of the new
religion, each with a different emphasis, but all asserting the basic proposition
of a man-god, crucifixion, and redemption, in some form or another. John provides us with a mystical interpretation of
the new religion and emphasizes the fulfillment of the prophesies in the
Old Testament by using or alluding to some twenty-five quotations from the
early books. Mark is the most apocalyptic in his presentation of the last
days insisting more than the others that all will occur within his generation.
Matthew emphasizes the church as the living institution
through which God is calling the peoples of the world to repentance and
faith. For him Jesus is the final agent of mediation
between the divine and the vulgar. Luke and Matthew provide us with birth
narratives for Jesus while Mark has none. A committee probably wrote
John. Luke is a compilation of material from many sources but probably
written by one writer. Luke opens with the Zechariah and Elizabeth story,
which no one else reports. It is a parallel to the Elkanah and Hannah
story that we read in Samuel. John will
play Samuel to Jesus's Saul in the story told by Luke. The cleansing of
the Temple which is the last straw for the leaders of Jerusalem and the next to last angry act of Jesus
in Mark's story is placed at the beginning of Jesus's career in John.
John's work comes out of a Hellenistic world view and unlike Mark John
offers a reading which says that the judgment is not something that has
already fallen, nor is it something that will come in the last days, but
it is what occurs to an individual in the moment that individual makes the
decision of faith in Jesus the Son of God. For John history has
been internalized and judgment has been transformed to the present moment
of "decision" of faith. John's Jesus says "I am the
resurrection and I am life," and "I am the good shepherd,"
and "I am what I am." Mark's "who am I?" has be- come
"I am...". John's Jesus is not really a historical figure at all, but
"lives" in a context of eternity, while Mark's story is of a man
on this earth. John's Jesus says "Now my soul is in turmoil, and what
am I to say? `Father, save me from this hour.' No, it was for this that I
came to this hour. Father, glorify thy name." Mark's Jesus says,
"Abba, Father, all things are possible to thee; take this cup away
from me."
Matthew presents the story especially addressed to
the Jews in an effort to prove that Jesus was the Messiah whom they had expected while
Luke aims his text primarily at the Greeks
and Romans, and John argues that Jesus was not only the human
Messiah expected by the Jews but also the divine Son of God, the redeemer
not only of the Jewish peoples but also of the fallen world. His doctrine
of the Logos or Word is established in his prologue.
John's reinterpretation and rearrangement of the events in the other
stories is aimed at showing that the Word in the Old Testament is fulfilled in the Jesus as redeemer
myth. He uses "scripture is fulfilled", "scripture says",
and "in order that it might be fulfilled" as introductory
phrases time after time.
One good reason to read Mark first is
that there are good reasons to believe that Mark's gospel was written
several years before Luke and Matthew wrote.
Another good reason to read Mark first is that he creates a new literary form:
the gospel. Like other new genres, the gospel both builds on
existing forms and strikes out in new directions. Mark is obviously
influenced by the apocalyptic writings of the first century B.C.E.,
writings which describe in symbolic language the coming of divine power to
cleanse the earth of corruption and to restore the "kingdom" to
the chosen people who had been faithful to the covenant. Mark makes it
clear in several places that the imminent power of the divine is about to
explode into history. In fact, it is hard to see how Christianity could have survived the generation for which
Mark wrote without the interpretive work done by Paul and published in his letters. Mark's
Jesus says clearly that all will come to pass
within a short time. As Kee puts it, "the reality of Jesus Christ was
to be sought in the church's preaching, not in the historian's
reconstruction of who he was."[4]
In other words, Christianity has from the beginning depended upon an
interpretation of a story, a reading of a life.
Mark's story may be, as Kee says, "a
propaganda writing produced by and for a community that made no cultural
claims for itself and offered its writings as a direct appeal for adherents
rather than as a way of attracting the attention of intellectuals or
literati of the day."[5]
But it is also a sophisticated and well-crafted work. Although it does not
present argument for its proclamations it does present the proclamations with
the authority and credibility that comes from the literary devices
employed. Mark's story sounds true. Read it aloud; you cannot miss
the"back to the wall" truth-telling tone.
It is there in the first line, "Here begins the gospel of Jesus...." It
is there in the transitions: "It happened at this time",
"After John had been arrested...",
"Very early next morning...", "that evening after
sunset...", "When after some days he returned...". It is
there in the "facts": "John was dressed in a rough coat
of camel's hair...and he fed on locusts and wild honey." "So
they opened up the roof over the place where Jesus was, and when they had
broken through they lowered the bed on which the paralyzed man was lying."
The first gives us particulars that identify John and fix him forever in
our literary history. The second draws upon an intimate knowledge of the
beds and houses of that time and place. Mark also tells us that Jesus's
sanity was questioned, that he was misunderstood, dismissed, and
ridiculed. What better way to convince readers of his overall veracity
than to be specific and concrete with his examples? If this is propaganda
let it be understood as first rate propaganda. Mark is an artist. Look at
the beginning and ending of his story: the first image is one of flocks of
people coming to John at the Jordan to be baptized, and the last image
is the empty tomb. He opens with hundreds of people looking to be
"saved," searching for some meaning in their lives. And he ends
with the promise signalled by the empty tomb. Could this image have within
it the answer to the needs expressed by the flocks of people at the
beginning? Mark gives us the hint, the mystery, and the fear: "They
said nothing to anybody, for they were afraid." The perfect ending
for his story. But, of course, someone has added verses 9-20, the
resurrection stories, to ruin the artistry of Mark with the didacticism of
the official line.
The struggle between Saul and Samuel, which was the
struggle between king and prophet, is repeated in the suggested struggle
between John and Jesus, but is
resolved in the figure of the character Jesus. He is a merging of the
kingly figure and the priestly figure. Jesus has the authority and
charisma of David, the super
natural powers of Samuel (who also returns from the dead), and the mission
and focus of Elisha. He, like
Moses, is a
composite character who embodies the virtues of the leaders from priestly
and monarchic traditions. Add to that the frustrations and anticipations
of a people once more under the power of conquerors with different gods
and the time for Endtime is ripe. The story is familiar to us: a
people is under the oppressive power of a rich and powerful nation; their
god is challenged by another divine figure who has earthly power, they
desperately need a leader to take them out of their slavery, to deliver
them from evil. But now it is the Romans, not the Egyptians, who have
brought their god into Palestine n the form of Caesar. The Hebrews
anxiously await the next chapter in the covenant story.
Mark's Jesus arrives as one of the multitude of people
seeking baptism from John. The Red Sea,
which separated the Hebrews from the Egyptians, is replaced by the River
Jordan, and baptism becomes the sign of the new covenant. Water, to
wash away the sins of the past, is the perfect image for conversion with
its cleansing, life-sustaining, and purifying powers. While Saul was
picked out of the crowd by being a head taller than everyone else, Jesus
is picked out as special because he is ordinary. John recognizes him as
special in the story, and the specialness is shown by the image of the descending
dove and the voice which speaks to Jesus in a private word from the
heavens: "Thou art my Son, my Beloved; on thee my favour rests."
These signs serve the same narrative function as did the burning bush in
the Moses story, the ladder in Jacob's dream, the
fire in the Samson story, or the small still voice that Ezekiel hears:
they identify and empower the hero. Known only to the prophet (and the
reader) these signs indicate to the individual a connection with the
Other and the beginning of a special quest. These private signs (the call) will now be- come public in
the narrative form of miracles which are the authenticating images of the
authority given to the hero. The result will be shown in the response of
the immediate audience which serves as witness to the events, and who will
attest, "Never before have we seen the like."
What is unique about this hero's story?
He shares much with earlier heroes. He performs healing miracles, but so
did Elisha. He can
control natural forces, but so did Moses. He can change
water to wine, but Elisha could change putrid water to potable water.
Jesus feeds multitudes, but others have done
that also. He comes back from the dead, but Samuel was called up from the dead earlier. He
teaches in parables, but Nathan did that too. Jesus walks on water;
Elisha made an iron axe float on water. The miracles performed by Jesus
are of a kind with those performed by other prophets. He is the
word incarnate, but so was Ezekiel. He will be
raised to heaven, but so was Elijah. He is
thought to be out of his mind, but Samuel was often in a state of
rapture. What then is unique about Jesus? Mark tells us nothing of his
birth, does not mention anything about a supernatural birth at all; and
though Matthew and Luke do provide birth narratives, these too are familiar
to us from the birth of Isaac to the birth of Samuel. Two of the most
dramatic healing miracles in Mark are found in the giving of sight to the
blind man from Bethsaida and later to blind Bartimaeus. In both cases
these stories come at a time when Jesus has been trying to explain
something to his obtuse disciples. He asks them to recognize the truth in a story he tells them, to read his sayings
as he intends them, and they fail miserably as readers. But how does one
read the intention of the gods? That is the story of these stories. Jesus
asks his disciples to recognize truth in his stories and they fail. After
each failure a blind man is suddenly given sight and can see. "Do you
still not understand? Are your minds closed? You have eyes; can you not
see?" are questions Jesus asks his disciples in frustration when they
are unable to understand what his mission is, what knowledge he has that
they cannot recognize. One's sympathy is with the students here. The
lesson is not all that clear.
Is the "lesson" not clear
because Jesus is not a good teacher? No, he is usually
patient and repetitive, only rarely chastising his students with the
lash of rhetorical questions: `Are your minds closed?' `Can you not see?'
What teacher has not used these very questions of frustration? Shortly
after restoring the sight of the blind man at Bethsaida Jesus asks his
disciples "Who do men say that I am?" and after getting several
answers - John the Baptist, Elijah, one of the
prophets - he asks Peter, "Who do
you say that I am?" Peter replies: "You are the Messiah."
Peter's eyes are opened. He can see. The narrative reveals in its form a
"truth" that it
wants to proclaim: the true identity of the hero, who in most hero
narratives is of humble birth, a king hidden as a commoner. All of the
ocular imagery in the story functions to serve the idea of seeing the
"truth" which is hidden behind or under some appearance or
other and must be pierced by sight or in-sight in order to be understood.
The hero must be recognized. Secrecy, one of Mark's main themes, must be
pierced at some point in the story and the hero recognized for who he
really is - the recognition scene announced by Peter is consummated in the
transfiguration where Jesus appears on a mountain top with the spirits of
Moses and Elijah. The voice, private at the
river, is now public, "This is my Son, my Beloved; listen to
him." Peter, James, and John, we are told, are witnesses to this
scene of the confirmation of the hero by the divine. Those who might think
that Jesus is Moses are shown to be wrong for there he is with Moses.
Those who might think he is Elijah are shown to be wrong for there he is
with Elijah. In typical Markan strategy the truth, hidden in secrecy, is
revealed to a small audience, and in the telling of that story, revealed
to us as readers. This literary strategy reveals also a perception about
the nature of truth. It says truth is hidden behind appearances, sometimes
revealed, objective, god-given, magical, and beyond unaided humans. Jesus,
who like Ezekiel, embodies the
Word or Logos, is the
messenger of God's word, bringing glimpses of another level of reality to
his disciples. There is a tension in Mark between this supernatural messenger
and the developing man-character called Jesus. The interesting side of
Mark's Jesus is his human side: changing, frustrated, seeking, loving,
talking, teaching, human Jesus. It is here that we find his uniqueness; it
is here that we "see" his lesson.
But, of course, this reading is not the
official line. Believers
have from the gospels on proclaimed that Jesus was the Christ, the son of God, sent to
establish a new covenant with the people who will believe and be
baptized. He is proclaimed to be a god. But that is not unique. Every
Caesar was also so proclaimed. Osiris, Tammuz, Adonis, Dionysus, and
Mithras all died for the sins of the people. They also had cults which
grew around them which included
ceremonies like baptism to symbolize rebirth, and communion to symbolize
unity with the redeemer-god. They also talked of redemption and a pain
free life in the future. One cult grew up around Attis and Cybele.
Its followers celebrated a Day of Blood in the month of March each year.
At that time they hanged Attis in effigy to a tree where he bled to death.
Then they took his "body" into a burial place and for several
days mourned his passing. At the end of the mourning period the
proclamation was made that Attis had risen from the dead, and the people
rejoiced and celebrated this victory over death. Redeemers and
saviour-gods were not unique to the time. Jesus is unique; Christ is not.
Dr. Crane puts it this way:
Jesus taught that we should love our enemies;
Christ walked on
water. Jesus taught that we should not judge others,
should forgive
them; Christ turned water into wine.
Jesus taught that the kingdom
of God is within us; Christ raised
Lazarus from the dead. Jesus
taught that we should not lay up
treasures for ourselves on earth;
Christ fed the multitude with a few
loaves and fishes. Jesus was a
charismatic human being; Christ is a
saviour, a messiah - an ancient
idea. Created by humanity.[6]
There is a sense in which Jesus is a model for human beings to
follow. He was a man of his time who held the assumptions and beliefs of
his era. He is portrayed as a charismatic man who lived with intense
purpose and drive, who had an existential thrust to his life, who cared
deeply about human beings, and who wrestled with profound questions of
ethics. The stories that grew up around him have affected the world for
two thousand years and have touched the deepest parts of our humanity with
their simplicity of image and their promise of "salvation".
Several years before the gospel stories
were written down another hero appears on the scene to spread the gospel
and to deal with the many questions of meaning asked by the early
Christians. This "first Christian" is Paul.
He provides us with the only written documents about Christianity for the period between 30 and 70 BCE.
His letters provide a reading of the spiritual life and teachings of Jesus and are extremely important in establishing
the doctrines of early Christianity. Like Moses before him, Paul is a hero who comes from
the inner circle of the "enemy". While Moses was raised in
Pharaoh's household only later to find his call in the desert experience
with Yahweh, Paul is
a Roman Jew who is working with alacrity to wipe out Christianity when he
has his conversion experience on the road to Damascus.
Meanwhile Saul was still breathing
murderous threats against the
disciples of the Lord. He went to the
High Priest and applied for
letters to the synagogues at Damascus authorizing him to arrest
anyone he found, men or women, who
followed the new way, and
bring them to Jerusalem. While he was
still on the road and
nearing Damascus, suddenly a
light flashed from the sky all around
him. He fell to the ground and heard a
voice saying, `Saul, Saul,
why do you persecute me?' `Tell me.
Lord,' he said, `who you are.'
The voice answered, `I am Jesus, whom you are
persecuting. But
get up and go into the city, and you
will be told what you have to
do.' Meanwhile the men who were
travelling with him stood
speechless; they heard the voice but could see no one. Saul
got up
from the ground, but when he opened
his eyes he could not see; so
they led him by the hand and brought
him into Damascus. He was
blind for three days, and took no food
or drink. (Acts 9.1-9)
Saul, the persecutor of Christians, will
now become the "chosen instrument" to spread the story of
Christianity to the nations and the kings and the
people of Israel. Saul of Tarsus, converted to the very doctrine he had
been attempting to stamp out, is now renamed Paul, baptized in
the name of Christ, and sent out to spread the "good news" which
he took on that day on the road to Damascus. And as we
have seen so many times in these stories the change of direction in his
life is signalled by a change in name. The conversion story is an
important introduction for this hero and as we might expect it is told
more than once. A bit later (Acts 22.6-10) Paul tells the story in first
person:
I was on the road to Damascus, when suddenly
about midday a
great light flashed from the sky all
around me, and I fell to the
ground. Then I heard a voice saying to
me, "Saul, Saul, why do you
persecute me?" I answered,
"Tell me, Lord, who you are." "I am
Jesus of Nazareth," he said, "whom you
are persecuting." My
companions saw the light, but did not
hear the voice that spoke to
me. "What shall I do, Lord?"
As we have seen so often before when
reading about heroes in the biblical stories, the details in the two
versions are different. In one the fellow travellers see the light but
hear no voice, in the other they see nothing but hear the voice. The
importance to the story of this experience, however, is clear: Paul is authenticated as a hero by a conversion
experience with the divine force which speaks to him and gives him a task
to perform in the midst of great danger. It is puzzling why the writer,
presumably Luke, did not make
the necessary changes to the text to provide consistency. One possible
explanation is to speculate that the first person account was extant in a
letter and thus could not be changed, while Luke at the same time could
see the problem with the first person account. That is, in Paul's account
if the light blinded him then why did it not blind the observers who
witnessed the light? But whatever the case, part of the resolution of the
problem comes from a realization that this is a story and that it follows
certain patterns and images. Paul is blinded. How does that function in
the story? He is blinded to the old ways, and after a period of time
(three days) he is brought back whole, and with a new commitment to
Christianity. One of the
other fascinating "meanings" present in the conversion of Paul
story is the example it establishes: if one who is perse- cuting
Christians can be converted and saved then clearly anyone can be converted
and saved. The form of the story carries the content of the doctrine of
universality.
Paul is a Jew born in Tarsus, raised in Jerusalem, educated
under the tutelage of Gamaliel, a Pharisee, and a Roman citizen. He died,
according to tradition, in Rome under Nero in the early 60's. He never
read the gospels, did not meet Jesus, and never
once in his writings refers to Jesus's miraculous birth or to his
miracles. Paul represents Jesus as the second Adam (Acts 5.12-19), concentrates on the
spiritual side of the man-god, and argues for three important constitutive
rules of the new religion: (1) monotheism, (2) universalism, and (3)
grace. Paul is perhaps best considered as the first Christian missionary,
if not the first Christian. He is interested in the spread of the new
religion from Jerusalem to Judea, Samaria, Syria, Asia Minor, Macedonia,
Greece, and finally all the way to Rome. While the Jewish Christians continued
to believe that Jesus was the long promised Messiah, whose ministry,
death, and resurrection signalled the beginning of the final age of
history, Paul concentrated his efforts on converting pagans to the
new religion. He emphasizes the resurrection of Jesus above all else, and
his mes- sage is one of the imminence of the new age with the urgency for
spreading the good news obviously increased by not knowing exactly when
the return of the Lord will occur. For the Jewish Christian Jesus was a
human selected by God to be the Messiah, while for Paul Jesus was divine
from the beginning.
Paul's letters give
a picture of a dedicated missionary who travels all over the middle east
to proselytize for the new religion. But he does much more than
proselytize, he also establishes rules for the religion as the need
for them arises. Time after time he proclaims and stipulates what the new
religion will be, often in answer to specific questions or problems raised
by a specific congregation. He addresses the congregation in Corinth with
a letter which appeals to them to stop their bickering and squabbling
about who is the first among the missionaries:
I appeal to you, my brothers, in the
name of our Lord Jesus Christ:
agree among yourselves, and avoid
divisions; be firmly joined in
unity of mind and thought. I have been
told, my brothers, by
Chloe's people that there are quarrels
among you. What I mean is
this: each of you is saying, `I am
Paul's man,' or `I
am for Appollos';
`I follow Cephas', or `I am Christ's.'
Surely Christ has not been
divided among you! (1 Cor. 1.10-13)
The human propensity for quarreling is
manifest here. One man fights with another over which person baptized him,
or over the ranking of the officials within the church. The residue of
thousands of years of belief in the divisive doctrine of
"chosenness" is impossible to erase. Although Paul is certainly a monotheistic universalist
himself, the proclamation that all shall be welcome into the new religion
is met with opposition and concern by
the newly converted. The strong belief that one's tribe has been chosen by
the "true" god for some manifest destiny rings out across the
centuries, and it often rings out from a killing field where the
proclamation is tested, where the gods of one's fathers must meet in
combat to determine who is chosen. (Any so- lution to the deep conflicts
in the Middle East today seems highly unlikely as long as
the religious claims of all participants are based on the strongly
held belief that each is the chosen representative of the only true god.)
Paul's first letter, "The First Letter of Paul to the
Thessalonians" allows us to draw certain conclusions about the
problems that were arising in the congregations some twenty years after
the ministry of Jesus. A big puzzle
for all was what was to happen to Christians who die before the return of
the Lord. How were they to become apart of the new covenant, the new
order? It was a problem, one imagines, because the second-coming was not
on schedule, was not as quick as expected. Paul assures the congregation
in the letter that the Christian dead will rise and join the other
Christians "up in the clouds." As we have seen in Mark there is
a strong belief in the impending return of Jesus as divine ruler of the
new kingdom. Another set of problems faced by Paul also have the second-coming
as their source: if Jesus as Messiah/Redeemer is returning to the earth to
redress injustice and bring about the new order, and if this occurrence is
imminent, then why should anyone continue to pay attention to the matters
of the world? Why, indeed, should one work or plan for the future in any
way at all? Paul is uncertain about the time of the Parousia[7]
saying only "the Day of the Lord comes like a thief in the night."
But he is certain about how one must conduct oneself while waiting for the
second coming. "You must abstain from fornication," he says, and
"you must learn to gain mastery over your body." In a second
letter to the Thessalonians[8]
Paul orders that "the man who will not work shall not eat," an
injunction which suggests that many were not working but "idling
their time away" while waiting for Godot.
Romans, as the
headnote in the New English Bible says, "contains the fullest and most
balanced statement of his [Paul's] theology."
And what is the centre of this theology? In a word grace. It is by
means of God's grace, Paul argues, that righteousness and eternal life
enter in to the sinful world. "God's act of grace," he writes,
"is out of all proportion to Adam's wrongdoing."
The wrongdoing of Adam brought sin and death, but the grace of God brought Jesus the Messiah who brings acquittal to all of
humankind. Believe and you will be saved. Paul emphasizes the importance
of love in the life of the Christian, and insists upon the doctrine of
grace. He attempts to upset the idea of a chosen people, not by arguing,
as I would, that its consequences are disastrous, but by proclaiming a
different point of view as true. "For God has no favourites," he
writes, "so my gospel states." No circumcision is required; no special
dietary rules are proscribed in this new religion. These are external
marks and the true circumcision, Paul proclaims, "is of the
heart." His new religion will embrace those Jews who will be baptized
and will also reach out beyond the tribes to all the peoples who will
listen and believe. Paul's story is one of a man driven by a religious
call to spread the news to all of the peoples of the region in order to assure
that they will be aware of the new dispensation from God. But Paul, like
Mark, seems to believe that the Endtime is right around the corner, and that the
return of the Lord to rule the world is imminent. That belief in the
imminence of the second coming is the constant throughout Christian
history. How Christianity continued to flourish past the first
century CE is a puzzle to non-believers and a testimony to the power of
the institution called the church and the irrationality of human beings as
soon as they enter the arena of religion.
The Jesus of the synoptic gospels is comprised largely
of "snapshots." We see him through the lenses of three different
artists, each with his own set of intentions and his own sense of
audience. We see him during about one hundred days of his life, performing
miracles, healing, and teaching. We know almost nothing of him outside of
the New Testament stories; we cannot say with any certainty
that he even existed outside of those stories. What we read of him in the
gospels is quite different from what Paul tells us through his letters. In a sense
the Jesus of the church or churches is a Pauline fabrication: the living,
feeling, shouting man of Mark's stories, who can destroy a fig tree, clean out a temple, and throw
himself to the ground in despair, has become a spiritual and conceptual
isolate in Paul's theological discourse. The Old Testament begins with "In the beginning..."
and the New Testament ends with "Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!" as a
hopeful reply to the last voice in the narrative, that of the character,
Jesus, who speaks "Yes, I am coming soon!"
From beginning to end we have lingered in
these stories for some time; their power will continue to serve them, and
you, well, in the ongoing human story.
[1] The Interpreters’ Bible Abingdon
Press, New York, Volume 7, page 828.
[2] See, e.g., the excellent debate between
Gary Habermas and Antony Flew in Did Jesus Rise From the Dead? – The
Resurrection Debate, edited by Terry L Miethe, Harper and Row, San
Francisco, 1987.
[3] “Q” probably comes from “quelle” the
German word for “source.”
[4] Kee, page 33.
[5] Kee, page 138.
[6] “The Limitations of Christ,” John Crane,
from Reflections on theNature of Things, Volume IV, Number 9, Jefferson
Unitarian Church, Golden, Colorado.
[7] The future coming of Christ.
[8] [8] There is some debate about whether Paul actually wrote 2 Thessalonians. The theme and style do not strike all scholars as similar enough to be genuine Pauline writing.