The Quest for the Historical Jesus
Each gospel tells the story of Jesus in a
different way.
For example, Jesus speaks differently in John than in the
Matthew, Mark, and Luke. John's date for the crucifixion is also
different. Matthew and Luke have somewhat different versions of
the temptations or the sermon on the mount. These differences,
and many many more, have led biblical scholars to the conclusion
that the story of Jesus was changed prior to its being written
down in the gospels. If this is true, what was added, deleted,
and changed in the oral transmission of the tradition prior to
its being written down? Or, what were the original words and
deeds of Jesus? These questions led to what has been called "the
quest for the historical Jesus." This was the attempt to
determine the original words and deeds of Jesus prior to the
changes and additions created by the early church as it adapted
his message to their situation in life.
As a result of the "quest," a number of influential scholars
came to the conclusion that a goodly portion of the gospel
stories were a creation of the early church. In their view,
there was an original core of Jesus' words and deeds, and to this
core the early church added his miracles and much of his
teaching. These additions, changes, and amplifications occurred
as the church expressed in concrete terms the meaning of his
life. For example, the story of Jesus feeding the five thousand
did not really occur as narrated in the gospels. Rather, the
alleged miracle was a way of concretely describing how Jesus can
come to a congregation of people in the one loaf of the Holy
Communion. What are we to make of this?
First, it needs to be said that the quest was carried out
within the limits of a "scientific" methodology. In other words,
it was assumed that Jesus Christ did no miracles. As a result,
Jesus' significance had to be found in some other realm -- Jesus
a teacher of wisdom, Jesus the highest form of consciousness,
Jesus the evolutionary apex of humanity, or Jesus the founder of
a universal social order. The effect, however, was to gut the
gospels of their essential content. The gospels do have
implications for Christian consciousness, for social life, for
wisdom and understanding. But their primary aim is to proclaim
that Jesus is the one who brings people to a living, loving God.
This God, in the person of Jesus, healed the sick, delivered
those oppressed by demons, forgave the sinful, confronted the
unrighteous, and lifted up the lowly. These acts are miraculous
acts, the physical healings no more than the "spiritual" events
in which Jesus spoke with authority to forgive, console, and
confront. Once the miraculous was eliminated, there was
essentially nothing left. As a result, the "questers" came up
with little more than an abstract philosophy of life, a form of
higher consciousness, a social order of "love."(1)
There is another way to approach the matter. Consider the
miracles. Rather than trying to explain away the healings as did
Schleiermacher, Tillich, Bultmann, Macquarrie, Robinson, et. al.,
why not lay hands on people in the name of Jesus Christ and ask
God to heal them? Rather than ignore the exorcisms, why not cast
out demons in Jesus name? Rather than assuming that Jesus never
miraculously fed the 5,000, why not look into the matter and see
if that has ever happened today? Rather than believing that
Jesus never spoke miraculous divine words, why not ask him to
speak to us with authority?(2) link
Once that approach is taken, a whole new world emerges. It
will readily be seen that the gospel accounts are telling us what
Jesus once did as descriptions of what he can do now.(3) And when he does these things now, we will
believe he did them then. In both cases, then and now, it will
be seen that Jesus does the same saving acts over and over again
for people who need God. Since these actions differed from
person to person, how they first occurred and how they are
remembered will differ as well. Scripture reflects that variety.
For example, Jesus doubtless spoke beatitudes on more than one
occasion, and the differences in Matthew and Luke's version of
the Sermon on the Mount reflect different summaries of these
various occasions. Furthermore, under the inspiration of the
Spirit, the gospel writers did remember the work of Jesus in
different ways, and this memory was transformed in particular
ways. But all those ways were rooted in Jesus as a historical
person. They were rooted in the historical Jesus because each
one proclaimed him as one who saved and saves, and that is
exactly what he did, then and now.
Comment
In this essay, I describe one aspect of an approach to interpreting Scripture. How one interprets Scripture is called a "hermeneutics," and I first became aware of the need for such a different hermeneutic in seminary.Endnotes
1. There is a new quest, which promotes some very helpful ideas. Its best proponent is N.T. Wright, but he does not bring to the fore the essential ideas presented here, that Jesus is active today, doing now what he did then. I will discuss him in greater detail in another essay.