Jesus the Jew – A Short Diatribe

Over the many years I have been reading and writing about the Christian Faith, I have become just a little irritated by those well meaning people who try to tell me that in order to really know about Jesus, or ‘Yeshua’ as they like to call Him, it is necessary to get a Jewish perspective on the Gospels. (Actually, “Yeshua” is Hebrew, and Hebrew was rarely spoken in Israel in His day. According to the esteemed Jewish historian David Flusser, “Yeshu” would have in all probability been His name in Galilee. – The Sage From Galilee, 6.).

Now no one is going to say that the Jesus of Scripture was not thoroughly Jewish, and no one is going to say that the Bible is not a Jewish Book. Still, there are several reasons for my irritation; one of them being the fact that Paul, the Apostle to the Gentiles, plus the other writers of the New Testament, did not deem it necessary to include within their narratives a great deal of information about the Jewish culture and tradition of their times. Luke wrote a Gospel to Gentiles (as most every scholar claims), and yet he did not appear to be as concerned to relate to us the exclusively Jewish flavor of the events of Jesus’ Life; not like, for example, one sees in the writings of Josephus a generation or so later.

In starting my rant I should say that my annoyance is not with those in the scholarly guild who have in the last generation taken Jesus’ Jewish heritage seriously. Rather it is with those who insist on interpreting Jesus through the lens of Rabbinic books and practices that hale from a different era than pre-70’s Israel, as if these much later sources give us an inside line on Christ. Indeed, it seems that simply being Jewish is enough to grant one this insider’s perspective. This despite the fact that Jesus was a very counter-cultural figure who often went contrary to the traditions of the day.

On the first page of the classic work Aspects of Rabbinic Theology, Solomon Schechter warns the reader of “the unsatisfactory state in which this [ancient Jewish] thought is preserved” and advises “caution and sobriety.” Apart from Josephus who wrote circa A. D. 90, and to a lesser extent his earlier contemporary Philo, the main source of information about Second Temple Judaism is the Mishnah, a collection of (often) disputes about the Law for study purposes. But the Mishnah was not compiled until the third century, of which, in an extended quote Schechter observes,

“There must have been some Rabbinic work or works composed long before our Mishnah, and perhaps as early as 30 C. E. This work, or collection, would clearly have provided a better means for a true understanding of the period when Rabbinism was still in an earlier stage of its formation… But whatever the cause, the effect is that we are almost entirely deprived of any real contemporary evidence from the most important period in the history of Rabbinic theology… They have not left the least trace in Jewish literature, and it is most probable that none of the great authorities we are acquainted with in the Talmud had ever read a single line of them, or even had heard their name.” (Ibid, 3-5).

There is a reason why experts like Flusser, E. P. Sanders, Sean Freyne, and J. D. G. Dunn do not spend much time citing the Talmud in connection with the Life of Jesus. Since it was compiled and written many centuries after Jesus lived it is not very relevant. There may be some bits of information that could be used for illustrative purposes, and these are supplied with a precautionary note in Craig A. Evans’s Ancient Texts for New Testament Studies, 220ff., but Schechter’s words of caution ought to be heeded. There is little to no “light” on Jesus to be shed by documents originating centuries after the fact and from contexts which included the re-imagining of Judaism (i.e. Rabbinic Judaism) after the devastation of Vespasian’s armies in A.D. 66-70, and the Roman response to the Bar Kokhba rebellion of A. D. 132-135. One may appreciate the pious and scholarly efforts of Alfred Edersheim’s The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah, etc., but he was working with sources that were not contemporary to Jesus by any measure. Modern Messianic Jewish writers rely too much on Edersheim, although many modern scholars warn against it (e.g. Scot Mcknight’s strong warning in his essay, “Jesus of Nazareth,” in The Face of New Testament Studies, edited by Scot McKnight & Grant Osborne, 171). Claiming that “Jesus would have done this or that” on the basis of Rabbinic literature is a risky business. The Gospels are our avenue into His Life and times, and, as I have said, they do not bother to fill us in on many of the the customs of the time.

If we turn to Josephus it must be said that he was a priest who portrayed the Pharisees in a positive light (hence his influence upon E. P. Sanders!), and who was sixty years removed from John the Baptist and Jesus.

What about the Dead Sea Scrolls? A Good question. But those who like to draw our attention to the Jewishness of Jesus seldom make much of them (Geza Vermes did, and his emphasis on Jesus’ Jewishness was welcome, but his works on Jesus are shot through with outdated Bultmannian bias). If the strictly segregated community at Qumran were Essenes (which view is not held universally), then we can say two things: first we can say that study of the scrolls help us to know that,

“Jesus’ engagement with his contemporaries, both supporters and opponents, reflects an understanding of Scripture and theology that we know, thanks to the Dead Sea Scrolls and related literature, to have been current in pre-70 Jewish Palestine.” – Craig A. Evans, Jesus and His World, 9.

The other thing that must be said is that,

“The Essenses, as far as we know, played no direct role in Jesus’ life and work.” – E. P. Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 46.

If you wish to see the world through the Jewish eyes of Jesus, the books of Kenneth Bailey may be helpful, although just because a person has lived in the Middle East for half a century does not alter the fact that he is still two thousand years and very many upheavals removed from what he is writing about. Yes, Eastern societies had a pronounced outlook on honor and shame, similar in some respects to the Japanese in our own day. In Japan you don’t poke fun at people and their mishaps in the way one might do in the West. It isn’t funny. Even so in the Gospels one might understand Jesus’ answer to the Rich Young Ruler in Mark 10:18-19 as giving the man an opportunity to save face. The Lord may have been doing that; or then again He may not. Jesus didn’t seem too bothered about honor and shame when calling Peter “Satan” in Matthew 16:23, nor for that matter did the Pharisees when dealing with the man born blind in John 9:28, 34. Apparently the Pharisees had something else on their minds than the honor of the poor man they were haranguing.

Reading the likes of Bailey, Sanders, N. T. Wright, James Charlesworth and the rest, one thing keeps staring me in the face. It is that these writers, informative as they certainly are, agree upon many of the historical elements of the Gospels, but their reconstruction of the background of Jesus’ ministry hardly advances anything not already found in the Four Gospels, other than filling in details of the historical figures and places. Sanders seems miffed that Jesus appeared to bypass the major cities of Galilee (Sepphoris, Tiberias and Scythopolis), and he constructs opinions on that basis (The Historical Figure of Jesus, 103-107), but just because the Gospels don’t mention it doesn’t mean He didn’t frequent these venues.

If the student wants to gain a good idea of the present state of scholarship on Jesus’s First Century Jewish setting, let them read James D. G. Dunn’s excellent survey in his Jesus Remembered, 255-326. Dunn runs through the relevant sources and cites all the relevant scholars. If Dunn’s liberal tendencies are off-putting (although they don’t show much in those pages), I suggest Paul Barnett’s terrific Jesus and the Rise of Early Christianity, 27-153. Not to be overlooked are the articles in the Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels edited by Joel B. Green, Scot McKnight, and I. Howard Marshall. but let’s not fool ourselves that calling Jesus (Greek “Iesous“) by a Hebrew name and adding Talmudic interpolations to the Gospels, or even the fact that a Bible teacher is a Jew brings one closer to the Jesus of the Gospels. It doesn’t! It may even push the real Jesus further away. We all have one true source; the Four Gospels. End of rant.

8 comments On Jesus the Jew – A Short Diatribe

  • Agreed. I’ve become more and more impatient throughout the years about “key background” we MUST have to “really understand” the scriptures. I know nobody wants to be a “narrow-minded fundamentalist,” but I must protest at some point. Scripture is sufficiently clear to an ordinary person, right? The Church doesn’t need a caste of hermeneutical priests to decode and mediate the “real meaning” to congregations so they can understand God’s word, do they?

  • Some folks aren’t going to like this post!

  • I agree. It’s nice to see a rare rant from you, Paul. 😉

  • I have been studying this for some time and agree with you Paul, great words – continue your rant (and can I quote you in my treatise?). This needs to be spoken more across American churches. “God is the God of the Gentiles too.” As a missionary in Papua New Guinea I am seeing huge numbers of people being sucked into what I like to call these “back to Israel movements” (because they claim that Gentiles have corrupted the Gospel context and need to do things in a more Jewish manner – such as; worship, dress, using Hebrew words and names, Torah observance, feasts and Sabbath keeping etc.). I have read some great authors who say that Jesus is the central meaning or point of Judaism, not Judaism or its culture itself. Particularly by following – “Rabbinical Judaism” as per Mk 7/ Mt 16.
    Having said that though we need to remember that Peter, James, John, and the author of Hebrews were writing not strictly speaking to the western church but to believing Jews, in that you cannot take the scripture out of its natural context or culture. As they say “Christianity is not clear or colorless, it is colored by whatever culture it is portrayed in as long as the true Gospel is not tainted.” As such, and as you have pointed out in many of your writings, there is still the import to know what we can claim as a word “to” us or “for” us. As westerners, we do tend to dive into the other ditch when we think introspectively without thought of the original audience. We fall into a ditch by claiming all the promises given to Abraham’s line for ourselves in the church. Thus we replace poor Israel with the western church and rob Israel of her heritage without so much as a mention as to her contribution to the Gospel. The question that I want to ask is “How do we as westerners celebrate Christ through out the year with or without observing the feasts, which the Back to Israel folk say we need to observe (Torah observant) since “Jesus and the disciples observed them”? Or how do we celebrate Easter and Christmas without the pagan traditions accepted in them as these people complain about?

  • Hi Steve,

    Yes you can quote me. You ask:
    “The question that I want to ask is “How do we as westerners celebrate Christ through out the year with or without observing the feasts, which the Back to Israel folk say we need to observe (Torah observant) since “Jesus and the disciples observed them”? Or how do we celebrate Easter and Christmas without the pagan traditions accepted in them as these people complain about?” Who cares id they were pagan dates? Is not a Christian free to celebrate the Lord on those days? What matters is surely is not the day (Rom. 14:5-6) but the motive.

    Well, a quick answer is that that the NT doesn’t tell us what to do, so I guess any suitable celebration that does not put us under an aspect of the Law would be legit. In that light there is nothing wrong with Christmas and Easter, or the ‘Christian Year.’ To me the problem arises when people (Gentiles mostly) equate calling Jesus ‘Yeshua’ and Paul ‘Shaul’ (which would be utterly wrong since Paul names himself ‘Paulos’), and keeping the Feasts (about which there is not a lot of teaching in Scripture), which are a part of Israel’s old covenant, and worshiping on ‘Shabbat’, and on and on, is that it creates a false spirituality. Really it is a covert Galatianism.

  • I agree totally. Thanks for your perspective. I respect your approach to and presentation of Biblical teaching. This leads me to ask you what your take on this thought is… I have come to question and research about the related thought by many in the church that we Gentile Christians have become “spiritual Jews”. I have looked at a number of writers on line who use passages out of context to support their claim. This desire of the west to be more eastern in their approach to practicing Christianity has led them to spiritualizing, taking out of context or at least misapplying (in my opinion), many of the passages in the Epistles a main one is Rom. 2:28,29 where Paul is rebuking the Jewish reliance on their supposed obedience to the Law.

  • Hmm, I’m not sure I agree with you here. I mean I see the abuses but is there any value? So how would you characterize the work of Arnold Fruchtenbaum?

    • Mark,

      There are some good Messianic Jewish ministries which utilize certain Rabbinic materials for witnessing purposes. Ariel and Sojourners are two of them. That said, which emphasis do you think is helpful?

Leave a reply:

Your email address will not be published.

Site Footer

Sliding Sidebar

Categories