[faithandlife] John P. Meier on Jesus

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From: "Charles Scott" <crscott@...>
Date: Wed, 23 Oct 2002 03:11:11 +0000
BROTHERS:

Below is a Book review of works by Roman Catholic scholar
John P. Meier of Notre Dame.

Has anyone read any of his three volumes mentioned here?

Charles
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Book Review

A Marginal Jew:

Companions and Competitors
  The Meier Primer

The historical Jesus according to the dean of Catholic scholars


In 1988 John P. Meier sat down with a representative of the Doubleday
publishing company to discuss writing a book about the historical Jesus.
As the conversation unfolded, they assumed the project would be a single
volume. "Little did we imagine it would be a tetralogy," Meier recently
told an audience at Virginia Commonwealth University, whimsically
comparing the resulting product to Wagner's four operas, the Ring of the
Nibelungen.

Fourteen years later, Meier can visualize the end of his epic project.
Having published last year Part 3 of "A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the
Historical Jesus," he has commenced writing the fourth and final volume.
But don't expect to see it any time soon. Meier, a Catholic priest and
professor of theology at the University of Notre Dame, has left the most
intractable problems of historical-Jesus scholarship for last.

Much like Wagnerian opera, the Marginal Jew series may seem endless and
formidably dense to the uninitiated. But also like the Nibelungenlied,
Meier's tetralogy is the work of a powerful intellect that will
withstand the test of time. Some of Meiers' peers are proclaiming the
Marginal Jew series the most thorough and comprehensive work of
scholarship on the historical Jesus in this generation. Critics may
quarrel with Meier's reasons for characterizing Jesus as an
eschatological prophet, but no one disputes the extraordinary erudition
of his scholarship.

It is axiomatic among contemporary New Testament scholars that Jesus was
a Jew, noted Meier in his April address to the VCU history department.
That represents an advance over the so-called "first" and "second"
quests for the historical Jesus in the 19th- and mid-20th-centuries.
Early scholarship, dominated by German Protestants with strong
theological biases, emphasized Jesus' distinctiveness from a supposedly
legalistic and decaying religion. The great contribution of the current,
"third" quest for the historical Jesus – as exemplified by the work of
Geza Vermes and E.P. Sanders – has been to root him in the mainstream of
1st-century Judaism.

The Jewishness of Jesus is now an academic cliché. But strangely enough,
Meier noted, a number of modern scholars – especially those associated
with the highly publicized Jesus Seminar -- have tendered
interpretations that submerge Jesus' Jewish identity. (continued...)


John P. Meier, a Catholic priest and professor of New Testament at
Notre Dame University, continues his magnum opus,

A Marginal Jew, with the publication of the third volume, Companions and
Competitors.

In the first volume, Meier laid out a rigorous methodology for
identifying the genuine words and deeds of the historic Jesus. His five
criteria of authenticity, widely employed by New Testament scholars
today, were useful for stripping away the legendary accretions of the
early church. Meier devoted his second volume to establishing what he
believed to be the core historical truth of Jesus: that he was an
eschatological prophet who, after a sojourn with John the Baptist,
patterned his ministry on that of the miracle-working prophet Elijah.

Meier fleshes out his portrait of Jesus in Companions and Competitors by
defining him in relationship to his followers and his opponents. To tell
the story of Jesus, he observes, is to tell the story of his interaction
with his followers – the Twelve, his disciples and the enthusiastic
crowds of Galilee – as well as his foes, the competing religious groups
in 1st-century Palestine. In focusing on Jesus’ followers, Meier espies
a primitive organizational structure to his movement that is often
overlooked in New Testament scholarship. Then, by shifting his
magnifying glass to Jesus’ opponents, Meier brings clarity to Jesus’
conflict with the Pharisees and Sadducees. For a fourth and final
volume, he defers his analysis of Jesus' parables, his messianic self
consciousness, his attitude toward Mosaic law and the reasons why he was
crucified.

In Meier’s appraisal, contemporary historic-Jesus scholarship is
divisible into two camps: one which emphasizes the Jewishness of Jesus,
seeking to understand him in light of Judean culture and religious
practice of the 1st century C.E., and another that uses alien frames of
reference, typically socio-economic or politico-nationalistic. As the
title of his series implies, Meier stands solidly with the Jesus-as-1st-
century-Jew party. In Companions and Competitors, he casts himself
explicitly in opposition to members of the Jesus Seminar whose
depictions of Jesus as a social iconoclast, a social revolutionary or
generic Mediterranean peasant obscure his Jewishness. (continued...)


------------------------------------------------------------------------


The Meier Primer
The historical Jesus according to the dean of Catholic scholars

by James A. Bacon

In 1988 John P. Meier sat down with a representative of the Doubleday
publishing company to discuss writing a book about the historical Jesus.
As the conversation unfolded, they assumed the project would be a single
volume. "Little did we imagine it would be a tetralogy," Meier recently
told an audience at Virginia Commonwealth University, whimsically
comparing the resulting product to Wagner's four operas, the Ring of the
Nibelungen.

Fourteen years later, Meier can visualize the end of his epic project.
Having published last year Part 3 of "A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the
Historical Jesus," he has commenced writing the fourth and final volume.
But don't expect to see it any time soon. Meier, a Catholic priest and
professor of theology at the University of Notre Dame, has left the most
intractable problems of historical-Jesus scholarship for last.

Much like Wagnerian opera, the Marginal Jew series may seem endless and

formidably dense to the uninitiated.



But also like the Nibelungenlied, Meier's

Name:

John P. Meier



Title:

Professor of Theology

Affiliation:

University of Notre Dame Department of Theology



Education:

B.A., St. Joseph's Seminary and College (New York), 1964

S.T.L., Gregorian University (Rome), 1968

S.S.D., Biblical Institute (Rome), 1976

Selected Book Titles:

A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus, Vol. 1. The Roots of
the Problem and the Person; 1991.



A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus, Vol. 2. Mentor, Message
and Miracles; 1994.



A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus, Vol. 3. Companions and
Competitors; 1994.



Notre Dame

Web profile



tetralogy is the work of a powerful intellect that will withstand the
test of time. Some of Meiers' peers are proclaiming the Marginal Jew
series the most thorough and comprehensive work of scholarship on the
historical Jesus in this generation. Critics may quarrel with Meier's
reasons for characterizing Jesus as an eschatological prophet, but no
one disputes the extraordinary erudition of his scholarship.

It is axiomatic among contemporary New Testament scholars that Jesus was
a Jew, noted Meier in his April address to the VCU history department.
That represents an advance over the so-called "first" and "second"
quests for the historical Jesus in the 19th- and mid-20th-centuries.
Early scholarship, dominated by German Protestants with strong
theological biases, emphasized Jesus' distinctiveness from a supposedly
legalistic and decaying religion. The great contribution of the current,
"third" quest for the historical Jesus – as exemplified by the work of
Geza Vermes and E.P. Sanders – has been to root him in the mainstream of
1st-century Judaism.

The Jewishness of Jesus is now an academic cliché. But strangely enough,
Meier noted, a number of modern scholars – especially those associated
with the highly publicized Jesus Seminar -- have tendered
interpretations that submerge Jesus' Jewish identity. In recent years,
Jesus has been portrayed as a religious iconoclast, a social
revolutionary, a generic Mediterranean peasant, even an itinerant
philosopher in the mold of the Greek cynics. "To be sure, words like
'Jew' and 'Jewish' adorn the works, and politically correct noises are
made about his Jewishness," said Meier, "but one searches in vain for
treatment of the ways that Jesus interacted with and reacted to other
Jewish groups."

The influence of the Jesus Seminar was pervasive in the popular media
when Meier began writing in the late 1980s. By entitling his work, "A
Marginal Jew," Meier cast himself in opposition to the Seminar, planting
Jesus firmly back in Judaism's mainstream. By employing the adjective
"marginal," he did not mean to imply that Jesus was only marginally
Jewish, but to pose a question, inspired by the style of Jesus' own
riddle-speak and parables, that would focus on Jesus' relationship to
Judaism. Jesus certainly was not marginal in same literal way as those
who dwelled in the desert monastery of Qumran, Meier noted: The
Qumranites deliberately isolated themselves from what they regarded as
the corruption of the Temple cult in Jerusalem. Rather, Jesus was
marginal in the sense that he moved in circles outside the centers of
power and influence. As a Galilean, he lived on the periphery of the
land of Israel. Indeed, he may have marginalized himself politically by
criticizing the Temple priesthood and prophesying the Temple's demise.

The first three volumes of A Marginal Jew endeavor to frame a coherent
answer to the question posed by the title. In Vol. 1, Meier took readers
through a survey of the sources and an explication of his methodology
for determining if a Gospel verse reflects an early source, perhaps
capturing an authentic saying or deed of Jesus. Vol. 2 aimed the
spotlight on Jesus himself, focusing on key sayings and deeds, with
special attention to Jesus' miracles and his relationship to John the
Baptist. Most notably, Meier concluded that Jesus presented himself to
Israel as a prophet of the end of time, patterning himself after the
miracle-working Old Testament prophet Elijah.

In the third volume, Meier said, he deemed it time to "widen the circle
of light" around Jesus. No person is adequately understood in isolation
from others. A charismatic individual such as Jesus is defined largely
by his relationships with his followers and his opponents. In Meier's
estimation, contemporary scholars have often neglected this perspective.
"The full range of Jesus' relationship with Jewish groups has not been a
thrust of modern academic research lionized by the media."

Meier categorizes Jesus' followers in three circles defined by degree of
intimacy with the prophet. The outer circle consisted of the crowds who
flocked around him. The middle circle was comprised of the disciples
called to follow him. An inner circle of the Twelve symbolized his
mission to the 12 tribes of Israel. Like any academic model, Meier
conceded, his scheme does not capture all the nuances. Relationships
were fluid; people moved in and out of different circles. Furthermore,
certain people do not fit into the construct: Think of stay-at-home
disciples such as Martha and Mary. Or think of Mary Magdalene, an ever-
present companion who did not belong to the Twelve.

Jesus was defined as well by those he opposed, Meier noted. Several
Jewish groups competed for power in 1st-century Palestine; religious
influence was a hotly contested commodity. The fact that Jesus persuaded
a number of people to follow him put him in competition with others,
even if he did not engage them directly. The most prominent of these
groups were the Pharisees who, like Jesus, were active among the common
people. The difficulty in dissecting Jesus' interaction with the
Pharisees lies as much with the Pharisees as with Jesus. "The dirty
little secret of New Testament exegesis," said Meier, "is that nobody is
sure who the Pharisees were. … In the end, the quest for the historical
Pharisee is even more difficult than the quest for the historical
Jesus." Data on the Sadducees is even scarcer: The party of the Jewish
aristocracy left no self-descriptive literature.  As Meier observed:
"They were described only by their opponents. We all know the Sadducees
were the bad guys... because their opponents tell us so."

The vast majority of Jews in Palestine shared basic common beliefs,
according to Meier. They worshiped one God, believed that God had a
covenant with the children of Israel, and accepted the Temple in
Jerusalem as God's sanctuary on earth. Most Jews were happy to practice
the basics of their religion: the Sabbath, circumcision, the food laws
and the pilgrimage to the Temple. Whatever their feelings about Annas or
Caiaphas or other high priests in power, they followed the Temple
calendar and liturgy and looked to the priests as the divinely
constituted leaders of their generation. Within the parameters of this
mainstream, there were many expressions of Judaism – of which Jesus'
movement was one. Jesus emerged from the mainstream tradition, Meier
said, and he addressed other Jews within it.

With the first three volumes, Meier said, he has laid the groundwork for
the final book, which explores what he considers to be the four greatest
enigmas posed by the study of Jesus. These include:

Jesus and Jewish law. Scholarly treatment swings between two extremes.
Either Jesus opposed or abolished the Mosaic law, or his attitude toward
the law was largely uncontroversial. Jesus was a devout Jew, Meier said,
but his attitude towards the law – as made clear, among other things, by
his prohibition of divorce and oath taking – was hardly uncontroversial.
Jesus’ parables. Many scholars have used the parables as the starting
point for understanding the historical Jesus. But many have accepted the
parables uncritically, Meier said. Favorites such as the Good Samaritan
and the Prodigal Son get "free passes." He intends to approach the
parables with the same strict criteria of authenticity he has applied to
other Gospel material.
Jesus' self designation. Scholars have been consumed by what kind of
titles – Son of God, Son of man, messiah etc. – that Jesus might have
applied to himself. Meier is not so sure that Jesus had a clear meaning
in mind: He suspects, for example, that he might have used the term "Son
of man" as enigmatic, riddle-speak to tease the mind of the audience
into active thought.
The crucifixion. Why did this Elijah-like prophet from Galilee wind up
crucified in Jerusalem on grounds of claiming to be king of the Jews?
Any reconstruction of the historical Jesus must be judged adequate or
inadequate based on its ability to explain how Jesus came afoul of the
Temple priests and Roman authorities.
Meier still has plenty of questions, but he has reached some firm
conclusions as he nears the end of his task. First, contrary to a number
of theories that would identify him with any of the well-known groups
active in 1st-century Palestine, Jesus was not a Pharisee, Sadducee,
Essene or a Zealot.

Jesus did bear significant similarities to the Pharisees, Meier said.
He, like they, enjoyed a base of support among the common people. Both
shared a desire to call all of Israel to the doing of God's will, and
both believed that God would guide his people to the end of times. Some
scholars perceive a likeness between Jesus and the "liberal," or
tolerant, strain of Hillel: "Do unto others as you would have them do
unto you." Others suggest that his uncompromising attitudes toward
divorce bear greater resemblance to the stricter Pharisaic school of
Shammai.

Unlike the Pharisees who saw God as the principal agent of the end of
time, however, Jesus made himself a key figure in the eschatological
drama. Also, unlike the Pharisees, Jesus performed remarkable deeds. No
individual Pharisee was identified in his own lifetime as a miracle
worker. Furthermore, Pharisees were punctilious in their observance of
tithing, purity laws and temple ritual. Jesus, by contrast, forbade his
disciples from fasting. He was a friend of toll collectors and sinners.
"Jesus loved a good party," Meier observed. Conversely, Jesus also
appears to have been celibate – which the Pharisees certainly were not.

Jesus had even less in common with the Sadducees, a small group
concentrated in Jerusalem and consisting mainly of Temple priests. Jesus
and the Sadducees perhaps would have found common ground in rejecting
the body of oral tradition – the so-called tradition of the elders –
esteemed by the Pharisees. But there is little evidence that they
interacted. In the only encounter between Jesus and the Sadducees
recorded in the Gospels – the incident in which the Sadducees disputed
Jesus' teaching on the resurrection -- the confrontation was marked by
vigorous disagreement, even hostility.

How about the Essenes, or the Qumranites, who are widely held to be
Essenes? Jesus and the dwellers in the Qumran monastery did share an
eschatological mindset, Meier noted: They awaited the coming of God's
Kingdom on earth. Jesus, like the Qumranites, practiced a fiercely
radical moral ethic in anticipation of God's imminent intervention.
Jesus advocated restrictions on divorce and, like some of the Essenes,
apparently practiced celibacy. But while the Qumranites had withdrawn
from the Temple, Jesus regularly attended Temple festivals. For all of
his criticism of the Temple priesthood, he followed their lunar calendar
for dating the festivals. He even participated in the feast of
Channukah, a relatively recent innovation of the Jerusalem priesthood.
Likewise, while the denizens of Qumran practiced an intensive – some
might say obsessive – concern with ritual purity and the Mosaic law that
exceeded even that of the Pharisees, Jesus advocated a more relaxed
view: The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. Far from
focusing on the minutiae of purity rules, Jesus dined with the toll
collectors and outcasts. Finally, noted Meier, Jesus did not display the
scribal proclivity of the Qumran monks to pore over the sacred texts.
Jesus typically spoke on his own authority in a charismatic manner,
rarely citing scriptural justification. The Gospels never once mention
the Essenes or the Qumran community, Meier said. In all probability,
Jesus never spoke of them. "Jesus and Qumran did not occupy the same
spiritual universe."

Meier reserved special scorn for the depiction of Jesus as a
revolutionary Zealot, an image that periodically surfaces in Hollywood
and historical fiction. Serious scholars long ago abandoned the notion,
bandied about in the 1960s, that Jesus advocated the violent overthrow
of the Romans. When Flavius Josephus, whose writings comprise the main
source for 1st-century Palestine, used the term "zealots," he referred
to a group of armed revolutionaries who fought the Romans in the great
uprising of 66 C.E. – 40 years after Jesus was crucified.

There is no hard evidence that any organized armed rebellion against
Rome took place during Jesus' ministry. There were protests and bandits,
but the homeland of the Jews, administered by the Roman governor Pontius
Pilate in Jerusalem and the Jewish potentate Herod Antipas in Galilee,
was relatively pacific, Meier observed. "You can count on one hand the
number of significant protests and demonstrations of passive resistance.
There was not a single instance of armed rebellion." By the standards of
the ancient world, Pontius Pilate, working in collaboration with the
high priest Caiaphas in Jerusalem, did a good job of keeping a lid on
things – in contrast to later governors, who did much worse. "In the
ancient Near East, you had two choices: a cruel and efficient ruler or a
cruel and inefficient ruler. Pilate, Caiaphas and Herod should have been
canonized."

If Jesus wasn't a Pharisee, Sadducee, Essene or Zealot, what kind of Jew
was he? It is a difficult question to answer, Meier said: He combined so
many contradictory roles: He was a prophet, a son of David, a spinner of
parables, an exorcist and a miracle worker. No one of these attributes
was unique. There were other prophets, other teachers, other exorcists,
other wonder workers. But no other figure, Meier said, combined all
these talents.

Despite the uncertainties in New Testament exegesis, the outlines of
Jesus' ministry seem clear enough. He emerged from an obscure and
ordinary life as a woodworker in Nazareth, a hill town in Galilee, then
joined John the Baptist. Jesus broke away to start his own movement,
poaching some of John's disciples, practicing his form of ritual
immersion and preaching his eschatological message. But Jesus emphasized
the good news, that God was coming to save all of Israel. Performing
exorcisms and practicing faith healing, he patterned himself after
another prophet from Northern Israel, the miracle-working Elijah, whom
the Jews associated with the coming kingdom of God. Jesus appointed an
inner circle of 12 disciples symbolizing the 12 tribes of Israel,
reinforcing the idea that salvation would come to all Jews.

Despite the lack of formal training, Jesus taught his own interpretation
of the Mosaic law. He elevated the humanitarian aspects of Judaism to
the fore, preaching a radical ethic of love, mercy and forgiveness. It
is nonsense, as some Christians have done, to suggest that Jesus wanted
to abrogate or nullify the Torah. The Jewish law was a given – "the
sacred canopy" of his teaching, Meier said. Jesus' radical insistence
upon doing God's will completely and without compromise may have
conflicted with other interpretations, particularly the practice of
divorce, but his logic and symbolism were thoroughly Jewish.

Somewhere along the line, Jesus angered the Temple aristocracy. Around
the year 30 C.E., Meier said, Jesus went to Jerusalem in a "make it or
break" confrontation with the people in power. A belief had spread among
his followers that he was descended from King David. After the attack on
the moneychangers in the Temple, Caiaphas and the other high priests
might have seen Jesus as a Davidic claimant and a threat to public
order. Launching a pre-emptive strike, they arrested Jesus before things
got out of control. Pontius Pilate crucified him on the charge of
claiming to be King of the Jews.

What sort of Jew was Jesus? He defied simple categories. He fit no
formulas. But the total pattern, "the gestalt," was unique, Meier said.
Such a conclusion is not entirely satisfying, he conceded. "I can well
imagine Regis Philbin asking, 'Is that your final answer?' … That sort
of answer will have to do for now."

Meier's study of the historical Jesus has consumed more than 14 years.
As a benchmark of his thinking, Meier said, he occasionally refers to an
article he wrote about the historical Jesus for the New Jerome Biblical
Commentary in the mid 1980s. The outlines of his interpretation have
remained consistent, but he has refined his outlook in a number of
areas.

As a result of his inquiries, Meier says, he has elevated the importance
he attaches to John the Baptist as the mentor of Jesus. Also, his
examination of Jesus' miracles led him to the view that Jesus modeled
himself as an Elijah-like prophet of the end time. There were only three
miracle workers in the Old Testament – Moses, Elijah and Elisha. Elijah
was an itinerant prophet from Northern Israel; so was Jesus. Elijah
called a disciple, Elisha, to follow him; Jesus summoned disciples to
follow him. Elijah was expected to return at the end time; Jesus saw
himself as an end-of-time prophet. "That's not where my quest was
supposed to go," Meier said, but the evidence was compelling. "My arms
were twisted to come to that conclusion."

Meier also revised his thinking about the parables. There is no question
that Jesus taught in parables, but there is reason to suspect that many
of his best-loved stories were either invented or altered by the early
church. As he writes his fourth volume of Marginal Jew, he said, he will
rethink the parables from the start.

Meier is modest about his own contribution to the study of the
historical Jesus. He commenced his work around the same time as the
Jesus Seminar. And, though he certainly hadn't intended such when he
began, "in one sense, my work has been a detailed argument against every
single thing the Jesus Seminar ever said." On a more positive note, he
has taken the Jewishness of Jesus with utter seriousness. Previous
quests for the historical Jesus denied his Jewishness or made Judaism a
negative foil against which the positive Jesus could be defined. One of
the delights of working at Notre Dame has been the ability to
collaborate with "an incredibly international, ecumenical group" of
Catholics and Protestants -- and Jews. If he can advance the appreciate
of Jesus as a Jew, Meier said, it's all the contribution he could hope
for.

As Meier winds up his study of the historical Jesus, he is looking
forward to future projects. His next project will focus on the Gospel of
Matthew. After that, he may return to the historical Jesus. He has kept
his historical study "militantly untheological," he said, but he looks
forward to engaging in theology. "I'll begin dialoguing with my
theological colleagues and ask if they see [the historical Jesus] as
useful for contemporary Christology."


-- May 1, 2002









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