University of St Andrews
St Mary’s College (Faculty of Divinity)
Inaugural Lecture
by the Right
Reverend Professor N. T. Wright
Research Professor of New Testament and
Early Christianity
5.15 pm, October 26 2011
‘Imagining the Kingdom: Mission and
Theology in Early Christianity’
The four gospels stand magisterially at
the head of the canon and the centre of early
Christianity. They are remarkable documents. If they had been lost for
centuries, and then dug up last year in the sands of Egypt, they would be
hailed as among the most extraordinary writings from antiquity. Despite the occasional efforts to push them
out of their central position and substitute other documents, whether actually
existing (such as the wrongly named Gospel of Thomas) or reconstructed
(such as the hypothetical document ‘Q’), the majority of scholars still
believe, rightly in my view, that Matthew, Mark, Luke and John deserve their
place. The fact that they are well known should not blind us to their
remarkable blend of page-turning narrative, vivid portraiture (especially of
their central figure), historical verisimilitude and sophisticated theology.
And yet. Reversing what
St Paul says about himself, the gospels, though well known
at one level, are unknown at another. An oversimplification, of course; but I
refer to the overall drift of gospel studies, and to the perception of the
gospels in the church community to which biblical studies remains tangentially,
and sometimes uncomfortably, related. Huge strides have been made, not least by
my predecessor but one, Professor Richard Bauckham,
both in his work on the wide intended readership of the gospels and in his
award-winning book on the gospels and the eyewitnesses. If he is even half
right – and I think he is at least that – then all kinds of assumptions, including
some of those blessed things they used to call ‘the assured results of
criticism’, will need to be torn up. But we need to go further still. Despite
generations now of redaction criticism and narrative criticism, I am not
convinced that the main message of the gospels has been grasped, let alone
reflected in the methods employed for further study. And since I shall contend
in this lecture that the four gospels stand at the centre
of the missionary and hence theological life of the early church,
a failure to understand their central thrust is most likely an index of a
failure to grasp several other things as well about the life and work of the
first Christians.
I am not being alarmist. Fine work in
many directions has been done on the gospels, a generation ago by another
predecessor, Matthew Black of blessed memory. And of course Robin Wilson, of
more recent memory, contributed much to our understanding of the early
Christian hinterland within which the gospels and their early reception must be
understood. But there comes a time in every discipline to take a deep breath,
stand back, and say, ‘Well and good; but perhaps we’re
still missing something.’ That’s when we need, not simply more attention to
detail, vital and central though that remains, but precisely imagination:
a willingness to think beyond the fence, to ask questions hitherto screened
out. And, to complete the list of recent predecessors, Markus Bockmuehl in his short stay here published a remarkable
book, Seeing the Word, offering an eloquent
and wide-ranging plea for just such an imaginative leap, a reassessment of the
tasks and methods of the whole discipline. That is the kind of exercise which I
want to share with you this afternoon, with due gratitude both for the
invitation to occupy this chair and for the warm welcome I have received in St
Mary’s College and in the wider University community. (It occurs to me that
within this succession it has been over fifty years since someone was appointed
whose name didn’t begin with either a B or a W. Make of that what you will.)
My remarks will fall into three
sections. First, I shall propose a fresh thesis about the gospels, stressing
the way in which they summoned their first readers to imagine a new state of
affairs being launched into the world, a state of affairs for which the obvious
shorthand was ‘the kingdom of God’. This might seem obvious, but the history of
gospel scholarship has included many avoidance mechanisms, drawing attention
away from the gospels’ uncomfortable claim. Thus, in the second section, I want
to pull back and survey the wider intellectual and cultural climate in which
the discipline of ‘New Testament Studies’ was born and nurtured, and suggest
that the failure to grasp the central message of the gospels flows directly
from various philosophical and cultural agendas which have dominated the
discipline. This will send us back, third, to the gospels and the other New
Testament writings, to look afresh at early Christian mission and the theology
which grew up to support and explain it.
1. How God Became King: The Story of the
Gospels
My proposal about the gospels is that
they all, in their rather different ways, tell the story of Jesus of Nazareth
as the story of how God became king. They all, in other words, announce the
launch of a ‘theocracy’. Research into the gospels has, by and large, managed
to screen out this claim, which would have been obvious in the first century
and which sustained the early church in its life and mission.
The word ‘theocracy’, of course, sends
shivers down many spines today. In our current climate, with the uneasy
stand-off between secularism and fundamentalism, the idea of ‘theocracy’ sounds
uncomfortably like a return to what people vaguely imagine as the situation of
the Middle Ages, with popes, bishops and priests ordering everyone about – or,
indeed, to the forms of theocracy envisaged and sometimes even implemented in
other religions today. (When I was lecturing in Ireland recently, someone asked
me to comment on the fact that only two countries in the world have clergy
sitting as of right in the upper chamber of Parliament: the UK on the one hand
and Iran on the other.) Most modern westerners, not least in our great
universities, react to this very strongly, upholding freedom both of action and
of thought. Theocracy is what we thought we’d got rid of, not something we
wanted to discover in some of the western tradition’s most cherished central
texts.
But ‘theocracy’, in a sense yet to be
defined, is of course what is meant by ‘the kingdom of God’, which the synoptic
gospels highlight at the central motif of Jesus’ public announcements and which
the fourth gospel presupposes as his central theme (the first time we meet it
in John it seems to be assumed that this is what Jesus is all about). We know
from Josephus that the revolutionaries, in the last century before the
disastrous Roman-Jewish war, took as their battle-cry the slogan ‘no king but
God!’ Presumably they thought they knew how God would exercise that kingly
rule. Probably they imagined themselves having some role as divine agents. But
we should not doubt that ‘God’s kingdom’ denoted the long-awaited rule of
Israel’s God on earth as in heaven. The widespread assumption today that ‘the
kingdom of God’ denotes another realm altogether, for instance that of the
‘heaven’ to which God’s people might hope to go after their death, was not on
the first-century agenda. When Jesus spoke about God’s kingdom, and taught his
followers to pray that it would arrive ‘on earth as in heaven’, he was right in
the middle of first-century Jewish theocratic aspirations.
So when the gospels tell the story of
Jesus as the story of ‘how God became king’, this wasn’t just an aspiration; it
was an accomplishment. We can see this in three narratival
strands which work together in all four gospels (though not, interestingly, in
any of the non-canonical gnostic materials). As with this whole lecture, I here
summarize and simplify a large mass of complex material.
The three strands in question come in
addition to, not in competition with, the two more normally observed. First,
the gospels are biographies: gone are the days when people could confidently
deny that. Several studies have
indicated the reverse: when placed alongside Greco-Roman bioi,
the four canonical gospels clearly belong in something like the same genre.
Second, the gospels reflect the life of the early church. How precisely they do
that is another matter; that they do so is not in question. But the further
three further dimensions have all too often been missing from the discussion.
And these – which all interlock – explain what God’s kingdom is all about.
The first of these missing dimensions is
that the four canonical gospels tell the story of Jesus as the continuation
and climax of the ancient story of Israel. To say this is more than to
say that the gospels portray Jesus as the fulfilment
of ancient prophecy. That is obvious. It is the kind of fulfilment that matters here. In the wider Jewish world of
the day, some people were telling the longer story of Israel was being told in
search of an ending; the gospels are written in order to provide such an
ending. What matters, though it cuts right against the grain of modern western
thought, is the idea of narrative continuity. Not just ‘narrative’ as
such; that might lead simply to a repeated pattern, which we naturally find as
well, for instance in the strong sense of a ‘new exodus’, the fresh and final
repetition of ancient Israel’s greatest story. That is important, but it points
beyond itself to the belief that all these repeated patterns were part of a
larger sequence that was going somewhere. History might be in some sense
cyclic, but the cycles contributed to a forward, linear movement. Thus the book
we call Pseudo-Philo tells the ancient story of Israel and breaks off at the
point where David is about to become king. Its recounting of the tales of the
Judges seem to be designed as a model for militant
messianic movements in the writer’s own day. The book of Wisdom recounts the
story of the Exodus, not simply as a great historic moment in Israel’s ancient
past, but as the model for the new and decisive act of judgment which Israel’s
God is about to perform, condemning the wicked and vindicating his wise and
righteous sufferers. At that level, despite the radical difference of genre, we
find something similar in 4 Ezra and 2 Baruch, who look back to the horrible
events of 586 BC as a kind of model for what they have experienced in AD 70,
and retell the ancient story as a way of leading the eye up to the great
messianic deliverance which is about to burst upon the world, with (in 4 Ezra’s
vision) the messianic lion triumphing over the pagan eagle.
All of these, in their different ways,
look back to the scriptures, and particularly the book
of Daniel, with its intriguing combination of wisdom and apocalyptic. In fact,
the storytelling we have just glanced at belongs within a much larger movement
of thought in which Daniel 9 in particular became seminal. In Daniel 9 the
prophet asks how long the exile is going to be: will it not, as Jeremiah
prophesied, last for seventy years? Back comes the answer: not seventy years,
but seventy times seven. There are important echoes here of the Jubilee theme
from Leviticus 25, but for our purposes the point is that this predicted 490
years haunted the minds of devout Jews in the centuries immediately before and
after the time of Jesus. There is plenty of evidence to indicate that people
were calculating, as best they could, when that time would be up, and when the
long-awaited deliverance from pagan domination would therefore occur. Their
answers varied wildly. The Essenes, it appears, pinned their hopes on the
climax coming around the time when Herod the Great died. Some Rabbis, however,
did their sums quite differently (it all depends, of course, where you begin
the sequence), so that when Akiba hailed Simeon ben Kosiba as Messiah in AD 132 some of his colleagues opposed
him, not so much because ben Kosiba was not a
suitable candidate but because, according to their calculations, the Son of
David was not due for at least another century. All of this, interesting though
it is, simply points to the widespread phenomenon which is, I suggest, the
presupposition for the story the gospels tell in the way they tell it: that
Israel’s history, under the guidance of a strange and often opaque divine
providence, had not come to a standstill, but was moving forward towards its
appointed goal. The story has many twists and turns, many flashbacks and indeed
flash-forwards, advance hints of what is to come. But it is a single storyline,
still awaiting its proper and fitting fulfilment.
My first point, then, is that all four gospels, in their
different ways, are written so as to say that the story of the public career
and fate of Jesus of Nazareth provides that proper and fitting, if highly
surprising and subversive, fulfilment. Jesus is not,
for the evangelists, simply the antitype of the various types such as Moses, or
David, or the Passover lamb. He is the point at which the millennia-long
narrative has reached its goal. Matthew makes the point, graphically, with his
introductory genealogy. Mark does it with his opening quotations from Malachi
and Isaiah; Luke, by telling the story of John the Baptist as a reprise of the
story of Samuel. (They do it in many other ways, too, but these stand out.)
John goes right back to the beginning, to the opening of Genesis, and
structures his gospel so as to say that in Jesus not only the story of Israel
but the story of all creation is reaching its decisive goal. And in all four
gospels there are clear echoes and references back, in a variety of ways and
contexts, to the various prophecies of Daniel, including those of chapter 9. It
is in Daniel, of course, that we find the strongest statement of what the
climax will be, when it comes: it will be the arrival of God’s own kingdom, his
sovereign rule, trumping the rule of all pagan powers. And it is to Daniel that
we should look to find the text which, according to Josephus (echoed at this point
by Suetonius), most incited Jews to rebel against Rome: the text according to
which a world ruler would, at that time, arise from Judaea (Jewish
War 6.312-3; cf. Antiquities 10.267, where Josephus singles out
Daniel as the only prophet who gave an exact chronology for when his
predictions would come to pass). Josephus and Suetonius, of course, refer this
to Vespasian, called back from the campaign against Jerusalem to become Emperor
in Rome. The four gospels, clearly, have another candidate in mind. And, for that matter, a different sort of kingdom. But to
that we shall return.
There is of course much more that could
be said about the way in which the four gospels tell the story of Jesus as the
climax of the continuous story of Israel, with the kingdom of God arriving at
that climax. But I move rapidly to the second point, which is that the gospels
tell this story as the story of Israel’s God. In the world of second-Temple
Judaism there was a strong sense, not just that Israel’s fortunes needed to
change, but that Israel’s God needed to come back to his people, to the temple.
Ezekiel had described the divine glory leaving Jerusalem, and had prophesied
that it would return to a rebuilt temple, but nobody ever said they’d seen it
happen. There is no scene anywhere in the literature of the period to
correspond to Exodus 40, where the divine glory fills the newly constructed
tabernacle, or 1 Kings 8, where the same thing happens to Solomon’s Temple.
There is no sudden appearance, as was granted to the prophet Isaiah. Plenty of
texts say that it will happen (I think, obviously, of Isaiah 40 and 52, the two
biblical passages, interestingly, where the word ‘gospel’ occurs; of Zechariah
and Malachi), but none indicate that it already has. And here the four evangelists
are quite explicit. John is perhaps the most obvious: ‘the word became flesh,’
he says, ‘and tabernacled, pitched his tent, in our
midst; and we beheld his glory.’ In case we missed the point, John rubs it in
again and again. Mark, outwardly so different to John, hits the same note with
those opening quotations from Isaiah and Malachi. Both passages concern the
return of the divine glory, and the messenger who will prepare for it. Mark
leaves us in no doubt that he thinks it has now happened, in and through Jesus.
Matthew and Luke in their own ways get at the same point, Matthew not least
with the Emmanuel promise and Luke not least through the terrifying scene in
chapter 19 where Jesus, arriving in Jerusalem, tells the story about the king
who comes back at last, and then announces Jerusalem’s imminent destruction
because ‘you did not know the moment when God was visiting you’ (to;n
kairo;n th'~ ejpiskoph'~ sou).
I
hope you see that this puts the cat among several older critical pigeons. I
grew up in a scholarly world where it was taken for granted that while John had
a high, most probably Greek, Christology, the synoptics
had a low, most probably Jewish one. That only shows the extent to which people
were asking the wrong question in the wrong framework. Once we think
first-century Jewishly, a
different picture emerges. To the old sneer, that Jesus talked about God but
the early church talked about Jesus, we may reply that Jesus did indeed talk
about God and God’s kingdom – in order to explain what he himself was doing and
would accomplish.
Israel’s
stories normally confronted, not other Jews, but the might of pagan empire. If
the gospels bring this story to a climax, it shouldn’t surprises us to find –
this is my third main point – that they are all written to tell the story of
Jesus as the story of Israel, and of Israel’s God, reaching their proper
climax, so as thereby to tell the story
of how Israel’s God becomes king of the whole world. This is the clue to
the mission, and the missionary theology, of the early church, to which I shall
return.
Think
of the other narrative which had exploded around the time that Jesus was born.
The intellectual coup d’état which Augustus accomplished through his court
poets and historians was every bit as stunning as the political coup he
achieved in the double civil war that followed the Julius Caesar’s
assassination. Everybody in Rome knew that Augustus’s attaining of supreme and
unchallengeable power meant the overthrow of a centuries-long tradition of
fierce republicanism (Augustus, of course, insisted that he had merely restored
the republic, but nobody was fooled). But for Livy to tell the history of Rome
through the long years of the Republic and climaxing with the rule of Augustus,
with whom he had a lasting friendship, was a remarkable achievement. Scholars
differ on the extent to which Livy himself believed that the rule of Augustus
was an unqualified good thing, and Tacitus records (Annals 4.34) that in one of the later, and sadly lost, books of his
great work Livy felt able to praise the conspirators Brutus and Cassius. But he
knew which side his bread was buttered on, as is evidenced for instance by his
distorting of key political details to suit the new regime (e.g. 4.20, where
Livy suggests that Cornelius Cossus was consul, not
merely a military tribune, when celebrating his single-handed victory over an
enemy commander four centuries earlier, thus supporting Augustus’s jealous
retaining of military glory for himself in his own day).
But
the greatest writer to tell the long story of Rome as a history leading the eye
up to Augustus was Virgil. His early Eclogues
refer to the turbulent events of the civil war, and include the mysterious
fourth, hailing the birth of a child who will usher in the golden age. Virgil
read the Georgics to Augustus in
person after his victory at Actium in 31 BC; and he was regularly in the
company of Augustus during the years in which he composed the Aeneid itself,
the greatest poem of the period. Here there is, as is well known, a ‘strong
narrative teleology’ (OCD 1606),
invoking ‘Fate’ as the force which will lead Aeneas to found Rome and Rome to
produce, eventually, the wonderful new empire of Augustus. Already in the first
Book the scene is set, with Jupiter himself prophesying to the world, back then
in the time of Aeneas, that from his noble line there will be born ‘a Trojan
Caesar, who shall extend his empire to the ocean, his glory to the stars’
(1.286f.). His empire will be lavishly prosperous, and will bring peace to the
world (1.289-95). Aeneas himself is seen as a type of the coming Augustus, an
indication that here, too, typology can flourish within an overall grand
narrative. I am not aware of any monarch before Augustus causing the story of
his own accession to be told as the climax of a much longer narrative.
When
these three points are grasped together, we observe a remarkable phenomenon.
There is no sign that the Romans are borrowing from Jewish tradition the idea
of a thousand-year history climaxing in a surprising but victorious, prosperous
and peace-bringing reign. Nor is there any suggestion that Matthew, Mark, Luke
or John had read Livy or Virgil. But their story of Jesus as bringing the long
history of Israel to an unexpected climax offered a remarkable parallel to the
great Roman narrative, which Augustus and his successors were busily
reinforcing in statues, coins and other symbolic artefacts.
It was bound to be set on a collision course. The Jews, too, had cherished a
prophecy about a coming king whose peaceful rule would extend from one sea to
the other, from the River to the ends of the earth (Psalm 89; Zechariah 9). And
the four evangelists declare that this king has arrived, and that his name is
Jesus. It is not surprising – to anticipate a later point – that we find the
early church accused, in northern Greece which was such key terrain for the
early Empire, of behaving contrary to the dogmas of Caesar, and saying that
there was ‘another king [basilea heteron],
namely Jesus’ (Acts 17.7).
Rome
is, of course, scarcely mentioned in the four gospels. Yet, for those with
first-century ears attuned, its presence is everywhere presupposed. John’s
great climactic scene of Jesus and Pilate – the kingdom of God against the
kingdom of Caesar, challenging one another’s visions of kingdom, truth and
power – shows where, for him, the story was heading all along. Luke stages the
birth of Jesus carefully in relation to the decree of Caesar Augustus, and his
second volume ends with Paul in Rome announcing God as king and Jesus as lord,
‘openly and unhindered’. Matthew and Mark draw heavily on Daniel 7, the passage
above all where God’s kingdom confronts and overthrows the kingdoms of the
world, seen as a succession of four increasingly horrible monsters. There is no
doubt, in the first century, that the fourth monster would have meant Rome. And
if recent suggestions are right, Mark himself may have deliberately framed his
gospel with strong hints that in Jesus an empire was coming to birth of a
completely different character to that of Caesar. A current article (NTS 2010) contrasts the dove which
descended on Jesus at his baptism with the Roman eagle, appearing as an omen to
further the cause of Augustus or his successors. And an increasingly common
interpretation of Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem is to see that event
not only as the staged fulfilment of Zechariah 9 but
also as a deliberate parody of the regular entry into Jerusalem of Pontius
Pilate, on horseback surrounded by soldiers, coming from his quarters in
Caesarea.
Whether
or not that is correct, we should certainly see the muttered remark of the
centurion at the foot of the cross as vital. Mark hopes that his Roman readers
will come to share this astonishing viewpoint. In a world where Caesar,
unambiguously, was hailed as ‘son of God’, the centurion looks at the dead
Jesus and transfers the title to him. It is the point where all the lines meet
– the lines that run from Abraham, David and the exile; the lines that run from
2 Samuel 7, Psalm 2 and Psalm 72; the lines that run from Exodus 40 to 1 Kings
8 and Ezekiel 43; and, above all, from Isaiah 40—55 all the way into the
mindset of Jesus himself and the interpretative work of the evangelists. The
story told by all four gospels is the story of How God Became King: not by the
usual means of military revolution, but by the inauguration of sovereignty
during Jesus’ public career, and the strange but decisive victory on the cross
itself. All four report that Jesus was executed with the words ‘king of the
Jews’ over his head; and, as they all knew though many scholars have long
forgotten, the ancient Jewish dream was that the king of the Jews would be king
of the world. Of course: if Israel’s God was the creator of the world, one
would expect nothing less. And what the four evangelists are asking their
readers to do, as they ponder this strange multi-layered narrative, is
precisely to imagine: to imagine that
this, rather than something else, is
what it would look like when God became king. Along with music and the visual
arts, narrative is a primary human means of stimulating the imagination. And
this is precisely, I suggest, what the four gospels are aiming to do.
These
are the themes which I see prominently in the gospels but not so prominently in
contemporary scholarship. Indeed, much of the effort expended on the gospels
over the last hundred years and more has been directed, not towards grappling
with these issues, but precisely towards holding them at bay. Narrative and
imagination have been at a discount; the mechanical study of dismembered
fragments has been the rule. Most of the much-vaunted ‘methods’ proposed in
gospel scholarship have been generated from within a world where all that I
have just said has been ignored. Such methods are not neutral; they reflect the
underlying assumptions of their makers, and I am suggesting that those
underlying assumptions were deeply flawed. But why should this have been so? To try to understand that I turn to the second main section of my
lecture.
2. Avoiding the Kingdom: The Story of
Biblical Scholarship
If we
are to engage with our predecessors as historical critics of the New Testament
we must contextualize them in the climate of thought in which they lived. An
obvious example, not least in connection with dismembered fragments, is the
great German Rudolf Bultmann. He was himself keenly
aware of his own presuppositions, though many of his followers, not least in
the UK and America, treated his work as the objective results of neutral
scholarship. Anything but: he was writing his major work on the gospels at a
time when, after the First World War and the demise of the Kaiser and other
‘great men’, Germany was trying to become simply a ‘community’, a Gemeinde, in the
Weimar Republic. What did Bultmann do? He wrote about
the gospels as the collections of stories which die Gemeinde, the ‘community’, told
amongst themselves to sustain their present faith, not at all intending reference
to a recently departed ‘great man’, except for the sheer fact of his
crucifixion. No thought of ‘kingdom’ there in any sense that a first-century
Jew might recognise.
But
that observation is simply the tip of the iceberg. So, too, is the necessary warning
issued a generation ago by Hans Frei, that for much
of the last two centuries narrative itself has been ‘eclipsed’ in biblical
scholarship, which had regarded stories as secondary and looked instead for
nuggets of doctrinal and ethical teaching. (We might compare the recent
anti-Bible put out by the philosopher A. C. Grayling, which despite its attempt
to parody the actual Bible, with its chapter-headings and its ‘verses’,
consists of no narrative at all, but only wise sayings and advice.) But, again,
one has to ask why. This is a question which demands a multi-volume answer. All
I can do here is to put two or three items on the table for further discussion.
I shall once again oversimplify. My aim is to stimulate the disciplined
imagination.
First,
ever since the Renaissance the implicit narrative of western culture has
included a fracture. There is the good early period; then there is the bad or
boring middle period; then there is the sudden reawakening, the shining of a
great light, in which we retrieve the good early period – or some of it, anyway
– in a newly formed culture or worldview. Thus the Renaissance itself, fed up
with what was seen as the stodgy and unimaginative categories of the late Middle Ages, saw itself as breaking with the immediate past
and retrieving an earlier golden age. The Reformation, in its turn, went back
not (of course) to the Renaissance’s pagan sources but to the Bible and the
early fathers, though largely agreeing about the dark middle period from which
one needed a clean break. The Enlightenment, some of whose seeds were sown in
both the Renaissance and the Reformation, constantly tends to portray
everything before it as ignorant superstition, hailing modern science and
technology as the signs of the brave new world which enable us to draw an even
thicker line between ourselves and our predecessors, retrieving only those bits
and pieces of earlier wisdom which may commend themselves from time to time.
One
way or another, though, all these great movements have contained an implicit
(and often explicit) narrative in which what one precisely does not want is
continuity. Within Protestantism in particular – and until fairly recently most
of the running in biblical scholarship was made by Protestants of one stripe or
another – the sense of a major break in the narrative is deeply important.
Anything else might signal, at least by implication, that the Catholics had
been right all along, even though ostensibly the story being told would have
been about the first century rather than the sixteenth. There has, then, been
deep visceral resistance to any idea of a continuous narrative, and this itself
has greatly impeded a recognition of what the gospels
were actually doing.
Second,
however, the movement of thought from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment can
be characterized especially by the major revival of Epicureanism. Ever since Poggio Bracciolini rediscovered
Lucretius’s great poem De Rerum Natura in an obscure
European monastery in 1417 – exactly a century before Luther’s supposed
rediscovery of Paul’s theology led him to nail his thesis to the Wittenberg
door – the great alternative philosophy of the first century (alternative, that
is, to the otherwise dominant Stoicism) had been making its way in European
circles (see now Stephen Greenblatt, The
Swerve: How the Renaissance Began [London: The Bodley
Head, 2011]). It came to its full flowering with the thinkers of the
Enlightenment, taking in such seminal figures as Giordani
Bruno, Montaigne, Galileo, Bacon, Hobbes, Newton, Hume and, not least, Thomas
Jefferson, who famously proclaimed ‘I am an Epicurean’. (That claim has to be
taken seriously, despite Jefferson’s attempts to have his cake and eat it by
also noting his admiration for Epictetus, a first-century Stoic, and of course
for Jesus himself; the latter two being subject to Jefferson’s own rather
heavy-handed attempts to decontextualize them and present the cleaned-up
results in a way that sustained his other agendas rather than undermining them,
as left to themselves they might have done.) The point is that in Epicurean
philosophy, over against the confused and frightening paganism of the ancient
world and the confused and frightening religion of the middle ages, the gods
are removed far away, off to a distant heaven from which they don’t even bother
to get involved in the affairs of the present world. The world itself,
according to the first-century atomism of Lucretius, consists of, well, atoms,
and the objects made up of them, moving under their own steam, without divine
intervention, developing and transforming themselves according to their own
energy, their innate ‘swerve’ (clinamen, a crucial Epicurean term), and the survival of the
fittest. Darwinism before Darwin. Human society,
likewise, should be able to order itself from within, needing no divine
intervention whether through kings or priests or anybody else. The modern
movement of liberal democracy is thus the twin sister of modern atheistic
science, sharing Lucretius as the primary ancestor and the Enlightenment
philosophers as immediate parents. Biblical scholarship as we know it today was
born in a world where the gods had been banished far away, a world in which
humans and their societies moved under their own steam.
The
majority of westerners today simply do not realise
either that they are Epicureans by default or that Epicureanism was always only
one philosophy among others. As a young theologian I was taught that the
Enlightenment had opened up a new saeculum (as indeed the American dollar bill declares to
this day), and that we could not think of challenging it. That, of course, was
the shrill protest that presaged the arrival of postmodernity, when the old
Enlightenment certainties were shaken to the core. But people usually do not realise that the Epicurean stance of separating God or the
gods from the world was always simply one option; that it was always an
unstable option (since the gods always tended to sneak back in by other means,
as in the Romantic movement’s pantheistic answer to Enlightenment rationalism),
that it was always a costly option, easier to embrace if you were rich and
healthy enough to enjoy the Epicurean lifestyle. But the most important point
is that this unstable and costly option was always going to be a very bad
framework for understanding the Jewish traditions, especially the New Testament
itself.
Now
of course, as a historian I believe that people with all kinds of different
worldviews can and should study the evidence of the past and offer what
interpretations they can of it, and particularly – the heart of good history –
what made people tick. As the great contemporary historian Asa
Briggs has written in his recent account of his time at Bletchley Park, what
made young historians such good codebreakers is that
they were ‘well read, drawn to lateral thinking, and taught to get inside the
mind of people totally different from themselves’ (Secret Days p 78). But there’s the point. To use the
anthropologist’s jargon, historians of whatever background and context ought to
have a stab at offering an etic
account of the societies they are studying, that is, an outsider’s fair
analysis of the phenomena before them. But, as with anthropology, so with
history, the insidious pressure is there to provide what purports to be an emic account – an account of how the
people themselves actually thought – but which is in fact the
etic one in disguise. And
when, in the case of Enlightenment historiography, the etic account was offered from within Epicurean principles, the
chance of getting anywhere near the emic
account that first-century Jews (including the early Christians) might have
offered was severely reduced. In fact, within the Epicurean worldview Judaism
was reduced, first, to being a ‘religion’ (the word ‘religion’ itself having been
already severely redefined to reflect Epicurean principles, now meaning ‘that
which humans do with their solitude’), and then to being the wrong sort of religion (since it persisted, perversely from the
Epicurean point of view, in believing that the real world of creation, and
human actions within it, actually mattered as part of the whole). Those who
embraced the Enlightenment but sought still to be good Christians thus
portrayed themselves in a different light. Martin Luther’s Protestantism, in
which Paul rose and smote the wicked Judaizers, came to birth in a new form, as Christianity had to become
unJewish in order to hold up its head in European
culture. I’m talking here about the 1830s, not yet the 1930s. Religion and
ordinary life had to be kept as far apart as possible. The French went all the
way with the Enlightenment agenda, and tried to wipe out religion entirely – as
they are still trying to do, with the banning of Muslim headscarves. The
Americans compromised, and insisted on a rigid separation of church and state:
you could still be a Christian, but you’d better not bring it into public life.
The English, as usual, looked this way and that, took a pragmatic approach, and
muddled along. As a newcomer, I had better not try to describe what happened in
Scotland, though the simultaneous influence of John Knox and David Hume offers
an interesting legacy. As for Ireland, I am reminded of the remark of my good
friend the Irish American biblical scholar Dominic Crossan,
who said that the Irish never really got the Enlightenment, but they got the
British instead, which they found most enlightening in other ways. But my point
is this: Epicureanism, and its social and political outworkings,
may or may not be the best way for us today to organise
our world. I would argue not, but that’s not the point. But it is certainly not
a good framework for us to understand the world of the early Christians.
The
discipline has reflected this, on both sides of various great debates. The
fateful Enlightenment split between the gods and the world has generated a new
meaning for words like ‘natural’ and ‘supernatural’. It is now widely believed
by would-be Christian apologists that part of the task is to defend something
called ‘the supernatural’, in which a normally distant divinity invades the
‘natural’ world to perform ‘miracles’ or even, in the Christian story, to
become human. But this merely reinscribes and
perpetuates the Epicureanism which still serves as the framework for the
discussion. Thus, in the study of the gospels, so-called ‘liberals’ have done
their best to offer would-be historical accounts in which Jesus was ‘really’ a
Jewish revolutionary or teacher or apocalyptic prophet (the notion of
‘apocalyptic’ itself, by the way, has suffered radically through this process,
but that’s another story), while the so-called ‘conservatives’ have done their
best to offer a historical account in which Jesus really was a ‘supernatural’
being who really did do miracles and rise from the dead. And since in my own
work I have done my best to counter some of the revisionist proposals it might
be easy to suppose I was simply taking the latter path. Rather, I want to
insist that to understand the first Christians we must understand the radical
difference between the ancient Jewish worldview and the ancient Epicurean
worldview (remembering not least that one of the sharpest insults a Rabbi could
offer to heretics was to call them apikorsim, Epicureans). In the ancient Jewish worldview, the
one God was not removed from the world, but was mysteriously present and active
within it, at least in theory, so that if he remained absent, as in the
second-Temple period, there was precisely a sense of that absence. And the
modes of his presence and activity were concentrated on the major Jewish
symbols: Temple, Torah, land, family, and not least the great narrative which
was continuing and would be fulfilled even though it might have seemed for the
moment, like a submerged stream, to be running underground. This was the air
Jesus and his first followers breathed. And the task of describing, from an emic viewpoint, the mindset and
motivation of the earliest Christians is thus one for which the Epicurean
worldview is singularly badly suited. And to the extent that the movement of
nineteenth-century biblical scholarship was done from within that Enlightenment
framework, in its various forms owing much to Kant, Hegel and later Feuerbach,
it was bound to misunderstand and misrepresent what the earliest Christians
were about. And since some of the nineteenth-century proposals are still alive
and well, kept alive by the sheer inertia of a complex discipline long after
their sell-by date, we still find ourselves facing categories like ‘Jewish
Christian’ and ‘Gentile Christian’, like ‘Early Catholicism’ and ‘apocalyptic’,
which actually demand such radical overhaul that it might be better to draw our
own heavy line across the false Heilsgeschichte of triumphalist scholarship, and try to
start again.
There
is another element to all this which I just mention before turning to my final
point about the cultural context of modern biblical scholarship. Much of this
work has been done within the Lutheran tradition. But, for all its strengths,
the Lutheran world has long embraced a ‘two kingdoms’ theology in which God and
Caesar simply won’t mix. When coupled with the Enlightenment’s Epicureanism,
this has produced several generations of scholarship in which, for instance, it
is off limits to imagine that Paul might have regarded Jesus as the Messiah,
with all the overtones of world sovereignty that word carried. The general
scholarly view has colluded with the general popular view of western
Christianity, that the purpose of the whole thing is to go to heaven when you
die rather than discerning, ‘imagining’ shall we say, the kingdom of God on
earth as in heaven and working for that end. Of course, liberation theology and
its various exegetical offshoots have offered a rival view. But, as with the
so-called ‘conservative’ reaction, this has often simply maintained the split
world of the Enlightenment, proposing (for instance) that Paul was ‘really’ a
politician and therefore not really a
theologian after all. Similar things might be said about some of the work,
important in its own way, that has gone under the
umbrella of ‘sociology’ or ‘anthropology’. From the post-Enlightenment
standpoint, this appears to be on the ‘worldly’ side of the divide while God,
or the gods, remain elsewhere. From the Jewish and early Christian perspective,
such a division already gives in to one version of the paganism which both were
determined to resist.
One
final element of our modern world which has militated against imagining the
kingdom in our reading of the gospels, and much else besides, is the triumph of
left-brain thinking over right-brain thinking. This has been massively and
memorably set out by Iain McGilchrist in his
breathtaking book The Master and his
Emissary. McGilchrist has of course inevitably
been criticized from within his own field; he is both a brain scientist and a
literary critic, and as such has a unique perspective on the history of ideas,
though some of his fellow scientists insist that the left/right distinction is
not nearly so hard and fast as his book (despite frequent disclaimers and
modifications) might indicate. But, whatever caveats may be needed at the level
of the study of the physical brain, as I read his account of the way in which,
in the last three centuries, the apparently left-brain activities of analysing, calculating and organising
have steadily taken charge of our world, squeezing out the apparently
right-brain activities of imagination, story-telling, and intuitive thinking, I
find it uncannily accurate as a description of our world in general and of
biblical scholarship in particular.
McGilchrist
argues on the basis of brain science itself, in fact, that our brains are
designed to work in a two-way movement: from the right brain, with its initial
intuitions, metaphors and imagination, to the left brain which works on the
detail, and back to the right brain again to engage with the real world. The
right brain is thus the ‘master’, and the left brain the ‘emissary’, working at
its best within the framework given by the right and intending to pass the
results back across. But, as with some observable pathologies (not least
schizophrenia), the left brain has taken over, and we live (says McGilchrist) in a world in which the master has been
betrayed.
McGilchrist does
not refer to the world of biblical scholarship, but the following paragraph
jumped out at me as a pretty accurate summary of how the discipline has often
gone:
‘We
could expect’ (he writes) ‘that there would be a loss of the broader picture,
and a substitution of a more narrowly focussed,
restricted, but detailed, view of the world, making it perhaps difficult to
maintain a coherent overview . . . This in turn would promote the substitution
of information, and information gathering, for knowledge, which comes through
experience . . . One would expect the left hemisphere to keep doing refining
experiments on detail, at which it is exceedingly proficient, but to be
correspondingly blind to what is not clear or certain, or cannot be brought
into focus right in the middle of the visual field. In fact one would expect a
sort of dismissive attitude to anything outside of its limited focus, because
the right hemisphere’s take on the whole picture would simply not be available
to it.’ (428f.)
I recognise this picture. Having worked for the Church of
England for nearly twenty years, I recognise it as an
account of what has happened, damagingly, to our institutions. Whether it has
happened in the universities too, in the years I have been absent, I couldn’t
possibly say. My point is that it has manifestly happened in biblical studies,
and especially in New Testament studies, and not least in the study of the
gospels. All too often the microscopic analysis of details, vital though it is
in its place, has been made to seem an end in itself. ‘Objective facts’ are all
the rage, and whether you’re a left-wing hunter of objectivity, determined to
disprove the gospels, or a right-wing hunter of objectivity, determined to show
that they are after all ‘factual’, you may still be missing the point and
losing the plot. Facts are left-brain business; vital in their place, but only
part of the whole. Thus, on the one hand, those who presently trumpet the need
for a purely and exclusively ‘secular’ study of the Bible are simply following
through the anti-metaphorical agenda of the French Revolution (McGilchrist 347); while those who respond with an attempted
rationalistic proof of, say, Jesus’ divinity are often themselves remaining
within the same sterile antithesis. Like Marxism and capitalism, secularism and
fundamentalism are simply the left and right boots of Enlightenment
Epicureanism. Only when the detailed left-brain analysis can be relocated as
the emissary to the right-wing intuition, with its rich world of metaphor,
narrative and above all imagination, can the discipline become healthy again.
The
good news is that the gospels themselves resist the destructive, atomising, Epicurean left-brain analysis. They go on
telling the story of How God Became King, and demanding that serious readers
learn to imagine a world in which that might be the case, a world reshaped
around their account of Jesus. Perhaps, after all, biblical studies might be
one place where the return of the Master, a theme indeed made famous by some of
Jesus’ own stories, might begin to take place. This is a challenge,
particularly, for those engaged in doctoral studies. It is much easier to do a
purely left-brain doctorate, and there is still plenty of room for that. But we
also need, and quite urgently, a new generation who won’t be afraid to see the
bigger picture and, without in the least going slack on the necessary
left-brain analytic and philological exactitude, come back and articulate a
new, freshly imagined vision of the kingdom of God.
3. Early Christian Mission and Theology
All
this leads to my concluding remarks on early Christian mission and theology.
For over a century now it has been commonplace within the discipline called New
Testament Studies to assume that the early church had to jettison its
Jewishness in order to be relevant to the Gentile world into which it quickly
went. Thus it has been assumed, again, that Paul had to downplay the idea of
Jesus as Israel’s Messiah and to switch, instead, to the more readily available
category of the kuvrio~, the ‘Lord’. But this proposal, hugely influential though it
has been, simply fails to imagine what ‘the kingdom of God’ meant to the early
Christians, Paul included (he doesn’t use the phrase that often, but when he
does we can see that it remains at the centre of his
worldview). Paul, in fact, held firmly to the ancient Jewish belief, rooted in
the Psalms, in Isaiah and in Daniel, that a world ruler would indeed arise from
Judaea, that Israel’s God would thereby return to dwell amongst and within his
people, and that through this means the long-awaited new creation of peace and
justice would be inaugurated for the whole world. All of that standard Jewish
expectation came to fresh flowering in Paul’s work. Of course, the communities
which Paul founded were determinedly non-ethnic in their basis. But this was
not because Paul had as it were gone soft on the essential Jewishness of his
mission, or because there was something wrong (as Epicureans imagine) with
Judaism, but because he believed that it was precisely part of the age-old divine
plan that when God did for Israel what he was going to do for Israel then the
nations would be brought under the healing, saving rule of this one God. Paul’s
‘gospel’, his eujaggevlion, was thus much closer in meaning to the various eujaggevlia of Caesar than most of modern scholarship has imagined. It was,
as Acts 17 (already quoted) indicates, the royal announcement, right under
Caesar’s nose, that there was ‘another king, namely Jesus’. And Paul believed
that this royal announcement, like that of Caesar, was not a
take-it-or-leave-it affair. It was a powerful summons through which the living
God worked by his Spirit in hearts and minds, to transform human character and
motivation, producing the tell-tale signs of faith, hope and love which Paul regarded
as the biblically prophesied marks of God’s true people.
The
communities which sprang into surprised existence as Paul went around making
this royal announcement were remarkably devoid of an obvious symbolic world.
They were precisely not defined by the worldview-symbols of Judaism – Temple,
Torah observance and so on. They certainly didn’t adopt the symbols of the
surrounding pagan culture. How could this new community, this new sort of community, retain what for Paul
was its vital centre, namely its strong unity across
traditional social divisions, and its strong holiness in matters of our old
friends, money, sex and power? For Paul the answer was simple. The community
needed to understand what it was that had happened in Jesus the Messiah, and in
particular who the God was into whose new world they
had been brought. What we see in Paul is thus properly characterized as the
birth of the discipline which later came to be called Christian theology, by
which I mean the prayerful and scripture-based reflection, from within the
common life of the otherwise disparate body called the church, on who exactly
the one God was and what his action in Jesus and by the Spirit was to mean.
Early Christian theology was not an exercise undertaken for the sake of speculative
system-building. It was load-bearing. If the unity and holiness of the early
church were the central symbols of the movement, they could only be held in
place if a vigorous theology was there to stabilize them in the winds and
storms of the first century. Theology, in this sense, serves ecclesiology and
thus the kingdom-based mission. Actually, I have come to worry about a
post-Enlightenment theology that doesn’t do this, that thinks the point is
simply to ‘prove’ the divinity of Jesus, or his resurrection, or the saving
nature of his death in themselves, thereby demonstrating fidelity to the Creeds
or some other regula fidei. In the
gospels themselves it isn’t like this. All these things matter, but they matter
because this is how God is becoming king. To prove the great Creeds true, and
to affirm them as such, can sadly be a diversionary exercise, designed to avoid
the real challenge of the first-century gospel, the challenge of God’s becoming
king in and through Jesus.
This
challenge, of course, required imagination: not the undisciplined fantasy of
which left-brain thinking often accuses right-brain thinking, but the
imaginative leap from the worldviews of paganism, with their many gods who
might either be far removed, as in Epicureanism, or rolled into one and close
at hand, as in Stoicism – or indeed from the worldviews of ancient Judaism,
with their fierce concentration on the symbols of land, nation, temple and
Torah. But the leap was not made into the unknown. The imaginative leap
required was made on the basis of Jesus, Jesus the crucified and risen Jewish
Messiah, Jesus the one in and through whom Israel’s God had at last returned in
person to rescue his people and the world. And to sustain precisely that leap,
the early Christians told and retold, and eventually wrote down, the story of
Jesus.
The
four gospels, then, to return to our starting point, are thus appropriately
named ‘gospel’, in line both with Isaiah 40 and 52 and with the contemporary
pagan usage. They themselves, in telling the story of how God became king in
and through Jesus, invite their readers to the imaginative leap of saying,
‘Suppose this is how God has done it? Suppose the world’s way of empire is all
wrong? Suppose there’s a different way, and suppose that Jesus, in his life,
death and resurrection, has brought it about?’ And the gospels themselves, of
course, contain stories at a second level, stories purportedly told by Jesus
himself, which were themselves, in their day, designed to break open the
worldview of their hearers and to initiate a massive imaginative leap to which
Jesus gave the name ‘faith’. The gospels invite their readers, in other words,
to a multiple exercise, both of imagining what it might have been like to make
that leap in the first century (both for Jesus’ hearers and then, at a second
stage, for their own readers) and, as a further stage again, of imagining what
it might be like to do so today. For too long gospel study has been dominated
by the attempt to make the gospels reflect, simply, the faith-world of the
early church. Why, after all, the radical critics used to say, would the early
Christians have been particularly interested in miscellaneous stories of what
Jesus actually said or did, when all that really mattered was his saving death,
making the gospels simply ‘passion narratives with extended introductions’? The
conservative response has been that early converts would naturally want to know
more about this Jesus in whom they had come to place their faith. But this
stand-off, on both sides, has usually failed to reflect the larger question:
that the gospels tell the story of Jesus not out of mere historical anecdotage
or faith-projection, but because this is how Jesus launched the kingdom of God,
which he then accomplished in his death and resurrection. Even to hold this
possibility in one’s head requires, in today’s western church, whether radical
or conservative, no less than in the non-Christian world, a huge effort of the
imagination.
This
imagination, like all good right-brain activity, must then be firmly and
thoroughly worked through the left brain, disciplined by the rigorous
historical and textual analysis for which the discipline of biblical studies
has rightly become famous. But, by itself, the left brain will produce, and has
often produced, a discipline full of facts but without meaning, high on
analysis and low on reconstruction, good at categories and weak on the kingdom.
One of the reasons I was excited to be invited to come to St Andrews is because
this is already one of the very few places in the world where the imagination
is taken seriously as part of the whole theological discipline. I hope and
trust and pray that we will be able to work together at the challenging but
richly rewarding tasks of imagining the kingdom in such a way that will
simultaneously advance the academic understanding of our extraordinary primary
texts and enrich the mission and theology of tomorrow’s church. It is just as
difficult today as it was in the first century to imagine what the kingdom of
God might look like. Rigorous historical study of the gospels and the other
early Christian writings has a proper role to play in fuelling, sustaining and
directing that imagination, and in helping to translate it into reality.