2013-12-07

The Historical Jesus Quest Is Theology in Disguise

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by Neil Godfrey

Updated 8:30 am UTC

As a follow up to my last post I am sharing here another valuable snippet I read in Clarke Owens’ Son of Yahweh: The Gospels as Novels.

Owens’ first chapter, “Literary Criticism and the Historical Jesus”, is brilliant and deserves to be read and addressed by everyone who has an interest in how scholars work on the “quest” for the historical Jesus. My reasons for that evaluation:

  • the chapter gives the most articulate and cogent explanation I have yet read for why anyone would have “made up” the Jesus story;
  • the chapter exposes the fundamental flaws in the methodology of HJ scholars;
  • it exposes how the quasi-historical methods of HJ scholars serve theological ends (in part the topic of this post);
  • it demonstrates the failure of HJ scholars to understand modern literary criticism and its relevance for historical enquiry;
  • it demonstrates in the simplest way imaginable how to distinguish between historical persons (e.g. Socrates, Thales, Alexander, etc) and fictive ones like Jesus. (— This was meant to be the topic of this post but I got sidetracked. Next time . . . . )

And for those rabid anti-mythicists who assume that anyone who questions the historicity of Jesus is a raving lunatic with a hostile vendetta against God and Christianity, well, they’ll be disappointed to learn that Clarke Owens writes with sensitivity towards those whose cherished beliefs are challenged in his book.

‘Quest’ is an interesting word

Knights of the Round Table Departing on the Qu...
Knights of the Round Table Departing on the Quest for the Holy Grail (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

As Owens point out,

to go on a quest for something means that we seek it; we hope to find it; it is our most cherished goal, like the quest for the Holy Grail.

A quest is an entirely different kind of undertaking from

one in which we seek to ascertain whether or not materials exist which would support a finding that Jesus had an historical existence . . .

That is, a quest assumes that there is an historical Jesus to be found, and the reason for this is, ultimately, theological belief. A truly historical inquiry would, on the other hand,

require that we first examine the materials before we determine the nature of the quest [i.e. whether the materials indicate there is an historical Jesus or some other Jesus or agent to be sought]

Purpose of the Quest is to advance the credibility of theology

Prominent HJ scholar John P. Meier himself said so. In his chapter 7 of volume one of A Marginal Jew, “Why Bother? The Relevance of the Quest for the Historical Jesus”, Meier answered this question this way:

John P. Meier
John P. Meier

[T]he proper object of Christian faith is not and cannot be an idea or scholarly reconstruction, however reliable. . . .

What, then — as the objectors — is the usefulness of the historical Jesus to people of faith? My reply is: none, if one is asking solely about the direct object of Christian faith. . . . Yet I maintain that the quest for the historical Jesus can be very useful if one is asking about faith seeking understanding, i.e. theology, in a contemporary context. . . . [O]nce a culture becomes permeated with a historical-critical approach, as has Western culture from the Enlightenment onward, theology can operate in and speak to that culture with credibility only if it absorbs into its methodology a historical approach. . . .

Indeed, the usefulness of the historical Jesus to theology is that he ultimately eludes all our neat theological programs; he brings all of them into question by refusing to fit into the boxes we create for him. Paradoxically, although the quest for the historical Jesus is often linked in the popular secular mind with “relevance,” his importance lies precisely in his strange, off-putting, embarrassing contours, equally offensive to right and left wings. . . .

Properly understood, the historical Jesus[‘s . . .] refusal to be held fast by any given school of thought is what drives theologians onward into new paths; hence the historical Jesus remains a constant stimulus to theological renewal. For this reason alone, the Jesus of history is worth the pains of the pursuit . . . . (pp. 198-200, my bolding in all quotes; I have quoted Meier more extensively than has Owens in Son of Yahweh)

No doubt many of us who have read scholarly works on the historical Jesus will concur with Owens further comment:

As it turns out, the confession of theological purpose occurs in more than one work to be discussed in this book [Son of Yahweh], and is a more or less conscious apology offered usually deep into the text. Where it is not openly confessed, it appears as a sudden, inexplicable inconsistency in the logic of one’s method.

.

The Pope also said so. To quote a passage from Owens:

For centuries, Christian intellectuals have been trying to come to terms with, and to appropriate for their own purposes, post-Enlightenment methods of “historical criticism.” The idea has always been to contain the threat that rose to prominence in the Age of Reason to religious hegemony over ideas. Thus, “historical criticism” to these intellectuals is a branch of theology tactically aimed at containing flight from the church based on a weakening of belief in Christian miracles and orthodoxy. It is not really a historical method, because history, as treated in this method, is checked by the primacy of doctrine. As Edgar Krentz has written,

“History is studied to remove it in favor of nonhistorical truth. . . . Theology must either justify the use of historical criticism and define its nature or be willing to reformulate the Christian faith in terms of a positivist truth that historicism alone will validate.”

According to Krentz, historical criticism became generally accepted over time, and was made a duty for Christian intellectuals by a papal encyclical in 1943. . . .

That 1943 papal encyclical was Divino Afflante Spiritu, and appears in three of our posts on Thomas Brodie’s Beyond the Quest.

Who is this Krentz Owens is citing? The work by Edgar Krentz is The Historical Critical Method. The editor’s foreword (by Gene M. Tucker) explains what it is about:

Its purpose is to examine in general the foundations of what has come to be called the historical-critical investigation of the Bible. It traces the rise of this approach, examines its aims, methods, and presuppositions, and considers the implications of such work for theology.

So now you may think your suspicions that this was so are finally confirmed. Such confessions do explain why “the quest for the historical Jesus” has been mostly confined to theologians and is not found in the curricula of classical or ancient history studies. Of course the theologians will boast of their agnostics and atheists (the Ehrmans and Goulders) to supposedly “disprove” this assertion but will only be miring themselves deeper into fallacy and irrelevance (to all but the faithful) when they do so.

krentz
nice cover, enlightening content (worth a few posts in its own right)
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Neil Godfrey

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7 thoughts on “The Historical Jesus Quest Is Theology in Disguise”

  1. Excellent example of one word sneaking in so much.
    It reminds of how Christians like to sanitize nonbelievers by calling them “searchers”.
    I tell Christian, “I am not searching, I am exploring”.
    This book sounds fantastic.

    1. Ironically it was Albert Schweitzer who coined the word “Quest” in this context and he was, in one sense, opposed to it! He argued that Christianity remained vulnerable as long as it sought its moorings in history instead of something more mystical/metaphysical/spiritual.

  2. Schweitzer thought he found “the real Jesus” when he discovered the apocalyptic prophet archetype, and many have been deluded enough to follow his example. What they’ve really found is a construct for making the Jesus figure plausible within the modern historical method.

    It is important to recognize that Biblical criticism cannot be separated from theology, as the Bible is a theological book. “New Testament historians” like Ehrman like to believe that they are engaging in purely historic research with no theological agenda (after all, he’s “agnostic”), but their method is seriously biased toward protecting the credibility of the Bible (and thus their own). But a supposedly historically sound Bible, in the modern world, also serves quite nicely as a sound theological one. John P. Meier was more honest than most by coming right out and admitting to having a theological agenda — he couldn’t hide it, he’s a Catholic priest and his title is “Professor of Theology.”

  3. If God revealed himself most definitively in the historical particularity of a Galilean Jew in the earliest decades of the Common Era, then naturally those who believe this will want to inquire as closely as possible into the historical particularity of that life and Jesus’ mission. James Dunn in The Historical Jesus: Five Views

    What gets to me is how vigorously such a poor disguise is defended. To paraphrase the argument from Mystery Men:

    –Clark Kent is Superman.

    –Don’t start that again. Clark Kent wears glasses. Superman doesn’t wear glasses.

    –He takes them off when he transforms.

    –That doesn’t make any sense. He wouldn’t be able to see!

    1. It appears to be describing the “quest” as a more broadly cultural than theological one, as I suspect it is. Not unlike the way various periods in our history have seen quests for other “historical” or quasi-mythical figures — But the last sentence in the publisher’s review scares me when it speaks of

      the evolution of consciousness as a contemporary form of incarnation within the individual and society

      after raising the spectre of Jung. But no doubt I’ll read it anyway.

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