Geza Vermes

Jesus the Jew


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      These pages are dedicated to the memory of a friend, the leading Jewish New Testament scholar of his generation, whose outstanding achievement in the field of Gospel research is justly celebrated, and whose death on 9 October 1969 created a large gap in the world of learning and left a perceptible emptiness in the lives of the few who loved him.

      PAUL WINTER

      1904–1969

      IN PIAM MEMORIAM

      © Geza Vermes, 1973, 1983, 1994

       Preface © Stefan C. Reif 2001

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, SCM Press.

      0 334 02839 6

      First published in 1973 by

       William Collins Sons & Co.

       Second edition published 1983 by

       SCM Press Ltd

       This edition first published 2001 by

       SCM Press

       9–17 St Albans Place, London N1 0NX

      Second impression 2006

      Typeset by Rowland Phototypesetting Ltd,

       Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk

       Printed and bound in Great Britain by

       Bookmarque Ltd, Croydon, Surrey

      Contents

       Preface by Stefan C. Reif

       Preface by the Author

       Introduction: from Christianity to Jesus

       PART I: THE SETTING

       1 Jesus the Jew

       2 Jesus and Galilee

       3 Jesus and charismatic Judaism

       PART II: THE TITLES OF JESUS

       4 Jesus the prophet

       Excursus: prophetic celibacy

       5 Jesus the lord

       Excursus: ‘lord’ and the style of the Gospel of Mark

       6 Jesus the Messiah

       Excursus I: Jesus, son of David

       Excursus II: the metaphorical use of ‘to anoint’

       7 Jesus the son of man

       Excursus I: the cloud, a means of heavenly transport

       Excursus II: debate on the circumlocutional use of son of man

       8 Jesus the son of God

       Excursus: son of God and virgin birth

       Postscript

       List of abbreviations

       Notes

       Acknowledgements

       Reference index

       Index of names and subjects

      Preface

      A thousand years ago, the image that people had of Jesus of Nazareth was not the result of a complex challenge to their knowledge, intellect and faith but depended to a great extent on whether they were Christians or Jews. For the former, Jesus was the Son of God, born of the Virgin Mary, who was sent into the world to preach his message and to suffer crucifixion and who was resurrected on the third day after his death and then reunited with God at his right hand. For the latter, Jesus was born as a result of his mother’s illicit relations, was a brilliant student who rebelled against his teachers and used the power of the divine name to perform sorcery, for which activities he was put to death. The precise Christian theology might vary from sect to sect and the Jewish folklore could take on different forms but the essential point of controversy remained the same, namely, whether Jesus was human or divine.

      Once the seeds of modern thinking had been planted among Christians and had sprouted Protestant interpretations and humanist viewpoints, the intellectual blossoms took on a different hue. As Isabel Rivers has pointed out in the first volume of her Reason, Grace and Sentiment (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1991 p. 83), Edward Fowler, Bishop of Gloucester, could, in his The Design of Christianity of the 1670s, describe Jesus as the most balanced, charming and attractive of men, nothing short of a model Anglican gentleman. As the episcopal view put it,

      he was a Person of the Greatest Freedom, Affability and Courtesie, there was nothing in his Conversation that was at all Austere, Crabbed or Unpleasant. Though he was always serious, yet he was never sowr, sullenly Grave, Morose or Cynical; but of a marvellously conversable, sociable and benign temper.

      For the German orientalist, Hermann Samuel Reimarus, who died in 1768, Jesus was a Jewish political leader who attempted to rid his country of the Roman occupation and marched into Jerusalem in the hope of being proclaimed the newly anointed leader (Hebrew: mashiaḥ; English: ‘messiah’). He was put to death for his efforts, and his supporters stole and hid his body. They then explained their hero’s reverse of fortune by promoting the idea of his resurrection and a more theological notion of his messianic activity.

      One of the results of the liberation of Christians from their theological confines was, of course, the emancipation of the Jews from the narrowness of their ghettos. As a consequence of this greater freedom, intellectual Jews of the early nineteenth century in central and western Europe sought to replace their folkloristic view of Jesus with one that could occupy a more convincing place in the new Jewish history that they were composing. Both Christians and Jews were therefore at that time enthusiastically uncovering layers of legend,