Giosuè Ghisalberti

Jesus, the Unprecedented Human Being


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the chronology to come as a whole. Historical “facts” have no relevance; the interpretations are all-important. In the different narrative of the virgin birth in Luke, as compared to Matthew, we have noticeable differences: there is no appearance of the so-called wise men (an event of utmost importance) no flight to Egypt, no Herod and his murderous pathology. However, we do have an equally significant account of the births of two boys (John and Jesus) by one woman who was too old to conceive, and another woman who will give birth despite being a virgin. Both pregnancies are extraordinary, as the sons will also be, each in their own way – the first as a prophet and baptizer, the second as the one who will be declared to be a “first born.” By providing details of both births, Luke also makes a distinction that will separate Jesus from an entire tradition despite including, between his baptism and his temptations in the desert, an extensive genealogy for him leading back ←37 | 38→all the way to Adam and God. Luke cannot realize how both the virgin birth and Jesus’ baptism gives him an emergence entirely independent from any genealogy.

      The journey had to be trying for the young, expectant mother. The days of travel had to be arduous, physically exhausting. She was emotionally apprehensive, a new bride, pregnant. Though now married, the young couple did not know each other well; conversations may have been halting, awkward. Mary is a young girl, in her early teens, Joseph not much older. The census ensures that Jesus will be Joseph’s legal son – that is, lawful as determined by the Romans. But this census, initiated bureaucratically so as to more efficiently organize and control the occupied people of the region, immediately acknowledges Jesus as registered, legitimate by law; his name is written down and included along with everyone else and as someone who exists. The writing of his name, however, does nothing to determine his own self-conception. Luke’s account here presents considerable challenges for the reader. Jesus has been adopted into two traditions, one according to a lineage extending back to King David, the other determined according to Roman law – inscribed, by some, but not contained, in fact eluding both simultaneously. Luke may not be conscious of his own narrative and how Jesus remains, despite old and new inscriptions, scriptural and bureaucratic, outside their definitions. When Jesus is described as “her first-born son,” being “first” cannot simply be related to Mary as a mother. He is indeed her first-born son; but, with much more significance and repeated often by Jesus himself when he calls himself “the son of man,” he is indeed first and unprecedented. Luke (and Matthew will experience the same difficulties) strains to represent Jesus as a unique and prototypical human being while also, at times and in constant oscillation, relating him back to a tradition that gives him precedence and legitimacy. In this case, the gospel of Luke (as writing, as a document) at least partly recognizes itself, though not without hesitation, as opposed to the Roman census ←40 | 41→that has defined him according to Roman law and to the scriptures who have anticipated him in the history of Judaism. One of the consequences of the gospels is the determination to alter existing social conditions and to re-define familial relations; in each case, laws will be ignored and, in part, superseded. Even if Luke has only an unclear intimation of his undertaking, he must in some sense be conscious of his writing to be independent of two other scriptural forms, both of them legal and reflecting laws – the laws