Baker Academic

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Church Times review of Soundings in the Religion of Jesus


A friend recently send me a clipping of a review that I would not have seen otherwise. Because I'm not sure that there is a digital copy of this review circulating the interwebbernets, I've reproduced it here. I have corrected the reviewer's misspelling of "Eyal Regev" and I've probably added a few typos of my own along the way. The reviewer (Harries) is quite right that the book could have done more to distinguish between anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism.

I thank Rev. Harries and the Church Times (28 March 2013) for this generous exposure and close reading.

-anthony
Frank exchange on Jesus - Richard Harries finds a healthy openness about differences
Soundings in the Religion of Jesus: Perspectives and methods in Jewish and Christian scholarshipBruce Chilton, Anthony Le Donne, and Jacob Neusner, editors
Fortress Press £32.99 (978-0-8006-980 I -0)
Church Times Bookshop £29.70
 JESUS was a Jew, and can only be understood within the Jewish context of his time. That truth, so long ignored, is now taken for granted by all scholars of the New Testament. When Geza Vermes wrote his famous book Jesus the Jew, he assumed that objective scholarship would show us the truth of Jesus. What differentiates this book, written by distinguished Jewish and Christian scholars, is an awareness that scholarship is never as objective as we think it is; for we bring our religious assumptions to bear, and, furthermore, there is a proper loyalty to the religious community of which we are a part. 
 The result is that the contributors to this book are not shy of being critical of [each] other's evaluation of the evidence, where they think it is justified. This is itself a sign of how Jewish-Christian dialogue has moved on from simply trying to find commonalities to an honest facing of the differences. Indeed, they argue that it is in facing really difficult texts’ and issues that future dialogue is likely to be most fruitful. 
 This trenchant honesty is particularly marked in James D. G. Dunn's response to [Eyal Regev]’s understanding of why, Jesus was sentenced to death. Dunn argues that [Regev] has failed to take into account the clear messianic implications of Jesus's teaching. But this is followed by the complaint of Bruce Chilton and Jacob Neusner’s, echoing Amy-Jill Levine, that this criticism is itself a reflection of the fact that the terms of the debate are too often set by Christian rather than Jewish priorities. 
 A basic assumption behind this book is that good scholarly work on the historical Jesus can contribute to the wider issue of Jewish-Christian relations. So, as well as discussions of particular passages in the New Testament, there are essays, on New Testament interpretation in the periods from the Reformation onwards, including the Nazi period, and a setting out of Jewish and Christian truth-claims. A further assumption of the book is that a generative approach to the scriptures must be taken, so that we see Jewish scriptures as unfolding from the first to the seventh century, not as something static, and similarly with the New Testament. For example, it is with this in mind that Joel Lohr argues that Matthew 25.31-46 is best seen against the background of Jewish ideas of Judgement at the end of the first century, as well as Matthew's understanding of the mission to the Gentiles. This is a story specifically about the Judgement of the Gentiles (not the whole world), with an ethical criterion similar to the Jewish idea that they will be judged by the Noahide code. 
 It would be good to have more books of this kind focusing on particular texts, Jewish as well as Christian. It would be helpful if they could distinguish historic anti-Judaism from anti-Semitism more sharply than this book does. From a Christian point of view, one issue that remains to be discussed, as Dunn argues, is how developed views of Jesus (the Christ of faith) can be fitted into the Jewish context of the time, and how, if they can, this might contribute to constructive Jewish-Christian dialogue.

The Rt Revd Lord Harries of Pentregarth is an honorary professor of King’s College, London. He is the author of After the Evil: Christianity and Judaism in the shadow of the Holocaust (OUP).

No comments:

Post a Comment