Session 1 (Friday morning)
“Orality and the Gospels”: A Discussion with Eric Eve and
Rafael Rodríguez
Eric Eve (Fellow and Tutor in Theology, Harris Manchester
College, Oxford), author of Behind the Gospels: Understanding the Oral
Tradition (SPCK, 2013)
Rafael Rodríguez (Professor of New Testament, Johnson
University, USA), author of Oral Tradition and the New Testament: A Guide
for the Perplexed (T&T Clark, 2014)
Discussion (30 mins.)
Paper 1 (30 mins.)—The Battle with Beelzebul: Eschatological
Violence, Jesus’ Exorcisms,
and the Coming of the Kingdom of God (Jesse Nickel, PhD Candidate, University of St Andrews)
All three Synoptic Gospels record the accusation
made
against Jesus that it is through being in league with Beelzebul, the archōn of
the demons, that Jesus is able to exert his mighty power over the evil spirits
he encounters (Mt. 12.22-32 // Mk. 3.19b-30 // Lk. 11.14-23). In all three,
Jesus responds with familiar words about kingdoms divided against themselves
and the binding of the strong man. However, Matthew and Luke both add an
intriguing extra statement, with which Jesus makes it clear that his casting
out of demons, rather than indicating partnership with the powers of evil, in
fact signifies the presence of the kingdom of God (Mt. 12.28 // Lk. 11.20).
Using this pericope as a starting point, in this paper I will explore the
connection between Jesus’ exorcisms and the inauguration of the kingdom of God
in the Synoptic Gospels, in the context of the historical eschatological expectations
of second-Temple Judaism. Although the portrayals of eschatological events in
Jewish writings from this period are diverse, one of the nearly unanimous
expectations was that the arrival of the kingdom of God would entail the
violent destruction of all the enemies of God and/or his people (cf., e.g.,
Dan. 7; 1 En. 85-90; 1QM). I will discuss how this component of second-Temple
Jewish eschatology was represented and manifested in the kingdom-ministry of
the Synoptic Jesus. I will argue that, counter to many of his Jewish
contemporaries, who expected that this would involve a holy war waged by the
faithful against their Gentile oppressors, Jesus understood himself to be
prosecuting the expected eschatological battle in his encounters with evil spirits
– the true enemies of God and his people. In these mighty deeds, the
anticipated victory which would attend the inauguration of the kingdom of God
was being won.
This paper will sketch the conceptual framework for a new
approach to the study of the historical Jesus; specifically Jesus’ own
contribution to the origins of the early Church’s so-called “Christological
monotheism” and Christ devotion. The paper will summarise the relevant sections
of the second volume of my forthcoming book (Jesus Monotheism: A New Paradigm for the Shape
and Origins of the Earliest Christology), in which I argue
that, taken together, the OT and the NT—along with the historical evidence for
Second Temple life and thought—all point to Jesus’ own self-consciousness as a
heaven-sent, and uniquely “divine”, priest-king of a new eschatological order
(or covenant) as a decisive, determining, factor in Christological origins.
Paper 3 (30 mins.)—The God of Israel and the Eschatology of
Jesus (Markus Bockmuehl, Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity, Oxford)
Contrary
to recent critiques of monotheism’s supposedly intrinsic authoritarianism,
Jesus of Nazareth's strongly theocentric eschatology shaped a nonviolent
opposition to evil—whether its manifestation appeared individual or communal,
moral or political, demonic or structural. At the same time, an active
negotiation of eschatological tension and deferral arises from another
characteristic thread of the Jesus tradition: the Synoptic Jesus buttresses his
calls for constant watchfulness with the strangely ambivalent insistence that
‘the day' or 'the hour’ is unknown even to him. Jesus’ teaching is marked by
both urgency and restraint, and surprisingly short on unambiguous specifics;
proximity and postponement keep close moral company here. An urgent eschatology
of definitive judgment and redemption thus stands side by side with the charge
to cast out demons and ‘bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind and the
lame’ (Luke 14.21; cf Mark 3.15 par.).
Session 3 (Saturday morning) *beginning at 8:30 am
Panel review of Jens Schröter’s From Jesus to the New
Testament: Early Christian Theology and the Origin of the New Testament Canon
(Baylor University Press, 2013).
Jens Schröter (Professor for Exegesis and Theology of the
New Testament and New Testament Apocrypha, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin)
Helen K. Bond (Senior Lecturer in New Testament,University
of Edinburgh)
James Crossley (Professor of Bible, Culture, and Politics, University
of Sheffield)Edward Adams (Professor of New Testament, King’s College, London)
So wish I could be there for this one!
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