Tuesday, February 2, 2010

The great thing about not studying in North America is....

...that I can tell the world how ridiculous I find the cynic and non-apocalyptic Jesus hypotheses and have academic faculty agree with me. Just as I was about to post this I remembered that Australia's most popular 'historical' Jesus scholar is most likely Barbara Thiering so I guess the joke really is on me.

*Hangs my head in shame*

Edit: For those of you who are not aware of Barbara Thiering, this is her in a nutshell according to Geza Vermes:

Professor Barbara Thiering's reinterpretation of the New Testament, in which the married, divorced, and remarried Jesus, father of four, becomes the "Wicked Priest" of the Dead Sea Scrolls, has made no impact on learned opinion. Scroll scholars and New Testament experts alike have found the basis of the new theory, Thiering's use of the so-called "pesher technique," without substance. The Qumran pesher—the word itself means "interpretation"—is a form of Bible exegesis which seeks to determine the significance of an already existing prophetic text by pointing to its fulfillment in persons and events belonging to the age of the interpreter. Professor Thiering, by contrast, turns the sequence upside down, and claims that the authors of the New Testament composed the Gospel story so that pesher technique could subsequently be fastened to it. If so, the clue must have been quickly lost, but now for the first time after nineteen centuries of universal misunderstanding it is revealed afresh in Jesus and the Riddle of the Dead Sea Scrolls
One of my past lecturers was actually taught by Thiering back in the day. In fact he now teaches both Historical Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls and I am glad to say he doesn't follow her...unique...ideas.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

A Slow Month!


2 posts all January? Disgusting!

I would love to have an excuse and tell of how I have been drowning in work, but the truth is I am on holidays. A few hours of work here and there, followed by hours in the pool. In fact,  my new hobby is reading in the pool and to date no books have been destroyed!

In related news:
  • It is my birthday in 11 minutes;
  • I wish I had read Birger Gerhardsson's The Reliability of the Gospel Tradition a long time ago;
  •  I will be in Fiji for ten days in February.
Edit: I am glad to see I am not the only one with blogger's block.

    Sunday, January 10, 2010

    New Amsterdam

    The TV show New Amsterdam is airing for the first time in Australia now. It sounds like the most ridiculous concept. This is my re-enactment of how the show proposal went down:

    A: Well, we have a new TV show. It follows the life of a New York detective named John Amsterdam who solves homicide crimes.
    B: And...?
    A: Umm...and...he is searching for his soul mate. Yeah, he is searching for his soul mate while solving these crimes.
    B: Okay, but doesn't that sound a little generic?
    A: No...err...because...he can't die...until...he finds his soul mate! 
    B: OH EM GEE and he tests his immortality by killing himself every now and then!!!

    Short Aussie Promo:


    Longer promo: 
     

    Friday, January 1, 2010

    Notable Books of 2009

    Over at his blog, Ben Witherington has posted the "Ten 2009 Books on the New Testament You Should have Read." Not the most catchy title but it gets the message across. He has an interesting selection, a few which I would like to follow.

    As I haven't been interested in too many technical books published this year, I am going to broaden my criteria a bit by inventing new categories every time I reach 2 books.

    Academic:
    1. Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the God of Israel: God Crucified and other studies on the New Testament's Christology of Divine Identity (Eerdmans, 2009). Well, it is debated on whether this is a 2009 book, but my copy has that as the publishing date so I am sticking with that for convenience sake. This work is essentially God Crucified + a few essays, discussing the Christology of the New Testament in terms of the inclusion of Jesus as part of the "unique identitiy of God/YHWH." It is an excellent study on early Christology which, although not exactly compatible with the work of Hurtado, should be read along with it.

    2. Michael F. Bird, Are You the One Who Is To Come? (Baker Academic, 2009). I am not sure why I purchased this book but I am glad I did. Bird deals with the Messianic questions surrounding Jesus, and proposes that Jesus did indeed have a "Messianic self-understanding" and trajected his ministry and mission in terms of a broad sense of Messianic categories. These categories being far broader than those set out by Joseph Fitzmyer in The One Who Is To Come.
    Books from 2009 I Wish I had My Hands on:


    1.  James D.G. Dunn, Christianity in the Making Vol 2. Beginnings from Jerusalem. (Eerdmans, 2009). I haven't read it, but I am generally impressed with Dunn, as well as the first volume Jesus Remembered.

    2. Aquila H.I. Lee, From Messiah to Preexistent Son (Wipf & Stock, 2009). If a work is on Christology, I will generally like it  so I hope this will carry through.
    Notable Books I First Read in 2009:

    1.  Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the Eyewitnesses (Eerdmans, 2006). In this work, Bauckham covers almost every possible detail you could think of regarding eyewitness testimony and the gospels. Although some parts are not as strong as others, it would be required reading for anyone dealing with the development of the gospels.

    2. C.H. Roberts, Manuscript, society, and belief in early Christian Egypt. The Schweich Lectures of the British Academy 1977.  (Oxford University Press, 1979). This is a very small book which has influenced reconstructions of early Christianity in Egypt in a very big way.


    Popular(ish):


    1. Paul Barnett, Messiah: Jesus-The Evidence of History (IVP, 2009). This is an excellent introduction to historical Jesus studies for the interested reader by ancient historian and former bishop Paul Barnett. Unlike some of the other books which really don't talk about much at all, Barnett takes the reader into quite some detail.

    2. James K. Beilby, Paul Rhodes Eddy (editors), The Historical Jesus: Five Views (IVP, 2009). I really enjoyed this book, and those with a bit of knowledge on historical Jesus studies would apprecciate the interaction between the various scholars. The book almost legitimised the Christ myth argument by including it but it is swiftly  shot down by a number of credentialed scholars. The conrtibutors are Robert Price (Christ Myhthicist), John Dominic Crossan (The Historical Jesus: The Life of a Mediterranean Jewish Peasant), Luke Timothy Johnson (The Real Jesus), James D.G. Dunn (Jesus Remembered ) and Darrell L. Bock (Jesus Acccording to Scripture).

    I meant to post this a while ago but got distracted while it sat in my "draft" folder. Happy new year to all.

    Monday, December 21, 2009

    Archaeological Find

    A first century house allegedly dated to the time of Jesus has been found in Nazareth. But...the same guys offering $1,000 to prove Jesus didn't exist have informed me that Nazareth doesn't exist. What to do?

    Thursday, December 17, 2009

    Christian Beginnings and the Dead Sea Scrolls


    I finally purchased (and received in the mail) Christian Beginnings and the Dead Sea Scrolls ed. John J. Collins and Craig A. Evans. I just had to share my excitement over it, especially noticing an essay on John and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Those of you who know me should have no doubts about my fascination with the relationship between the Gospel of John and the Dead Sea texts. Anyway, online accompanying the book is an interview with Evans:




    PS: I actually received two other books this week: The Historical Jesus: Five Views ed. Beilby and Eddy; What Saint Paul Really Said N.T. Wright and on its way is Thiede's Jesus Man or Myth? (Which I hope isn't just a rehash of his cave 7 theory.)

    Saturday, December 12, 2009

    Scribal Habits as Christological Indicators of Early Christian Diversity

    In 1934 with the publication of Rechtgläubigkeit und Ketzerei im ältesten Christentum (tr. Orthodoxy and Heresy in Earliest Christianity ) Walter Bauer set into motion a new approach to understanding the relationship between orthodoxy and heresy in the early church.  Although problematic in many respects, this legacy has been continued to this day in a variety of fields. Two notable commentators following the legacy of Bauer would be Bart Ehrman (e.g. Orthodox Corruption of Scripture; Lost Christianities; as well as a short rehash in Jesus Interrupted.) as well as Helmut Koester. These scholars have in some way or another, utilised early Christian literary sources as indicators of Christian diversity. With this in mind, it is a contention of mine that an approach to early Christianity can be greatly complimented through the study of early scribal habits. In particular, an evaluation of textual corruptions and the use of features such as the nomina sacra may be used to tweak a Christological model to assist our understanding of Christian diversity.


    For example, text critical analysis of New Testament manuscripts and early patristic citations has been the basis for Ehrman’s reconstruction of Christianity. Ehrman’s thesis argues that early Christological controversies are reflected in corruptions of the NT texts by overzealous proto-orthodox scribes.[1] For example, in Luke 3:22 Ehrman conjectures an original adoptionist reading in the post-baptismal discourse of God, declaring “today I have begotten you” as opposed to “with you I am well pleased.”[2] Although Ehrman's  preferred adoptionist reading does not find much support,[3] it has opened up a new way of understanding the early Christian artifacts as an indicator of orthodoxy and heresy. Similarly, text critical analysis has been utilised by Ben Witherington in noting “a concerted effort by some part of the Church, perhaps as early as the late first century or beginning of the second, to tone down texts ...that indicated that women played an important and prominent part in the early days of the Christian community.”[4]

    In light of the possibilities of examining the manuscripts, I propose that the development of the nomina sacra may be used in the region of Egypt. That is, the use of nomina sacra act as a Christological indicator that may be used to demonstrate an early and possibly dominant proto-orthodox community.


    Although the nomina sacra is used in both literary and documentary papyri[5] the focus of this examination will be on the use in early literary works. The origins of the nomina sacra, although contested, show an awareness of both Graeco-Roman and Jewish scribal traditions. However, it would be fair to argue that the original abbreviation of the divine names appear to be tied to the Jewish scribal treatment of the divine name in the indisputably Greek biblical manuscripts of Jewish provenance.[6] Within the Jewish scribal tradition, the Tetragrammaton was often distinguished from the rest of the text.[7] For example, in P.Oxy. 3522 of Job 42, the Tetragrammaton is distinguished through the use of Paleo-Hebrew characters despite a Greek text.[8]  On this basis, as well as the consistent and early use, Roberts has found favour in the argument that the nomina sacra came to Egypt through “Jewish Christians from Palestine[9] citing synagogue  practices as the best explanation of such a consistent, widespread and early use.[10]

    Although by the Byzantine period around fifteen words came to frequently be treated as nomina sacra by Christian scribes, the significance of the early scribal habits should not be overlooked.[11] That is, noting that the earliest and most consistently abbreviated names were θεος, κυριος, χριστος and ιησους. [12] Similarly, a number of scholars have argued that the nomina sacra was present in the earliest Christian literary manuscript, P52, for example.[13]

    With this in mind, what can we learn about early Christian diversity? By appealing to a Christological model for defining sectarian Christianity, a number of possible directions can be taken. First of all it may be said that this demonstrates a form of early Jewish and proto-orthodox devotion to Jesus which has been coined “binitarian.”[14] Arguably, the consistent use of the scribal habit of Jesus/Christ with Lord/God[15] demonstrates both a reverence of YHWH and the high Christology of Jesus; as well as a divine equation of both. The implications of this on the models of Bauer and Koester include early evidence of proto-orthodox Christological expression in Egypt. Similarly, the exaltation of YHWH as an early scribal habit in Egypt would count in favour of proto-orthodox and Jewish Christianity as opposed to Marcionite leaning interpretation of scripture, or Gnostic demiurge tendancies.


    Further Notes:

    • For an evaluation of Bauer's model see Robinson, Thomas A. The Bauer Thesis Examined : The Geography of Heresy in the Early Christian Church, Studies in the Bible and Early Christianity.
    • Sorry if everything I said was wrong, utterly flawed and incoherent (having been written between 11pm-1am today).

    [1] Ehrman (1989). The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture.
    [2] Ibid. 49.; Idem (2005) Misquoting Jesus. 159.
    [3] For example, the reading relies heavily on the Western text type while also raising questions about Markan priority. Metzger in A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament grants the Alexandrian and Byzantine reading a “B” rating, stating, “The Western reading, “This day I have begotten thee,” which was widely current during the first three centuries, appears to be secondary, derived from Ps 2.7.”
    [4] Witherington, 'The Anti-Feminist Tendencies of the 'Western' Text in Acts', Journal of Biblical Literature (103.1.82), (March 1984).
    [5] E.g. P.Congr. 15.20 III/IV cf. http://www.anchist.mq.edu.au/doccentre/Conspectus.pdf
    [6] For a list of Greek biblical manuscripts generally held to be of Jewish provenance see the compilation by Robert Kraft: http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/rak//jewishpap.html#jewishmss
    [7] Roberts (1977), Manuscript, Society and Belief in Early Christian Egypt. 47.
    [8] This is evident in the image: http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/rak//lxxjewpap/POxy3522.jpg
    [9] Roberts (1977), Manuscript, Society and Belief in Early Christian Egypt. 45.
    [10] Roberts (1977), Manuscript, Society and Belief in Early Christian Egypt. 45-46.
    [11] Hurtado (2005). The Earliest Christian Artifacts. 96-97.
    [12] Hurtado (2005). The Earliest Christian Artifacts. 96-97.
    [13] Charles E. Hill, "Did the Scribe of P52 Use the Nomina Sacra? Another Look," NTS 48 (2002): 587-92.
    [14] E.g. Hurtado (2005), How on Earth did Jesus Become a God?; Idem, (2003). Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity. 627. It should be noted that Hurtado’s use of binitarianism refers to cultic devotion, not precluding the Trinitarian belief formulated by later orthodox Christianity.
    [15] Although, the sufficient ambiguity of the use of kyrios referring to both Jesus and YHWH in the Christian writings should be noted. That said, however, it should be noted that the kyrios scribal habit is present in Christian OT texts.