Jerusalem Post
 
Antisemitism and Jewish Survival
Wednesday Oct 24, 2012  
 




Christian Insecurity  and the Jewish Problem: The Quest for the Historical 
Jesus
 
“_As for  the story of Jesus_ (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03274a.htm) 
, there were at least 50 gospels written in the first and  second century 
CE. Four of them (Mathew, Mark, Luke, and John) were included in  the official 
canon during the fourth century CE and are found today in every  Bible. All 
of the original copies of the gospels were lost. What we have now are  
handwritten copies, which are an unknown number of replications removed from 
the 
 originals.” 
Background: Were I to point to a single evidence stream to  substantiate my 
description of insecurity at the base of Christianity it would  be the more 
that two centuries-long search for evidence to prove existence of  the 
central figure of that religion, Jesus. This is precisely what is  represented 
by the Search for the Historical Jesus begun during the 18th century  
Enlightenment and continuing even today. Certainly hints of “insecurity” are  
present in earlier Christian history: Paul, for instance, forced repeatedly to  
put off the parousia; or Augustine needing to explain, _“that we have not  
forged the prophecies about Christ.” _ 
(http://www.themiddleages.net/people/agustine.html) But the search by modern 
Christian  scholars to prove Jesus’ 
existence, a quest embarked upon almost immediately  “historical” tools 
arrived with the Age of Reason, leaves little doubt regarding  unease at the 
heart of the religion pointing directly to Christian  Insecurity. 
As always in discussing matters regarding issues the Christian religion I  
rely entirely on Christian authors to advance the discussion. 

“We can now know almost nothing concerning the life and personality of  
Jesus, since the early Christian sources show no interest in either, are  
moreover fragmentary and often legendary; and other sources about Jesus do not  
exist.”

_Rudolf  Bultmann_ 
(http://www.religion-online.org/showchapter.asp?title=426&C=277) , German 
theologian
 

P52, a papyrus fragment from one of the earliest know NT  manuscripts 
(90-160) 
“The Quest” of our title takes its name from Albert Schweitzer’s 1906 
book,  History of Life of Jesus Research which was translated into English as 
_The Quest for the  Historical Jesus_ 
(http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/schweitzer/) . While the term “quest” is 
relatively new, the effort to  
uncover evidence for a historical Jesus has been ongoing since the earliest 
days 
 of the Enlightenment. 

Evolution of the Search: Hermann Samuel Reimarus (d.  1768) is most 
credited with initiating the Search with his, “An apology for, or  some words 
in 
defense of, reasoning worshipers of God,” perhaps his last work  and only 
appearing in fragments in a work by Lessing around 1776 (US Declaration  of 
Independence, for time reference). An early example of the drive behind the  
Search is represented by Thomas Jefferson, third president of the United 
States.  Jefferson wrote his, _The  Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth_ 
(http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/JefJesu.htmlhttp:/en.wikipedia.org/w
iki/Jefferson_Bible) , (1819), In which he admires Jesus for  ethics but 
concludes that the miracles described in the gospels were likely  
embellishments, inventions of gospel authors. 
The Search, hereafter “Quest,” falls neatly into three (some prefer five)  
stages with Reimarus’ “rational” method describing the first; Schweitzer  
representing the start of the next, and the Third Stage which I represent by 
the  Jesus Seminar. The stages seem united as efforts to prove Jesus 
existence. But  another track followed by some scholars is to question whether 
there was such a  person, or whether he is an amalgam of other Jews in the 
struggle against Rome;  or even an adaptation of a figure from Paganism into 
Judaism. It is to the Pagan  Mystery religions that we now turn. 

Mystery Religion and the man-god Osiris-Dionysus: The  argument against a “
historical” Jesus revolves around the peculiar similarity,  almost identity, 
between Jesus as described by Paul and the gospels, and Osiris  -Dionysus 
of the Pagan Mystery religions. Osiris was an Egyptian god first  appearing 
in Egyptian tombs approximately 2500 years before the birth of Jesus;  
Dionysus (or Bacchus) about a thousand years later. The pairing of the deities  
first appears in the Roman Empire about a century before Jesus. Were I to 
simply  describe Dionysus without attribution the reader would immediately I 
was 
 describing Jesus. 
The following comparison of Jesus and Dionysus appears on multiple _web  
pages_ 
(https://www.google.com/search?q=jesus+and+dionysus+parallels&aq=1&oq=jesus+and+dionysus&sugexp=chrome,mod=0&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8)
 . I draw the 
following from Freke and Gandy, _The  Jesus Mysteries_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Jesus-Mysteries-Was-Original-Pagan/dp/0609807986) , p.5: 

“Osiris-Dionysus is God made flesh, the savior and “Son of God.” 
“His father is God and his mother is a mortal virgin. 
“He is born in a humble cowshed on December 25 before three shepherds. 
“He offers his followers the chance to be born again through the rites of  
baptism. 
“He rides triumphantly into town on a donkey while people wave palm leaved  
to honor him. 
“He dies at Eastertime as a sacrifice for the sins of the world. 
“After his death he descends to hell, then on the third day he rises from  
the dead and ascends to heaven in glory. 
“His followers await his return as the judge during the Last Days. 
“His death and resurrection are celebrated by a ritual meal of bread and  
wine, which symbolize his body and blood.” 

Towards the end of their study (p. 207) the authors summarize: 

“In synthesizing the perennial myth of the dying and resurrecting godman  
with Jewish expectations of a historical Messiah the creators of the Jewish  
Mysteries took an unprecedented step, the outcome of which they could never  
have guessed. And yet, upon analysis, the end was already there in the  
beginning. The Messiah was expected to be a historical, not mythical,  savior.” 



Freke and Gandy are, in some ways, better known than others doubting the  
historicity of Jesus. But they are not alone and I include other studies by  
critics and proponents of a Historical Jesus in a “bibliography” below. 

Critique of the “Quest”: The above is not intended to  prove or disprove 
the historicity of Jesus, is meant merely to illustrate  another, perhaps 
more obvious element in my description of Christian insecurity.  On the other 
hand I do question the methodology of most “mainstream” researchers  who 
place the cart of Jesus historicity before the horse of establishing the  
evidence. 
The most popular recent approach to the Quest is the _Critical  Method_ 
(http://theophilogue.com/tag/jesus-and-the-historical-critical-method/) , by 
which a biblical text of interest is compared with others assumed  
contemporary for similarities and differences. One example is the work of _The 
Jesus 
Seminar_ (http://www.westarinstitute.org/) . Founded in 1985  the Seminar 
comprises more than a hundred eminent scholars and theologians who  “vote” on 
the authenticity of sayings in the gospels with colored beads  representing 
degrees of agreement. Since all are expert on the period, the more  positive 
votes a particular saying receives the greater the likelihood that it  was 
actually spoken by Jesus.

The task the Seminar set itself was to  distinguish, “what the authors of 
the gospels said about Jesus [from what] Jesus  himself said,” (_The Five 
Gospels,  What did Jesus Really say?_ 
(http://www.westarinstitute.org/Polebridge/5gospels.html)  p.2). I will quote 
extensively portions of the  volume’s 
Introduction because the several issues raised provide an excellent  
perspective from which to critically view any historical event. But the quotes  
also 
illuminate those invisible frailties at the heart of Christian belief that  
inspired Augustinian doubt and sensitized Nicholls’ to the danger which, 
when  religious belief is threatened, can surface as threat to Jewish  
survival.

According to the authors, “Eighty-two percent of the words  ascribed to 
Jesus in the gospels were not actually spoken by him.” In other  words, the 
Seminar is questioning, 

“the alleged verbal inspiration and inerrancy of the Bible.” (p.5) “Why,” 
 ask the authors, “if God took such pains to preserve an inerrant text for  
posterity did the spirit not provide for the preservation of original copies
…  we do not have original copies of any gospels… The oldest surviving 
copies of  the gospels date from about one hundred and seventy-five years after 
the death  of Jesus, and no two copies are precisely alike… And handmade 
manuscripts have  almost always been ‘corrected’ here and there [in the 
process of copying  them], often by more than one hand… Even careful copyists 
make some mistakes,  as any proofreader knows. So we will never be able to 
claim certain knowledge  of exactly what the original text of any biblical 
writing was.” (p.6) 

And finally a reminder of the problem of oral tradition to written  
transcription: 

“The temporal gap that separates Jesus from the first surviving copies of  
the gospels—about one hundred and seventy-five years—corresponds to the 
lapse  in time from 1776—the writing of the Declaration of Independence—to 
1950. What  if the oldest copies of the founding document dated only from 1950?”
 (p.6) 


Critique of Methodology: As I wrote in introducing this  submission, I am 
neither historian nor theologian and would not undertake to  criticize 
Christianity as religion if I were. But one thing stands glaringly  bright in 
my 
readings of the Quest: nearly all authors, including those  participating in 
The Jesus Seminar (nearly entirely non-Jews and whose honesty I  generally 
respect), begin with the conclusion which their researches are meant  to 
prove: that Jesus was a man of flesh, a pre-assumed historical figure. This  
brackets the entire project, makes any conclusions dubious by  definition.

Let us assume, for example, that The Jesus Seminar has  developed a 
productive method for evaluating gospel sayings attributed to Jesus.  What 
precisely have they proven? If, as the authors themselves note, the oldest  
such 
document dates to nearly two hundred years after the events described, that  
they have, as the authors recognize, gone through many generations of 
re-write,  etc: even if Seminar experts all agree regarding authenticity of 
that “
twelve  percent” which they assume reliable, how can they conclusively decide 
that it  was the person of Jesus, from among the several million Judean Jews 
of that  time, who actually uttered the words? Yes they might distinguish 
the language,  the manner of forming sentences between a later and earlier 
speaker. But  attribute them to a single individual, and assume that 
individual Jesus? I doubt  any objective scientific enquiry would support such 
a 
conclusion. 
I’ll end this discussion by again reminding that my writing is not intended 
 as criticism of Christianity as religion or belief system. If I raise 
issues of  internal and usually submerged contradictions and uncertainties in 
its texts and  practice it is only to identify sources of those unconscious 
anxieties described  by Nicholls as a danger to Jewish existence. 

In recognition of the sensitive and potentially disturbing nature of this  
material I provide a suggested reading list, both pro and con: 
John Paul Meier is author of the three-volume study,  _A  Marginal Jew: 
Rethinking the Historical Jesus_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Marginal-Jew-Rethinking-Historical-Problem/dp/0385264259/ref=la_B000APMX2I_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=135066434
5&sr=1-2)  
John Dominic Crossan is a former priest and chair of The  Jesus Seminar: 
_The  Historical Jesus: The Life of a Mediterranean Jewish Peasant_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Historical-Jesus-Mediterranean-Jewish-Peasant/dp/0060616296/ref=
sr_1_4?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1350664712&sr=1-4&keywords=john+dominic+crossan) 
; and,  _The  Historical Jesus: Five Views;_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Historical-Jesus-Five-Views/dp/0830838686/ref=sr_1_9?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1350665167&;
sr=1-9&keywords=The+Historical+Jesus:+The+Life+of+a+Mediterranean+Jewish+Pea
sant)  
The Jesus Seminar: _The  Five Gospels, What Did Jesus Really Say? _ 
(http://www.amazon.com/The-Five-Gospels-Really-Authentic/dp/006063040X) 
(discussed 
above); and  _Finding  the Historical Jesus: Rules of Evidence_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Finding-Historical-Jesus-Evidence-Seminar/dp/1598150073/ref=sr_1_1
?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1350668316&sr=1-1&keywords=Finding+the+Historical+Jesus
,+Rules+of+Evidence)  (discussed above without  attribution); 

Timothy Freke and Peter Gandy, _The  Jesus Mysteries: Was the "Original 
Jesus" a Pagan God?_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Jesus-Mysteries-Was-Original-Pagan/dp/0609807986)  (see  
above) 
Earl Doherty: _The  Jesus Puzzle: Did Christianity Begin with a Mythical 
Christ? Challenging the  Existence of an Historical Jesus_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Jesus-Puzzle-Christianity-Challenging-Historical/dp/096892591X/ref=sr_1_1
?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1350666235&sr=1-1&keywords=the+jesus+puzzle+by+earl+doh
erty)  
George Wells: _The  Jesus Myth_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Jesus-Myth-G-Wells/dp/0812693922/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1350666489&sr=1-1&keywords=George
+Wells:+The+Jesus+Myth)  
And finally I have to mention the Jewish historian (not discussed  above), 
Robert Eisenman, who more often than not challenges my  thinking on matters 
First Century. Regarding our present topic I recommend his  discussion of 
Paul in: _James  the Brother of Jesus: The Key to Unlocking the Secrets of 
Early Christianity and  the Dead Sea Scrolls_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/James-Brother-Jesus-Unlocking-Christianity/dp/014025773X)
 .

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