The Historical Christ and the Theological Jesus by Dale C. Jr. Allison
Author:Dale C., Jr. Allison
Language: eng
Format: mobi
ISBN: 9780802862624
Publisher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Published: 2009-02-27T00:00:00+00:00
• Jesus spoke of hating one's father and mother: Matt. 10:37; Luke 14:26; Gospel of Thomas 55, 101.
• Jesus enjoined disciples to take up a cross: Matt. 10:38; Mark 8:34; Luke 14:27.
• Jesus enjoined unlimited forgiveness: Matt. 18:21-22; Luke 17:3-4.
• Jesus exhorted hearers to lose their lives in order to save them: Matt. 10:39; Mark 8:35; Luke 17:33.
• Jesus called people away from their livelihoods: Mark 1:16-20; 2:14.
• Jesus figuratively demanded violent removal of hand, foot, and eye: Mark 9:42-48.
• Jesus asked a wealthy man to relinquish his money: Mark 10:17-27.
• Jesus forbade taking oaths: Matt. 5:33-37.
• Jesus commanded money to be lent without interest: Matt. 5:42; Gospel of Thomas 95.
• Jesus called some to a life without marriage: Matt. 19:11-12.
• Jesus asked a prospective follower not to say farewell to his parents: Luke 9:61-62.
• Jesus asked his disciples to renounce all of their possessions: Luke
I infer from this collection of materials that Jesus made uncommonly difficult demands on at least some people. Whatever he may have taught about compassion, and whether or not his motivation owed something to eschatological expectation, he insisted on self-sacrifice, to the point of demanding that some individuals follow him immediately and unconditionally.
This historical verdict holds whatever tradition histories one draws up for the various units. What matters is not whether we can establish the authenticity of any of the relevant traditions or what the criteria of authenticity may say about them, but rather the pattern that they, in concert, create. It is like running into students who enjoy telling tales about their absent-minded professor. A number of those tales may be too tall to earn our belief; but if there are several of them, they are good evidence that the professor is indeed absent-minded.
Working through the tradition in the way I suggest leads to a large number of conclusions. Jesus must have been an exorcist who interpreted his ministry in terms of Satan's downfall. He must have thought highly of John the Baptist. He must have repeatedly spoken of God as Fa ther. He must have composed parables. He must have come into conflict with religious authorities.
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