Pages

google analytics

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

The Changing Faces of Jesus – The Jesus He Wants to Find


In one sense, the final chapters of Geza Vermes’ book The Changing Faces of Jesus[i] are unnecessary.  Chapters one and two dealt with the Jesus described in the Gospel of John, chapters three and four with the Jesus of Paul, chapter five with the portrait of Jesus found in the Acts of the Apostles, and chapter six covered the Jesus described in the synoptic gospels of Mark, Matthew, and Luke.  Finally now in chapters seven and eight, Vermes describes the Jesus he believes to be the ‘real’ and ‘historical’ Jesus.

But he’s been doing this all along – holding this portrait up against the various portraits of Jesus he describes in the different parts of the New Testament.  The only new thing in these chapters is that Vermes is grounding this portrait of the ‘real and historical’ Jesus in “the realities of the Jewish world of his day.” This way, explains Vermes, is the only chance we have to “transform Jesus into a lifelike character.”  In another section Vermes describes the job of the historian as “to reconvert the Christ of the Gospels…into the real tangible, flesh-and-blood person who once used to walk on the rocky dusty paths of the first century rural Galilee.” [ii]  In these chapters Vemes quotes extra-biblical sources like the writings of the historian, Josephus, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the writings of the rabbis in the Mishnah to recreate the milieu of Jesus’ time and place, to retrieve the atmosphere that he breathed, so that we can “catch a glimpse of what he really was.”[iii]

I think his choice of verbs here is particularly illuminating.  According to Vermes, we must “transform” Jesus and “reconvert” Jesus because the gospel writers have “concealed” and “disguised” him.[iv]   Though Vermes has described himself as an objective and neutral historian, [v] it’s apparent that he does have an agenda.  This isn’t a criticism or fault.  But he should be open and up front about it. Pretending to be unbiased is bad form and bad history.   It is true that the gospel writers have not written unbiased objective histories or modern biographies of Jesus.  We do need to read the gospels carefully, keeping in mind the Jewish context of Jesus’ life, but I am not convinced by Vermes’ arguments that primitive Christian church so completely obscured the historical Jesus. 

The historical portrait of Jesus that Vermes finds compelling is that of a Hasidic Holy Man like Honi the Circle Drawer and Hanina ben Dosa.  The lives of these charismatic rabbis and healers are brought to life by Vermes to illustrate their similarity to the Jesus he believes lies beneath the gospels.  They were pious teachers and charismatic healers who spoke and acted as God’s men in turbulent and changeable times.  And, indeed there is much similarity to be found between them and Jesus, the prophet of Nazareth.    The description of these men and of the culture and religion of Galilee during the first century A.D. is (in my opinion) the best material of the book.  Seriously.  It’s worth plowing through the rest of the book to get to this material.

But (and there’s always a “but”, right?) I do have some quibbles.  I have in my previous comments on Vermes’ book accused him of cherry picking facts, and of exaggerating differences and dismissing similarities in order to make his arguments.  And I think he does more of that in these chapters. 

For example:  in previous chapters Vermes has been extremely critical of the separation of time between the life of Jesus and the writing of the New Testament, in particular he is reluctant to admit any historicity in the gospel of John because it is so far removed in time from the historical life of Jesus.  But here in these final chapters where he is laying out what he believes to be the most trustworthy portrait of Jesus he is perfectly willing to accept the testimony sources written as late as or even later than the Gospel of John.  

“The Mishna and the rest of the writings of the rabbis post date the period of Jesus and their testimony cannot be automatically applied to the situation prevailing in the first century  A.D.  yet historical circumstances point in the direction  of the relative reliability of stereotypes regularly repeated.”[vi]

He is aware that the sources he quotes concerning the lives of these Hasidic holy men were written several centuries after the fact[vii], but Vermes offers none of the critical dissection he performed on the New Testament sources.  This is an inconsistent criticism of late (and therefore, unreliable…) sources. 

Another slight but telling example is found in his use of the “long ending” of Mark’s gospel in order to highlight the similarities between the New Testament Jesus and his portrait of the historical Jesus.  Vermes tells the story of Rabbi Hanina ben Dosa who, when bitten by a venomous snake, was unharmed – in fact it was the snake who died, prompting the rabbinical aphorism “ Woe to the man bitten by a snake, but woe to the snake which has bitten ben Dosa.” [viii]  This, Vermes says, provides context for Jesus’ “certainty that a man of faith could safely step on, or pick up, serpents without being harmed,”[ix] and supplies Mark 16:17 as the source.  So, even though scholars believe the long ending of Mark’s gospel to be a much later addition to the gospel, because it dovetails with his own portrait of Jesus, Vermes is willing to accept it.[x] 

If I have been critical of Geza Vermes’ book The Changing Faces of Jesus, it is not because I dislike him or his work.  Indeed, I am deeply impressed by his portrait of Jesus as a Jewish ish ha-Elohim (man of God) who performed miracles and exorcisms and taught about the imminence of the Kingdom of God.  His description of Jesus is marvelous:

“[Jesus] inherited the strength, the iron character, and fearlessness of his predecessors, the prophets.  Like Amos facing up to the priest of Bethel (Amos 7: 10 – 17) and Jeremiah prophesying doom in the face of King Jehoiakim (Jeremiah 36), Jesus was not afraid to stand up to the powerful.  He showed love to children who he proposed as models for those who sought to enter the Kingdom of God.  He welcomed women and felt pity for the sick and the miserable.  He surpassed the prophets.  They embraced the weak, the poor, the widow, the fatherless; Jesus went further and bravely extended the hand of friendship to the social outcasts, the unclean prostitutes and the despised publicans who were kept at arm’s length by his hidebound, pious contemporaries.  He is depicted as capable of demonstrating extreme emotions.  He could be moved by pity and by anger; he let his fury fly and strike opponents and critics.  Slowness in comprehension, let alone lack of understanding, especially on the part of his chosen disciples, often made him indignant.  …. Jesus was a man of steel and warmth at the same time, and a total devotee of God whose perfection and mercy he set out to imitate.”[xi]

But he plays with inconsistent rules (late sources are bad – except when they agree with his presentation) and he makes no acknowledgment of opposing interpretations – even to refute them.   The Jesus that he finds seems to be the Jesus he wants to find. And this could be a criticism leveled at all of us.  Even myself.  But, then again, I’m not pretending to be a “detached historian.” 

At the end of it all, I like the very Jewish Jesus that Vermes presents, but this stripped down version of Jesus isn’t compelling.  The portrait of Jesus that Vermes presents is of a Jewish holy man – acceptable to, but not worshiped by Jews of the first century, and he derides the Jesus of the New Testament as an “otherworldly Christ”  - worshipped by Gentiles who had no real understanding of the Jewish roots of the man Jesus.  The problem is the gap between them.  Between the historical life of Jesus the Jewish holy man and his worship and adoration by Gentile believers – are the original followers (and worshippers) of Jesus who were themselves, Jewish.    In order to bridge that gap, Jesus  must have been something more than what Vermes presents.



[i] Vermes, Geza The Changing Faces of Jesus, Viking Compass, New York, NY. 2000. 
[ii] Page 238
[iii] Page 238
[iv] Page 237, 238
[v] Page 9
[vi] Page 243
[vii] Page 254
[viii] Quoted on page 261
[ix] Page 269
[x] Granted – this idea of picking up serpents is also in Luke 10:19, and Vermes cites it as well, but it’s his inconsistent criticism of late (and therefore-as he says- historically unreliable) sources that bothers me.
[xi] Page 271-2 

2 comments:

  1. Excellent review series, Jeff. Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No...Thank you, Steve. It's good to know that it's been appreciated.

      My book pile is now empty. Have you any suggestions?

      Delete

Jeff Carter's books on Goodreads
Muted Hosannas Muted Hosannas
reviews: 2
ratings: 3 (avg rating 4.33)

Related Posts with Thumbnails