bntcpaper2014jesussdivineself consciousness libre

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British New Testament Conference, Manchester, 2014. Friday 5 th September. Jesus’ Divine Self-Consciousness: a Proposal (Dr C Fletcher-Louis, [email protected]) This is an unusual paper. It attempts to summarise over 200,000 words of a forthcoming book (volumes 2 and 3 of my Jesus Monotheism). The argument is laid out in a series of propositions (as also in the book). Each of these could easily justify a seminar paper in its own right. My aim today is simply to offer you the overall shape of the argument. To help you follow a dense argument here is a more or less word-for-word handout of what I will say (with plenty of supporting primary textual data and secondary references that would normally appear in the footnotes). Proposition 1: In the originally intended order of creation, humanity is God’s idol (tselem) and as such is “divine”; in both being and function. Genesis 1 (verses 26–28) uses the language of ancient Near Easter idolatry and idol making. On which see: M. B. Dick, Born in Heaven, Made on Earth: The Making of the Cultic Image in the Ancient Near East (1999) C. Walker and M. B. Dick, The Induction of the Cult Image in Ancient Mesopotomia: The Mesopotamian Mīs Pî Ritual (2001). Z. Bahrani, The Graven Image: Representation in Babylonia and Assyria (2003). N. H. Walls, Cult image and divine representation in the ancient Near East / edited by Neal H. Walls (2005). V. A. Hurowitz, “The Mesopotamian God-Image” (2003) and “Materials for Creating Cult Statues,” (2006). In Akkadian tsalam ili/ilani means divine cult image (idol). And In Genesis humanity is the tselem elohim—God’s idol. And idol in the ancient world is the deity, it does not merely represent the deity. So humanity is created to be God’s manifest presence in the world: “…. Adamic beings are animate icons … the peculiar purpose for their creation is ‘theophanic’.” (S. D. McBride, “Divine Protocol,” (2000) 16). C1st Jews knew this and so they tell a tale in which Adam is worshipped (before his sin) as God’s image-idol by the angels (Life of Adam and Eve 12–16 and parrs.). But - Adam is not a person. - Humanity is not the Creator. - The “divine,” sinless Adam is no threat to God’s unique identity, because he provides God “with a means of extending his divine presence. The divine image is not understood as something distinct from the represented god but actually extended the presence of that god.” (S. L. Herring, Divine Substitution, 2013, 218)

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Biblical Theological Account of Christ's Self-knowledge by a top scholar.

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  • British New Testament Conference, Manchester, 2014. Friday 5th September. Jesus Divine Self-Consciousness: a Proposal

    (Dr C Fletcher-Louis, [email protected])

    This is an unusual paper. It attempts to summarise over 200,000 words of a forthcoming book

    (volumes 2 and 3 of my Jesus Monotheism). The argument is laid out in a series of propositions

    (as also in the book). Each of these could easily justify a seminar paper in its own right. My

    aim today is simply to offer you the overall shape of the argument. To help you follow a

    dense argument here is a more or less word-for-word handout of what I will say (with plenty

    of supporting primary textual data and secondary references that would normally appear in

    the footnotes).

    Proposition 1: In the originally intended order of creation, humanity is Gods

    idol (tselem) and as such is divine; in both being and function.

    Genesis 1 (verses 2628) uses the language of ancient Near Easter idolatry and idol making.

    On which see:

    M. B. Dick, Born in Heaven, Made on Earth: The Making of the Cultic Image in the Ancient Near East (1999)

    C. Walker and M. B. Dick, The Induction of the Cult Image in Ancient Mesopotomia: The Mesopotamian Ms P Ritual

    (2001).

    Z. Bahrani, The Graven Image: Representation in Babylonia and Assyria (2003).

    N. H. Walls, Cult image and divine representation in the ancient Near East / edited by Neal H. Walls (2005).

    V. A. Hurowitz, The Mesopotamian God-Image (2003) and Materials for Creating Cult Statues, (2006).

    In Akkadian tsalamili/ilanimeans divine cult image (idol). And In Genesis humanity is the tselem

    elohimGods idol. And idol in the ancient world is the deity, it does not merely represent the deity.

    So humanity is createdtobeGodsmanifestpresenceintheworld:

    . Adamic beings are animate icons the peculiar purpose for their creation is theophanic. (S. D. McBride, Divine Protocol, (2000) 16).

    C1st Jews knew this and so they tell a tale in which Adam is worshipped (before his sin) as

    Gods image-idol by the angels (Life of Adam and Eve 1216 and parrs.).

    But

    - Adam is not a person.

    - Humanity is not the Creator.

    - The divine, sinless Adam is no threat to Gods unique identity, because he provides

    God with a means of extending his divine presence. The divine image is not

    understood as something distinct from the represented god but actually extended the

    presence of that god. (S. L. Herring, Divine Substitution, 2013, 218)

  • 2

    Prop. 2: Adam, already being in the image and likeness of Yahweh God, as his

    idol, should not have considered the offer to become a god equal to the one

    true God something worth grasping after (Gen 23).

    In line with ancient Jewish interpretation and much recent scholarship, Gen 13 says that

    Adam tragically pursued an independent divine identity; forgetting or ignoring the one he

    already had (as Gods image and likeness):

    - Already in Gen 2 Adam knows the difference between good and evil (so Sir 17:7, cf. 1QHa

    6:1112; 4Q417 frag. 2 i 1718 = 4Q418 frags. 43+44+45 i 1314; 4Q300 frag. 3 23; 2En.

    30:15); between the good trees and the evil one, between the good partner (Eve) and the beastial

    ones. Adam and Eve are wise (arummim3:25).

    - Adam is already divine; he has Gods own breath, a share in His own deity (Philo Worse

    86, cf. Creation144) and is created for divine immortality. (He also continues the creative work

    of naming parts of creation and the manner of his creation reiterates the point of Gen 1 that he is

    supposed to serve as Gods image-idol).

    - Adam is divine as Gods subordinate. - The serpent offers a faux deification, by which Adam and Eve he will become like gods (Gen

    3:5: Heb. kelohim; Gk. hstheoi, Vulg. sicutdii).

    - So Adam and Eve deny who they are and listening to the voice of creation (the serpent and the tree), they try to grasp an independent, additional divinity.

    - In so doing they annhilate their true identity: as God predicted, they die. Sin is both a rebellion

    against God and a self-denigration; a loss of being, of divine glory. - A fall that ancipates the tragedies of Israel and her kings. In particular, it has multiple points of

    contact with Solomons rise and fall (1 Kgs 111). As a new Adam (1 Kgs 34) Solomon turns

    in on himself and is led astray to self-serving idolatry through his wives (1 Kgs 1011). So Gen

    13 has a deeply political purpose as a meditation on the human quest for personal glory; it

    says sin is always a denial of our vocation to bear Gods divine presence as his tselem. A

    problem that afflicts rulers when they seek an independent divine identity. Prop. 3 says: The true image-idol of God is reconstituted in Israel, above all in the high priest (Exod 28), who is divine and receives worship as such. Aaron is dressed as an idol: in multi-coloured, jewel-clad garments (Exod 28, cf. 39:130). These (esp.

    the hoshen of judgement, the engraved gems, the ephod, robe, golden flower on the turban,

    pomegranates and bells) are generically the kind of glorious garments that decorate ancient Near

    Eastern idols. These are Gods glorious, light-giving, garments (cf. Ps 104:2).

    See esp. Fletcher-Louis, Gods Image, (2004); Priests and Priesthood, (2013); Carol L Meyers,

    Exodus, (2005) 244; William H. Propp, Exodus 1940, (2006) 526.

    So it is not surprising to find texts where the high priest or a high priestly figure is worshipped in

    ways analogous to the worship of divine cult statues by Israels neighbours.

    There are 13 texts that illustrate this Proposition.

    - At least 5, perhaps 8, describe a priest or priestly figure as the image-idol of God.

  • 3

    - At least 11 make him the recipient of worship (proskynesis, blessings, song).

    i. Exodus 28. (Image-idol of God).

    ii. Ezekiel the prophet: Ezekiel is, in a manner of speaking, the epiphany of Yhwh (Casey Strine

    Ezekiels Image Problem, (2014), 263), cf. Herring, DivineSubstitution,17678, 205207. (Image-

    idol of God).

    iii. Hecateus of Abdera: the Jews fall to the ground and worship the high priest (

    ... ) in the temple when he expounds the commandments to them. (in Diodorus

    Siculus XL.5). (Worship).

    iv. T. Levi. 17:3 describes an anointed priest whose priesthood was honored and glorified (

    ) by all. T. Reub. 6:12 Reuben commands his children to

    worship () [Levis] seed, because it will die for us in wars visible and invisible,

    and will be to you an eternal king. (Worship).

    v. In Ben Sira/Sirach 7:2731, 49:1650:21 the high priest receives praise and proskynesis as (i)

    Wisdom in human form (cf. Hayward 1996), (ii) A a manifestation of the the appearance of

    the likeness of the glory of Yhwh seen in Ezek 1:2628, (iii) As the perfected image and

    likeness of God of Gen 1:2628 and Ps 8, (iv) as the one who plays the part of the Creator (cf.

    Klawans, Purity, 6268). See Fletcher-Louis, Temple Cosmology of P, (2004). (Worship)

    (Image-idol of God).

    vi. Alexander the Greats prostration to the Jewish high priest in a story best attested in Josephus

    Ant. 11:326338. See Fletcher-Louis Alexander the Great. (Worship) (Image-idol of God).

    vii. In Song XIII of the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice (4Q405 23 ii) the high priesthood is praised and

    identified with the divine glory of Ezek 1:2628. (Worship) (Image-idol of God?).

    viii. 2Enoch57 & 64. See Fletcher-Louis, 2 Enoch (2012). (Worship) (Image-idol of God).

    ix. Dan 7:1314. See Fletcher-Louis, Dan 7:13 (1997). (Worship) (Image-idol of God?).

    x. The Son of Man-Messiah of the Similitudes of Enoch receives praise, blessing and prostration (1

    En. 46:5; 48:5; 62:6, 9) as one seated on Gods throne and identified with the Glory of Ezek 1:26

    28. (see Fletcher-Louis, Similitudes 2014). (Worship) (Image-idol of God?).

    xi. In Josephus War 4:324325 the high priests receive proskynesis. (Worship).

    xii. In 3 Enoch 1216 the high priestly Enoch-Metatron receives proskynesis as the lesser Yhwh

    (Worship).

    xiii. The Mareh Kohen piyut in the synagogues Yom Kippur Avodah service (esp. the Ashkenazi

    rite). (For the text and recent translations see e.g. Swartz & Yahalom, Avodah, 344355; Sachs,

    Mazor, 900903). The poem praises the high priest as he is imagined coming out of the sanctu

    ary and is likened to/identified with the Glory of God in Ezek 1:2628. In the same breath, he

    is also said to be dressed as Adam was dressed, with glorious garments. (Worship).

    I can no find no evidence that this view of the high priest was a matter of dispute. Props. 4 & 5 however qualify what worship of a divine high priest means.

    Prop. 4: The high priest is the divine image-idol in the temple-as-Eden and

    the temple-as-microcosm; on a cosmic stage.

  • 4

    The temple is theatre. The high priest is an actor on a cosmic stage. He plays the role of God

    in the cult as microcosm and he plays the role originally intended for the image and likeness

    of God in a restored Eden.

    So, in the worship of the divine high priest there is not threat to the uniqueness of Israels

    God. It no more entails the worship of a second god than Anthony Hopkins performance of a

    production of Shadowlands in the West End would mean there are two C. S. Lewiss (one in

    the cemetery of Holy Trinity church, Headington, Oxford, and one in London).

    Prop. 5: The high priest is an office not a person.

    The temple is also sacrament and it works with the unmodern notion that the priest is an

    office, not a person.

    Within the temples liturgical, sacramental, framework, the high priest is not a private,

    individual person. He is consituted by:

    (a) Purification rituals the other side of which he is blameless, sinless, perfected (see Lev

    21:10 LXX; Philo Spec. Laws 1:102; Flight 108 and Wis 18:21). (b) Special clothes that no ordinary Israelite can wear; that say he belongs to Yhwh

    (Exod 28:36), i.e. not to himself.

    (c) A predefined liturgical script that has to be performed to be effective. (d) Gods choice of the Levites and (the personal disaster that is) Aaron. It cannot be earnt,

    won or bought and is effective regardless of the incumbents own inner moral state. In

    John 11:5152 Caiaphas can prophesy not from himself ( ), but because he is the high priest, even though he does not understand what he says and his own guilt

    in the matter.

    The high priests own personal interests, attributes and aspirations are occluded. He ministers

    in persona christi (as the anointed one, ha-mashiah) and that, in turn, means he ministers in

    persona Domini (and also in persona mundi, in persona Israhel, and in persona Adam).

    In Ben Sira 50:21 when the high priest utters Gods name the Hebrew says the congregation

    fell down before him. The him is deliberately ambiguous. He is the high priest who is the Most High.

    Contrast the king and others, like Moses. We have biographical accounts of Moses and the lives of some of Israels kings (cf. Philos Life of Moses); recounting their achievements, their

    failures, their flaws and virtues. No one ever thought to write a Life of Aaron. Nor any priest

    after him.

    Aaron-as-office is a response to the failure of kingship where personal interests interfere with

    the call to represent God to the world. This was Adams failure. He wanted to go solo, to compete with God, rather than align and submit his interests, values and choices with the one

    whose divine image-idol he was created to be. Solomons failure too.

  • 5

    (Today we temper the excesses of our royalty through an elected legislature. In the Bible the

    kingship problem is dealt with by the priest-as-office. Israel is a theocracy-through-a-

    hierocracy).

    He really is divine (the priest is Yhwh), but, as an office:

    (a) the high priest is not included in the divine identity. Inclusion means a distinct

    identity (of a divine Son with a Father). The priest manifests or expresses the

    divine identity (just as a cult statue manifests a deity).

    (b) the high priest is not a separate figure who is worshipped alongside God.

    Prop. 6: The high priest is co-creator, in a sacramental ontology.

    So, biblical monotheism is deeply iconic (not aniconic). It proclaims the good news that it is Gods purpose that we share and express his life and identity and incarnation is not the least unbiblical. All this comes to its fullest expression with the high priest playing the role of the Creator, reenacting the work of the 7-days of creation. This is clearly laid out Ben Sira/Sirach and is already present in Priestly portions of the Pentateuch (see Fletcher-Louis, Cosmology of P). Because the temple is more than just theatrebecause it is sacramentin a sense the high priest is as a Co-creator. The world is established by temple service (Avodah) (m. Aboth 1:2) so, in part, the high priest and his liturgical duties have a cosmogonic function.

    Prop. 7: In accordance with Israels Scriptures, the priesthood had a position

    of primacy in Second Temple political theology and messianic hope.

    There is less enthusiasm for a royal messiah in the C1st than we might expect. But this is historically unsurprising. In the Pentateuch there is no need for a king; in part because Aaron

    is a royal high priest. Some of his garments are a kings garments.

    In antiquity what is true and good is what is old. Sinai precedes Zion. So the Bible says hierocracy is Gods ideal constitution. And throughout the Second Temple period the nation

    was led by priests (a royal priest in Aramaic Levi Document, Ben Sira, Maccabean propaganda).

    (See e.g. James VanderKam From Joshua to Caiaphas, (2004)). Some turned to a diarchic model after the failures of the Hasmoneans; with the king or

    prince clearly subordinate to the high priest. But no oneand this is of the utmost importance

    for our understanding of Jesusespouses a king who is a priest. That is the model of the old Canaanite city states, Mesopotamian kings, Hellenistic divine rulers and imperial Rome

    where the Caeser is also Pontifex Maximus; the Great Priest ( ). God severely

    judges Israels kings who leverage the cult for their own purposes (2 Chr 26:1621, cf. Josephus Ant. 9:224; 20:266; Heb 7:14).

  • 6

    Prop. 8: Daniel 7:13 exemplifies the centrality of temple and priesthood in

    Second Temple theology and its hope for a new (messianic and royal) high

    priest.

    The most important text for the hope for a future high priest is Dan 7. I laid out my priestly

    reading of Dan 7:13 in 1997. The argument is consolidated by a forthcoming article on the

    priestly Son of Man figure in the Similitudes (Fletcher-Louis, Similitudes (forthcoming)) and

    an article in which I have argued NT texts assume the Son of Man is a priest (Fletcher-Louis,

    Jesus as the High Priestly Messiah: Parts 1 & 2 (2006 & 2007)).

    There is much more on this that could be said. But, in brief, the scene is set at the temple.

    Daniels man figure comes to God with clouds the way the high priest comes to God in the

    holy of holies surrounded by clouds of incense on the Day of Atonement. As the true high

    priest he has Adamic and angelic characteristics.

    I have only changed my mind on one point. There are royal aspects to the one like a

    son of man which is unsurprising because the high priest is a royal figure: a royal priest

    (something quite different from a priest king).

    [Prop. 9: Apocalyptic literature reflects the spirituality and cosmology of the

    Temple (and Torah) and of the belief that humanity in general, and the

    priesthood in particular, is created to be Gods true image-idol.]

    Prop. 10. All four Gospels present a plausibly historical account of a Jewish

    Jesus with a self-consciously unique, incarnational divine identity

    The Gospels think Jesus has a pre-existent, incarnational self-understanding (see work of Bauckham, Gathercole, K. Rowe et al). The principal Synoptic texts are:

    (i) The storm and sea crossing stories. (ii) The transfiguration.

    (iii) The I have come with a purpose sayings (Mark 1:24; 2:17; Luke 12:49; Matt 5:17;

    8:29; 10:3435; Mark 10:45; Luke 19:10). (iv) The Son given all things, revealing the Father (Luke 10:2122 & Matt 11:2527)

    (v) Jesus speaks as the Shekinah from Gods winged chariot (Luke 13:33 & Matt 23:37)

    (vi) Matthews Immanuel, Yhwh-Kyrios theophany language and proskynesis to Jesus. (vii) Lukes use carefully structured use of (ho) kyrios.

    (viii) The blasphemy texts (Mark 2:10; Mark 14:6264).

    There are no texts (not even Matt 4:111; Luke 4:113; Mark 10:1722) that count against this

    view. And it is a plausible Christology for these thoroughly Jewish texts because:

    (a) We can now dispense with the assumption that as Jewish texts the Gospels could not

    have this Christology.

  • 7

    (b) The gospels say that Jesus thinks he has the divine glory that Adam lost: e.g. Baptism-

    Temptation stories; Luke 10:1722.

    (c) There is plenty of evidence that Jesus of the gospels thinks of himself as Israels true

    eschatological high priest and therefore divine on that count. (See preliminary studies in

    Fletcher-Louis Sacral Son of Man (2001) & High Priestly Messiah, (2006 & 2007)

    and compare on both John and the Synoptics: H. Bond, Caiaphas, esp. 13340 and

    Robe; Kerr, Gospel of John, esp. 1419, 332335, 351368; Barker, Temple Imagery in

    Philo; N. Perrin, Jesus the Temple; B. Pitre, New Priesthood, 7082; H. Attridge,

    High Priestly Prayer). The key Synoptic material is:

    a. Jesus forgiving sins. Compare Aaron taking away/forgiving sins in Exod 28:36

    38 (and the priestly Enoch in 2 En. 64:5). This is both a theological challenge:

    Jesus does what only God and Gods living image-idol can do. And it is a

    political challenge: Jesus mediates outside of the temple what only a priest, with

    sacrifices, in the temple can mediate.

    b. Jesus contagious healing holiness (Mark 1:4045; 5:2434, 3543, cf. Exod 30:2930;

    44:19; Wis 18:2025).

    c. Jesus working on the Sabbath; something only priests can (and must) do in the temple: Mark 2:2328; 3:16; John 5:17.

    d. Jesus as the pre-existent Holy One of God (Mark 1:24, cf Aaron in Ps 106:16; Num

    16:7; Ben Sira/Sir 45:6). e. The Transfiguration (of Jesus garments).

    f. The Son of Man title.

    g. Jesus claim to fulfil Ps 110:1 (in combination with Dan 7:13); a text that describes one who is both king and priest (v. 4).

    h. His celibacy (cf. esp. Qumran priestly celibacy).

    i. His identification with historic Israel and the representatives of her faith (Adam, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, Solomon, Elijah-Elisha , cf. Ben Sir 4450).

    (d) The Gospel writers (incl. Matthew and prob. also John) respect the distinction between

    the Jesus of history and the Jesus of Christological monotheism. a. Jesus does not proclaim himself a divine agent of creation (contrast 1 Cor 8:6;

    Col 1:16; John 1:3; Heb 1:2).

    b. Jesus uses the strange expression Son of Man where Yhwh-Kyrios is the Churchs preferred language.

    c. Christ devotion does not take place during the ministry, even though Jesus

    speaks and acts as God-incarnate.

    [Prop. 11: In so-called Christological monotheism Jesus identity includes a

    truly human and therefore divine identity

    Acts 17:1634; Phil 2:611 and Rom 18 all confirm Propositions 13 and show that

    theological anthropology provided both a negative and a positive conceptual framework for

    Pauls Christological monotheism. For Paul Jesus answers humanitys plight and fulfills Gods original intention that humanity should bear his divine presence and rule in creation as his

    representatives.]

  • 8

    Prop. 12. In the first instance, the worship of the Lord Jesus Christ is best

    explained as a response to the conviction that he was Israels true

    eschatological high priest, the true image-idol of God.

    We might have suspected this from:

    - Luke 24:5053 (where Jesus is first worshipped by the disciples as he ascends to

    heaven giving the two-handed blessing that was the prerogative of the priest

    according to Lev 9:22 (cf. Ben Sira/Sir 50:20 and m. Tamid 7:2).

    We can now understand why:

    - Christ devotion begins after his resurrection, but before his full exaltation and

    ascension to Gods right hand, in Matt 28:9, 17; Luke 24:5053 (proskynesis) and Luke

    24:47 (forgivenss of sins for repentence in his name): this is because the resurrection

    confirmed for the disciples Jesus claim to be the true eschatological high priest (Daniels Son

    of Man and the priest-king of Ps 110). The disicples reasoned: this messiah has been

    resurrected then he is indeed Yhwh-Kyrios. - Christ is an agent of creation in Christological monotheism; this flows from his

    identity as the true high priest. See Prop. 6.

    - Christ is said to be sinless (Rom 8:3; 2 Cor 5:19, 21; Heb 4:15; 1 Pet 2:22; 1 John 3:5, cf. Phil 2:68). See esp. Prop. 5.

    And on careful inspection we find that priestly language, categories and a high priestly script partly explains the classic Christological monotheism texts:

    - Phil 2:611.

    - Col 1:1520. - 1 Cor 8:6.

    Prop. 13. There is a lack of proper recognition and response to Jesus in the

    Gospels because his self-understanding as Israels priestly king is puzzling

    and seems to disregard the God-given boundaries of the office.

    But how is it possible that Jesus spoke and acted this way and it does not precipitate a

    response in the Gospels? This is not hard to explain.

    (a) The most Jesus could reasonably claim to be, by virtue of natural credentials, is a royal

    messiah, Elijah-like healer and prophet. It would be an absurdity for Jesus to claim to be the true high priest.

    (b) Indeed, it would be a blasphemy. It would mean that Jesus was exalting himself (as

    the king is warned not to do in Deut 17:20), taking the honour for himself () (Heb 5:4), with a flagrant disregard for Gods own constitution (revealed through

    Moses).

    (c) It would be a double absurdity if Jesus now claimed that he was Israels true high priest outside the boundaries of the office (with no appeal to anointed clothing, rites of

  • 9

    purification and the sacramental ontology and cosmology of the temple). To speak and

    act as the true high priest ex persona not ex cathedra would be to subordinate the divine

    identity, power and authority of the office to his own person. Has Jesus not read Moses?!

    (d) Does he not know that sacral kingship is a pagan model? If he were to adopt it he

    would be making himself () equal to God (John 5:18, cf. Phil 2:6; 2 Thess 2:34;

    Josephus Ant. 18:256; 19:4). It would be the authorities God-ordained duty to punish

    him lest he lead the people astray (Deut 13).

    But the Jesus of the Gospels believes that he has God and Scripture on his side:

    - his healings and their manner confirms his priestly self-consciousness.

    - At the transfiguration he is both priestly (with transfigured garments) and also Gods

    royal son)

    - even the demons recognise he is both a royal figure (Mark 5:7 Son of the Most High

    and a priestly figure (Mark 1:24 Holy One of God)

    - And Scripture does provide one passage to justify his messianic identity; and it

    precedes Sinai. Ps 110 describes one who is a priest-king

    So, during his ministry, Jesus undertakes a carefully worked out PR strategy that is designed:

    (a) to introduce his radically new vision of Israels constitution to his disciples slowly, not

    all at once lest he loose them. (b) to give him a public stage in Jerusalem where he will make, with the greatest possible

    impact at the centre of the nations current power structures, his claim to be Israels

    priest-king after the order of Melchizedek.

    That means, in particular, careful PR management of his Son of Man self-claim:

    - Jesus usually speaks of the SM as if he is somebody else. - In the order in which they are delivered, the SM sayings have a progressively clearer

    connection to Dan 7:13 (not clear: Mark 2:10, 28; pretty clear: Mark 8:38; crystal clear:

    Mark 13:26, 14:62). - Jesus avoids SM talk when he is with the authorities.

    - The self-claim only becomes really obvious at the final show down (14:62); when its

    full theological and political implications draw upon him their inevitable consequences.

    Some of the disiciples got it, especially towards the end. James and Johns requestcan we sit

    at your left and right when you come in your glory (Mark 10:37) implies a divine view of Jesus true identity. So when they arrive in Jerusalem with the crowds, the way the Synoptics

    tell it, we should assume that an inner core of the disciples believe that Jesus is far more than

    just a royal messiah. And so we wonder why they are not already, in private at least, confessing and worshipping

    him in the way that they would do after his death.

    For two reasons this is understandable: 1. In C1st Judaism worship takes place in the temple, not outside (or in synagogues).

    2. If the disciples came to the conclusion during Jesus ministry that he would soon sit in

    divine glory, as both king and priest, they would also assume that he would be properly installed to that office in Jerusalem (cf. Mark 10:37). He cannot make himself the

  • 10

    nations priest-king. He will not treat equality with God a thing to be seized. (He is not

    Caesar).

    Prop. 14. The divine identity of Jesus is a matter of his own deeds and his

    peculiar life as Israels priestly king. So, on analogy to the identity of the

    pagan divine ruler, he is a person and God is now two (Jesus monotheism).

    The OT has a unitarian christological monotheism in which the high priest, a Messiah

    (anointed one, christos) expresses, manifests, the divine identity.

    The NT form of christological monotheism is binitarian. The one God (of the Shema) is

    one God the Father and one Lord Jesus Christ (1 Cor 8:6). How has the OT monotheism

    mutated?

    The reworked Shema in 1 Cor 8:6 and related texts (Phil 2:611) presumes the life of Jesus as it

    is described in the Gospels; a narrative, a biographical, that has forced a splitting of the internal structure of the unique divine identity.

    We should read the Gospels in the light of Props. 19 this way: - Jesus has no liturgical theatre or stage. Though being the one clothed in divine glory and

    the rightful star of the sanctury-as-heaven stage, he strips himself of his costume,

    taking the outward appearance of an ordinary man, and is found wandering the towns and villages of Israel. He has left the theatre. It is as if Anthony Hopkins really does

    believe he is (another) C.S. Lewis.

    - Jesus is not an office, but the creative power and divine identity of the office is poured out into an ordinary life that has its own narrative, as a son living in

    interpendence with the divine Father. This man is Yhwh-Kyrios in his royal person.

    - So his story is told in a kind of encomiastic biography that focuses on his historical person. - His identity is revealed in deeds of power (e.g. Luke 10:13; 19:37; 24:19; Acts 2:22; 10:38),

    saving benefactions (cf. Acts 10:38) and a peculiar character (or virtues) that mean his life

    is generically like that of the Hellenistic divine Ruler or true Emperor (cf. Acts 10:3638). His is a Canaanite kind of a kingshipafter the order of Melchizedek.

    - All of the above is true of Jesus the true priest. So Yhwh-Kyrios is now manifest in this

    person: LJC is the Yhwh-Kyrios of the high priests office writ large across a personal biography.

    These aspects of the gospel story place internal mathematical pressure on the identity of the One God in a way that explains the conceptual origins of the belief that now a messiah is

    included within the divine identity as a distinct person (persona or face).

    In the light of this story, the one God is now two.

    The NT form of christological monotheism is best now labeled Jesus monotheism.

  • 11

    Prop. 15: The NT offers a plausible explanation of the origins and shape of NT

    Christology: an historical Jesus who claimed to be the incarnation of a distinct person

    within the eternal divine identity; whose resurrection served as confirmation of this self

    claim.

    All of Prop. 10 and 13 makes sense not just in the world of the gospels, but for the historical

    Jesus.

    It makes perfect sense, for example, given all that we now know about the impact of the Emperor

    cult on first century Palestine, that Jesus himself knew that his messianic self understanding

    both sounds and, in a sense actually is, somewhat pagan. This should be obvious from:

    (i) The plain logic of his deeds and words in relation to the meaning of Scripture and

    the Jewish critique of Ruler Cult (Ben Sira 50; 14 Maccabees, Similitudes of Enoch,

    Philo, and so on).

    (ii) the way he apparently chose to have a christological chat with the disciplesabout

    the son of God and the Son of Manat Caesarea Philippi (Mark 8:2738) a cultic site

    for Emperor worship. (iii) The way he is accused, in John 5:18, of a pagan attempt to seize equality with God.

    If the Jesus monotheism of 1 Cor 8:6; Phil 2:611 (and the like) presumes the Jesus narrative of the Gospels (= Prop. 14), then the simplest explanation for the Christology of Gospels is the

    historical Jesus himself.

    One effect of Propositions 114 is to exclude the possibility that the high Christology of the

    gospels comes from the faith already arrived at by some other means (and to which 1 Cor 8:6;

    Phil 2:611 then testify). (Contrast Bultmann, Hurtado and others).

    So, I offer you a new landscape. We have rapidly scaled a conceptual mountain and in the

    land before us there is new opportunty; to consider afresh what it might mean, for all the discrete issues and questions that arise from the historical Jesus data (Jesus and the temple,

    Jesus and Torah, Jesus and the parables, and so on), that it is not thoroughgoing eschatology

    (Schweitzer) that governs Jesus life and message; it is thoroughgoing incarnational monotheism.

    All sorts of new possibilities now open up. I close with just one case study:

    It is usual to say that Jesus pre-existence in some NT texts is a matter of tidy theology (so e.g. Bauckham). But I propose it is inextricable from other aspects of Jesus own aims, actions and

    self-perception.

    A. there are texts were Jesus priestly identity is tied to his sense of pre-existence. He has come

    as the Holy One of God (Mark 1:24) and the Father consecrated and sent him into

    the world (John 10:36, cf. also Mark 10:45; John 3:13; 6:62). B. Jesus nowhere enters into a priestly office or function in his earthly life or ministry (contrast

    Levi in T. Levi 38 and Jub. 3132; Enoch in 2 En. 22:810).

    C. We have seen that in speaking and acting as a priest-king he sets himself against his people, their institutions, their reading of Scripture, and that he draws onto himself the

  • 12

    accusation that he is a pagan deceiver. Might it be that the kind of messianic self-

    consciousness that can so calmly and firmly transcend his people, their judgements

    and the normative Scriptural hermeneutic of his age makes excellent sense if that

    contingent, temporal, self-consciousness is grounded in a pre-existent identity and

    epistemolgy (texts A)? Might it be, in other words, that we need a pre-existent Jesus to

    make sense of Jesus as an historically believable human being?

    This kind of thought sequence, I have found, now crops up time and again when I reflect on

    the Jesus of the gospels and the Jesus of history from within the new paradigm.

    It invites the conclusion that, in the end, Jesus monotheism was Jesus monotheism.

  • 13

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  • 14

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