2004 - Alan F. Segal vs. Rikk Watts - Journal For The Study of The Historical Jesus

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The journal discusses a wide variety of topics related to studying the historical Jesus, including historical analyses of specific biblical passages and traditions. It also encourages articles that argue traditions are not historically accurate. The editorial encourages more high-quality submissions.

The journal focuses on traditional historical Jesus studies but also discusses broader themes, such as analyses of whether certain biblical passages should be used in reconstructing Jesus historically.

Authors must follow formatting guidelines for submissions, which include providing bibliographic information, translations, and using appropriate fonts for ancient languages. They also agree to review proofs and accept editorial changes.

Journal for the Study of the

Historical Jesus
Volume 2.2 June 2004
CONTENTS
Editorial Foreword 115-116
MICHAEL F. BIRD
The Case of the Proselytizing Pharisees?Matthew 23.15 117-137
JAMES G. CROSSLEY
The Semitic Background to Repentance in the Teaching of
John the Baptist and Jesus 138-157
DONALD CAPPS
Jesus as Power Tactician 158-189
ALAN F. SEGAL
How I Stopped Worrying about Mel Gibson and Learned to
Love the Quest for the Historical Jesus: A Review of
Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ 190-208
RIKK WATTS
Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall: A Review of Mel Gibsons
The Passion of the Christ 209-218
ALAN F. SEGAL
Being Dispassionate about The Passion of the Christ:
A Response to Rikk Wattss Review 219-223
RIKK WATTS
A Matter of Horizons, The Passion Through the Looking
Glass: A Response to Alan F. Segals Review 224-229
Book List 230-231
Notes for Contributors 232
[JSHJ 2.2 (2004) 115-116]
ISSN 1476-8690
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004, The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX and 315 East
26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010, USA.
EDITORIAL FOREWORD
Invitation to Contribute Articles
With this issue the rst two volumes of JSHJ have been completed. The response
has, frankly, been overwhelming. The rst volume sold out, was reprinted, and
it has also sold out. Clearly the journal addresses an interest and meets a need.
On behalf of the editorial board and the publisher, who have believed in this
project from the beginning, I wish to thank you, our readers and subscribers.
We need, however, an increase in high-quality contributions to continue
developing the journal and to maintain the level of academic excellence shown
in these rst two volumes. And so I wish to encourage those with the expertise
to contribute an article for consideration. While a majority of the articles will
continue the focus on traditional historical Jesus studies, the vision for the jour-
nal is broader than this. I would encourage readers to consult my inaugural article,
On Finding a Home for Historical Jesus Discussion: An Invitation to the Journal
for the Study of the Historical Jesus, JSHJ 1.1 (2003), pp. 3-5, for a description
of the variety of themes that the journal encourages (this article may also be
downloaded from the journals website: www.continuumjournals.com/jshj).
One clarication should perhaps be made. Many of the articles published
thus far have argued that a particular pericope or tradition is probably historical
and then proceeded to show the implications this has for understanding the
gure of Jesus. While such articles are the bread and butter of this journals
focus, it would be equally valid to have articles that argue that a particular peri-
cope or tradition commonly used in historical reconstructions of Jesus has a
provenance other than the historical Jesus, and thus should not be used in histori-
cal reconstructions of Jesus. This type of argument also makes a contribution to
this discipline, and such articles would be equally considered for publication.
Please consult the Guidelines for Contributors on the last page of this issue
for further instructions.
116 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
Introduction to this Issue
This issue contains a most interesting mix of articles and is evidence of the
breadth and depth that this journals focus can provide.
The rst article is from Michael F. Bird, a PhD candidate in New Testament
at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia. His article explores the
most appropriate context for understanding Jesus woe in Matthew 23.15, which
describes the Pharisees as those who cross sea and land to make a single
convert While this text is frequently used as evidence for Jewish proselytiz-
ing activity amongst Gentiles, this article argues against this interpretation and
comes to quite a different conclusion.
The second article, by James G. Crossley, of the Department of Theology at
the University of Nottingham, considers the term repentance in the teaching of
John the Baptist and Jesus. A careful consideration of the terms Semitic context
contributes to a better understanding of this important term.
The third article is by Donald Capps, the William Harte Felmeth Professor of
Pastoral Psychology at Princeton Theological Seminary. This article encourages
us to think outside the box. By someone beyond the traditional guild of histori-
cal Jesus scholars, it invites us to reconsider the traditional rejection of psycho-
logical studies with respect to Jesus as it explores the role of power tactician.
One of the areas of interest for JSHJ is the interpretation of Jesus in art. The
nal four essays consider Mel Gibsons movie, The Passion of the Christ. Alan
F. Segal of Barnard College, Columbia University and Rikk Watts of Regent
College, Vancouver, two scholars with different backgrounds and very different
interpretations of the movie, were invited to review the movie and then respond
to each others review. Their engagement with the movie and interaction with
each other should enhance our own understanding and response to it.
Robert L. Webb
Executive Editor, JSHJ
[JSHJ 2.2 (2004) 117-137]
ISSN 1476-8690
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004, The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX and 315 East
26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010, USA.
THE CASE OF THE PROSELYTIZING PHARISEES?MATTHEW23.15
Michael F. Bird
University of Queensland
Brisbane, QLD, Australia
ABSTRACT
This essay examines Matthew 23.15 in the context of the debate concerning pre-
Christian Jewish proselytizing activity amongst Gentiles. The study assesses the
historical authenticity of the logion and examines the various positions for under-
standing its meaning. It then attempts to argue that Matthew 23.15 is an authentic
saying of Jesus aimed at censuring a Pharisaic group for endeavouring to recruit
Gentile adherents (God-fearers) to the cause of Jewish resistance against Rome. It
concludes that the logion does not constitute evidence for the existence of a Jewish
proselytizing mission.
Key Words: proselyte, proselytizing, Matthew 23.15, Pharisees
In recent times there has been a shift in the way that Jewish missionary activity
in Second-Temple Judaism has been viewed.
1
Around the turn of the twentieth
century, it was common to argue that Judaism was indeed a missionary religion,
and this view found notable expression in the works of Adolf von Harnack and
Emil Schrer.
2
The position was reinforced by several Jewish scholars including
G.F. Moore, B.J. Bamberger, W.G. Braude and S. Sandmel.
3
This perspective
1. For a brief survey of the debate, see Rainer Riesner, A Pre-Christian Jewish Mission,
in Jostein dna and H. Kvalbein (eds.), The Mission of the Early Church to Jews and Gentiles
(Tbingen: Mohr/Siebeck, 2000), pp. 211-50 (211-20).
2. Adolf von Harnack, The Expansion of Christianity in the First Three Centuries (trans.
James Moffatt; 2 vols.; London: Williams & Norgate; New York: G.P. Putnams Sons, 1904
1905), I, pp. 1-18; Emil Schrer, The History of the Jewish People in the Age of Jesus Christ
(ed. and rev. G. Vermes, F. Millar and M. Black; 3 vols.; Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 197387
[1886]), III.1, pp. 150-76.
3. G.F. Moore, Judaism in the First Centuries of the Christian Era: The Age of the
Tannaim (3 vols.; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 192730); B.J. Bamberger,
Proselytism in the Talmudic Period (Cincinatti: Hebrew Union College; New York: Ktav, 2nd
118 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
was virtually canonized with Karl Kuhns article in TDNT and A.D. Nocks early
work on conversion,
4
and despite occasional dissenters,
5
it remained basically
unchallenged so that Jeremias could state, Jesus thus came on the scene in the
midst of what was par excellence the missionary age of Jewish history.
6
However, in the last twenty years this consensus has been contested and is argu-
ably in the process of being overturned.
7
Consequently there has been an abun-
dance of publications on this topic that have endeavoured to either defend
8
or
edn, 1968); W.G. Braude, Jewish Proselytizing in the First Five Centuries of the Common Era:
The Age of the Tannaim and Amoraim (Providence: Brown University Press, 1940); and Samuel
Sandmel, The First Christian Century in Judaism and Christianity: Certainties and Uncer-
tainties (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969).
4. K. Kuhn, pooq iuo,, in TDNT, VI, pp. 727-44; A.D. Nock, Conversion: Old and
the New in Religion from Alexander the Great to Augustine of Hippo (Oxford: Oxford Univer-
sity Press, 1933), pp. 61-62; cf. Harry J. Leon, The Jews of Ancient Rome (rev. Carolyn A.
Osiek; Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1995), pp. 250-56.
5. E.g. Johannes Munck, Paul and the Salvation of Mankind (trans. Frank Clarke; London:
SCM Press, 1959), pp. 264-71; L. Goppelt, Der Missionar des Gesetzes. Zu Rm. 2,21 f, in
L. Goppelt, Christologie und Ethik. Aufstze zum Neuen Testament (Gttingen: Vandenhoeck
& Ruprecht, 1968), pp. 137-47 (138-39 n. 5).
6. Joachim Jeremias, Jesus Promise to the Nations (trans. S.H. Hooke; SBT, 24; London:
SCM Press, 1958), p. 12; cf. Moore, Judaism in the First Centuries of the Christian Era, I, pp.
324: Judaism was the rst great missionary religion of the Mediterranean world.
7. Cf. Shaye J.D. Cohen, Adolph Harnacks The Mission and Expansion of Judaism:
Christianity Succeeds Where Judaism Fails, in Birger A. Pearson (ed.), The Future of Early
Christianity: Essays in Honor of Helmut Koester (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1991), pp. 163-
69 (166-67).
8. Dieter Georgi, The Opponents of Paul in Second Corinthians (ed. John Riches;
Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1986); Louis H. Feldman, Was Judaism a Missionary Religion in
Ancient Times?, in M. Mor (ed.), Jewish Assimilation, Acculturation and Accommodation
(Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1992), pp. 24-37; Louis H. Feldman, Jew and
Gentile in the Ancient World: Attitudes and Interactions from Alexander to Justinian (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1993); Peder Borgen, The Early Church and the Hellenistic Syna-
gogue, ST 37 (1983), pp. 55-78; Peder Borgen, Early Christianity and Hellenistic Judaism
(Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1996); Peder Borgen, Proselytes, Conquest, and Mission, in Peder
Borgen, Vernon K. Robbins and David B. Gowler (eds.), Recruitment, Conquest, and Conict
(Atlanta: Scholars, 1998), pp. 57-77; Reidar Hvalvik, The Struggle for Scripture and Cove-
nant: The Purpose of the Epistle of Barnabas and Jewish-Christian Competition in the Second
Century (ed. Martin Hengel; WUNT, 2.92; Tbingen: Mohr, 1996), pp. 268-318; David Rokah,
Ancient Jewish Proselytism in Theory and Practice, TZ 52 (1996), pp. 206-24; Clifford H.
Bedell, Mission in Intertestamental Judaism, in William J. Larkin Jr and Joel F. Williams
(eds.), Mission in the New Testament: An Evangelical Approach (Maryknoll, NY: Doubleday,
1998), pp. 21-29; James Carleton Paget, Jewish Proselytism at the Time of Christian Origins:
Chimera or Reality?, JSNT 62 (1996), pp. 65-103; John P. Dickson, Mission-Commitment in
Ancient Judaism and in the Pauline Communities: The Shape, Extent and Background of Early
Christian Mission (WUNT, 2.159; Tbingen: Mohr/Siebeck, 2003), pp. 11-85.
Bird The Case of the Proselytizing Pharisees? 119
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
reject
9
the notion of a pre-Christian Jewish mission to Gentiles. A passage criti-
cal to the discussion, either for or against Jewish missionary activity, is Mt. 23.15:
Ouoi t uiv, ypooti, |oi opiooioi uo|pioi, oi tpioytt qv
oioooov |oi qv qpov oiqooi tvo pooqiuov, |oi oov ytvqoi oitit
ouov uiov yttvvq, iiotpov uov.
Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you cross sea and land to
make a single convert, and you make him become twice as much a son of hell as
yourselves.
The logion is the second of seven woe oracles in Mt. 23.13-36 which
denounce the scribes and Pharisees. The problem is that the meaning of this
utterance is highly disputed; in particular, the uncertainty as to whether it consti-
tutes legitimate evidence for Jewish proselytism in the rst century. Furthermore,
its relationship to Matthews community appears complex as is the question of
its historical authenticity. In view of this, it will be the aim of this article to exa-
mine Mt. 23.15 in order to identify its meaning, its relationship to the historical
Jesus, and its signicance for the debate concerning Jewish missionary activity.
9. Martin Goodman, Proselytising in Rabbinic Judaism, JJS 40 (1989), pp. 175-85;
Martin Goodman, Mission and Conversion: Proselytizing in the Religious History of the
Roman Empire (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994), pp. 60-90 (originally printed in Martin
Goodman, Jewish Proselytizing in the First Century, in J. Lieu, J.L. North and T. Rajak
[eds.], The Jews Among Pagans and Christians in the Roman Empire [London: Routledge,
1992], pp. 53-78); Scot McKnight, A Light Among the Gentiles: Jewish Missionary Activity in
the Second Temple Period (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1991); E. Will and C. Orrieux,
Proslytisme Juif? Histoire dune erreur (Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1993); A.T. Kraabel,
The Roman Diaspora: Six Questionable Assumptions, JJS 33 (1982), pp. 445-64; A.T.
Kraabel, Immigrants, Exiles, Expatriates, and Missionaries, in K. del Tredici and A. Stand-
hartinger (eds.), Religious Propaganda and Mission Competition in the New Testament World:
Essays Honoring Dieter Georgi (Leiden: Brill, 1994), pp. 71-88; Shaye J.D. Cohen, Crossing
the Boundary and Becoming a Jew, HTR 82 (1989), pp. 13-33; Shaye J.D. Cohen, Was
Judaism in Antiquity a Missionary Religion? in M. Mor (ed.), Jewish Assimilation, Accul-
turation and Accommodation (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1992), pp. 14-23;
Paula Fredriksen, Judaism, the Circumcision of Gentiles, and Apocalyptic Hope: Another
Look at Galatians 1 and 2, JTS 42 (1991), pp. 532-64; I. Levinskaya, The Book of Acts in Its
First Century Setting 5: The Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1996); Riesner, A Pre-Christian Jewish Mission, pp. 211-50; Paul Barnett, Jewish Mission
in the Era of the New Testament and the Apostle Paul, in P. Bolt and M. Thompson (eds.),
The Gospel to the Nations (Festschrift Peter T. OBrien; Sydney: Apollos, 2000), pp. 263-83;
Andreas J. Kstenberger and Peter T. OBrien, Salvation to the Ends of the Earth: A Biblical
Theology of Mission (ed. D.A. Carson; New Studies in Biblical Theology, 11; Downers Grove,
IL: InterVarsity Press, 2001), pp. 55-71; Eckhard J. Schnabel, Urchristliche Mission (Sup-
pertal: R. Brockhaus, 2002), p. 174.
120 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
Authenticity
A matter determinative for any solution is whether the logion is authentic and
goes back to Jesus or else represents a creation by the early church. In a Sitz im
Leben Jesu the saying potentially reects Jesus competition with the Pharisees
in proposing an alternative agenda for Israel, set over and against the Pharisees
programme of national restoration through a regime of strict Torah observance.
Conversely, it is genuinely possible that the verse reects the response of Mat-
thews community towards judaizing Christians. Likewise, it may mirror a post-
70 CE Jewish counter mission in their vicinity or else echo the hostile response
that Christian missionaries received from Gentile converts to Judaism concern-
ing their Torah-free gospel.
10
In seeking a solution, several Mattheanisms are
detectable in the coupling of ypooti, |oi opiooioi (scribes and
Pharisees) as well as tvo (even one). The framing of the saying in a woe
oracle may also be redactional. Apart from this, the logion does not display
typical Matthean features and the words qpov (land) and pooqiuov
(convert) have their only occurrence in Matthews Gospel here. There are also
several indices which point towards its probable authenticity.
(1) There is possibly an Aramaic source underlying the logion. Jeremias
argued for the presence of several semitisms,
11
but the only certainties are qv
oioooov |oi qv qpov (sea and land)
12
and ytt vvq, (hell).
13
According
to Riesner, if Jesus said in Aramaic )rbx dx db( then a translation of oiqooi
tvo pooqiuov is not impossible.
14
(2) The case for authenticity is bolstered by juxtaposing the indices of
plausibility of environment and embarrassment. A dispute between two Jewish
groups competing for adherents is entirely conceivable in early rst-century
10. Paul F. Stuehrenberg, Proselyte, in David Noel Freedman (ed.), ABD (ABRL; 6
vols.; New York: Doubleday, 1992), V, pp. 503-505 (505); Munck, Paul and the Salvation of
Mankind, p. 266; John P. Meier, Matthew (ed. Wilfrid Harrington and Donald Senior; New
Testament Message, 3; Wilmington, DL: Michael Glazier, 1986), p. 269; W.D. Davies and Dale
C. Allison, Jr, The Gospel According to Saint Matthew (ICC; 3 vols.; Edinburgh: T&T Clark,
198897), III, p. 288; Ernst Haenchen, Matthus 23, ZTK48 (1951), pp. 38-63 (47); Anthony
J. Saldarini, Matthews Jewish-Christian Community (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press,
1994), pp. 46-50; H.J. Flowers, Matthew xxiii.15, ExpTim 73 (1961), pp. 67-69 (68-69).
11. Jeremias, Jesus Promise to the Nations, pp. 17-18; but cf. Robert H. Gundry, Mat-
thew: A Commentary on His Handbook for a Mixed Church Under Persecution (Grand Rapids,
MI: Eerdmans, 2nd edn, 1994), p. 461.
12. Gen. 1.10; Jon. 1.9; Hag. 2.6; Josephus, Ant. 4.190; 11.53; Sib. Or. 3.271; 1 Macc.
8.23, 32.
13. Josh. 15.8; 18.16; 2 Kgs 23.10-14; 2 Chron. 28.3; 33.6; Jer. 7.31; 19.4-5; 32.35; Neh.
11.30; 4 Ezra 7.36; 2 Bar. 59.10; 85.13; Sib. Or. 1.103; 2.292; 4.186; Str-B, IV, pp. 1022-1118.
14. Riesner, A Pre-Christian Jewish Mission, p. 234.
Bird The Case of the Proselytizing Pharisees? 121
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
Palestine. The Pharisees propagated their halakhic interpretation of the Torah
amongst the people,
15
the Qumranites attracted initiates who joined them in their
withdrawal from Jewish society,
16
ascetic gures such as John the Baptist
17
and
Bannus
18
also attracted followers, as did the popular prophets who often had
revolutionary intentions,
19
and Jesus in his movement called disciples.
20
Whether
converts were being actively solicited or simply gravitated towards a group, one
could expect that competition for followers between such groups would be
almost inevitable. Jesus may have been opposed by certain Pharisees and scribes
not simply because of the content of his teaching but because of his popularity
with the crowds at their expense.
21
In Johns Gospel a group of the disciples
belonging to John the Baptist complain to the Baptist that the crowds are now
going over to Jesus to be baptized instead of coming to him (Jn 3.26).
22
Rivalry
of this kind could result in the denunciation of other competing groups. Some
Jewish elements apparently rejected Johns baptism as testied by L and Mark
respectively.
23
The sectarians at Qumran also attacked the Pharisees as seekers
after smooth things,
24
and John the Baptist, according to Q, labelled them a
brood of vipers.
25
This demonstrates that the vehement language in calling the
proselyte a son of hell is not necessarily the product of later Christian anti-
Semitism projected back onto Jesus by the post-70 CE church, but may have
been indicative of intra-Jewish factionalism and polemics.
26
In Jesus environ-
ment, then, rivalry and rhetoric between himself and the Pharisees over converts
would be entirely comprehensible as they vied for inuence in their region.
Concurrently, such a derogatory remark about proselytes may have also been
potentially embarrassing to the early Christian congregations where, according
15. Josephus, Life 191; War 2.162; Ant. 13.288, 298, 401-406; 18.15, 17.
16. Cf. e.g. 1QS 1.16-26; 2.11-3.12; 6.13-23; CD 15.7-17.
17. Mk 1.4-8; Jn 1.19-28; Lk. 7.24/Mt. 11.7; Josephus, Ant. 18.116-18.
18. Josephus, Life 1112.
19. Josephus, Ant. 18.85-87 (Samaritan); 20.97-98 (Theudas); 20.169-72; War 2.261-63;
Acts 21.38 (the Egyptian); cf. War 2.258-60; Ant. 20.167-68.
20. E.g. Mk 1.16-20; 2.13-14; Lk. 9.57-62/Mt. 8.19-22; Jn 1.35-51. Cf. Martin Hengel,
The Charismatic Leader and His Followers (trans. James C.G. Greig; Edinburgh: T&T Clark,
1981); A.F. Segal, Conversion and Messianism: Outline for a New Approach, in James H.
Charlesworth (ed.), The Messiah: Developments in Earliest Judaism and Christianity (Minne-
apolis: Fortress Press, 1992), pp. 296-340 (322-23).
21. Cf. Mk 11.18; 12.12; 15.10.
22. On the authenticity of the tradition that the ministries of Jesus and John overlapped
where Jesus grew in popularity, see Rudolf Schnackenburg, The Gospel According to John (3
vols.; New York: Herder & Herder, 196882), I, p. 411.
23. Lk. 7.30; Mk 11.30-33 (= Mt. 21.25-27; Lk. 20.4-8).
24. 1QH 10.14-16, 31-32; 12.9-11; 4Q169 2.2; 3.3-8.
25. Lk. 3.7-9/Mt. 3.7-10.
26. Cf. e.g. 1QS 2.5-10; CD 1.11-21; T. Mos. 7.3, 9-10; Pss. Sol. 4.1-8.
122 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
to Acts (2.11; 6.5; 10.2, 22, 35; 13.16, 26, 43, 50; 16.14; 17.4, 17; 18.7), many
of the initial Gentile believers came from proselyte or God-fearer ranks. That
the primitive church would invent such a negative charge against proselytes,
who possibly comprised a constituent element of its membership, is unlikely.
Furthermore, continuing competition and confrontation with other Jewish groups
in the post-Easter era could provide a plausible setting for preserving the utter-
ance within the early church. Lastly, there is nothing in the logion which demands
a post-70 CE context or is anachronistic in Jesus own life setting.
Thus, the logion ts into a Palestinian Jewish environment typied by some
degree of competition between various groups for the hearts and minds of
followers, but also grates against the situation of the early church that largely
embraced proselytes who may have even had a Pharisaic orientation at one time.
(3) There is a theological divergency from the overall pattern of Matthews
theology. The logion with its unattering derision of proselytes (which in Mat-
thews context could readily be equated with converted Gentiles) deviates from
Matthews theological tendency which is to accentuate Jesus Jewish credentials
and the primacy of Israel in his mission, but to also demonstrate that the Gentiles
were included within the purview of his kingdom mission. Matthew arguably
takes his readers from (his perception of) Jewish exclusivism to a christocentric
universalism.
27
Though the evidence for authenticity may not be decisive, the saying plausibly
stems from a Sitz im Leben Jesu but has been redacted to t into contours of the
discourse of Mt. 23.13-36. Therefore, I side with Davies and Allison, McKnight
and Goodman who contend for a traditional saying framed by Matthew into its
present form.
28
If so, Mt. 23.15 arguably reects Jesus competition with the
Pharisees over a mission issue. However, the substance of this issue, as seen
below, is moot. The saying can be understood in three main ways.
Proselytizing of Gentiles by Pharisees
The rst option sees it as a reference to the proselytizing of Gentiles by Phari-
sees.
29
For many scholars a desire to win over Gentile converts is the plainest
27. Cf. James LaGrand, The Earliest Christian Mission to All Nations in the Light of
Matthews Gospel (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2nd edn, 1999).
28. Davies and Allison, Matthew, III, pp. 287-88; McKnight, A Light among the Gentiles,
pp. 106-107; Goodman, Mission and Conversion, p. 69; cf. Levinskaya, The Book of Acts in Its
Diaspora Setting, p. 39.
29. Jeremias, Jesus Promise to the Nations, pp. 18-19; H.J. Schoeps, Paul: The Theology
of the Apostle in the Light of Jewish Religious History (London: Lutterworth, 1961), p. 221;
Schrer, The History of the Jewish People, III.1, p. 160; Flowers, Matthew xxiii.15, p. 69;
Alan F. Segal, The Cost of Proselytism and Conversion, in D. Hull (ed.), SBL 1988 Seminar
Bird The Case of the Proselytizing Pharisees? 123
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meaning of the saying and they are often perplexed as to how it can be under-
stood in any other way.
30
A proselyte was, ordinarily, a convert to Judaism. At
the same time the word tpioyo (cross) does imply a sense of itinerancy and
it is used in Mt. 4.23 and 9.35 for Jesus own mission activity. J.C. Paget thinks
that the phrase sea and land requires efforts to convert Gentiles to Judaism.
31
We also know from later rabbinic sources that some Pharisees such as Hillel
were quite willing to accept Gentiles and instruct them.
32
Later rabbinic discus-
sions about proselytes may derive from rst-century Pharisaic practices. There
is also epigraphic evidence from ossuaries of proselytes in Israel.
33
By the same
token, Davies and Allison caution that since the verse is lled with hyperbolic
invective it cannot be adduced as evidence of Jewish missionary activity.
34
Moreover, trying to persuade a pagan to become a fully edged Jew seems too
much to ask in one exchange, particularly when conversions were predominantly
gradual. This is reinforced by the story of the conversion of Izates in Adiabene
and Juvenals son of a Sabbath-fearer who is eventually circumcised.
35
Further-
more, Jewish Hellenistic propaganda literature was primarily geared towards
convincing Jews that Judaism was on an equal footing with Hellenism and to
refute anti-Semitic argumentation. Only secondarily did it address Gentiles, in
Papers (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1988), pp. 336-69 (356); Feldman, Jew and Gentile in the
Ancient World, p. 298; Paget, Jewish Proselytism, pp. 94-97; Rokah, Ancient Jewish
Proselytism in Theory and Practice, pp. 212-13; Hvalvik, The Struggle for Scripture and
Covenant, pp. 291-95; Bedell, Mission in Intertestamental Judaism, p. 28; Dickson, Mission-
Commitment in Ancient Judaism and in the Pauline Communities, pp. 39-46; several recent
commentators largely assume this perspective, e.g. Meier, Matthew, p. 269; Joachim Gnilka,
Das Matthusevangelium (HTKNT; 2 vols.; Freiburg: Herder, 198688), II, p. 286; Leon
Morris, The Gospel According to Matthew (Pillar New Testament Commentary; Grand Rapids,
MI: Eerdmans, 1992), pp. 579-80; Craig S. Keener, A Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew
(Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1999), pp. 547-49; Rudolf Schnackenburg, The Gospel of
Matthew (trans. Robert R. Barr; Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2002), p. 231.
30. Cf. Bamberger, Proselytism, pp. 267-71; Paget, Jewish Proselytism, p. 95; Hvalvik,
The Struggle for Scripture and Covenant, pp. 293-95.
31. Paget, Jewish Proselytism, p. 97.
32. B. ab. 31a.
33. Pau Figueras, Epigraphic Evidence for Proselytism in Ancient Judaism, Immanuel
24/25 (1990), pp. 194-206 (196-98); Margaret H. Williams, The Jews among the Greeks and
Romans: A Diaspora Sourcebook (London: Duckworth, 1998), pp. 171-72.
34. Davies and Allison, Matthew, III, p. 288; cf. Fredriksen, Judaism, the Circumcision
of Gentiles, and Apocalyptic Hope, p. 539; A.T. Kraabel, The Disappearance of the God-
Fearers, Numen 28 (1981), pp. 113-26 (123); Kraabel, The Roman Diaspora, p. 452; Feldman,
Jew and Gentile in the Ancient World, p. 298.
35. Josephus, Ant. 20.17-49; Juvenal, Sat. 14.96-106 (cited in Menahem Stern [ed.],
Greek and Latin Authors on Jews and Judaism: Edited with Introductions, Translations and
Commentary [3 vols.; Jerusalem: Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, 1974], II, 301,
pp. 102-103; henceforth, cited as GLAJJ).
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which case such efforts at best might engender them with a positive disposition
to Judaism, defend Judaism against criticism, exhort the brilliance of monotheism,
the wisdom of Torah and demonstrate the superiority of the Jewish religion.
36
Such arguments would not gain converts per se (i.e. circumcised proselytes) as
much as it might win over sympathizers. In separate instances when a sympa-
thizer or God-fearer
37
consented to circumcision and joined the house of Israel
(Jdt. 14.10) it was usually out of a conviction for a deeper level of commitment
to Judaism. Circumcision was the sine qua non of full conversion. The journey
from pagan to proselyte (if free from duress) was a gradual process taking years
or even a generation.
Intra-Jewish Proselytizing of Non-Pharisaic Jews
A second alternative is that the logion signies the efforts of Pharisees to con-
vert other Jews to Pharisaism.
38
Goodman suggests that Jesus (or Matthew) was
attacking Pharisees for their eagerness in trying to persuade other Jews to follow
Pharisaic halakah.
39
The verse implies that the convert became a Pharisee or at
least adopted Pharisaic interpretation of the Torah. Although there is no corrobo-
rating evidence that Pharisees tried to convert other Jews to their sect, it is at
36. Cf. Victor Tcherikover, Jewish Apologetic Literature Reconsidered, Eos 48 (1956),
pp. 169-93; see recently, John Barclay, Apologetics in the Jewish Diaspora, in John R.
Bartlett (ed.), Jews in the Hellenistic and Roman Cities (London and New York: Routledge,
2002), pp. 129-48.
37. I recognize that, mainly due to the work of A.T. Kraabel, the existence of a homo-
genous group of Gentile sympathizers-adherents known as God-fearers in Acts has been
largely questioned. Be that as it may, a recent trend in scholarship has been to assert that there
is reasonable (though not completely unambiguous) evidence from literary, archaeological and
epigraphical sources for the association of Gentiles with variegated levels of attachment to
Jewish communities who could also be designated with the equivocal term God-worshippers
or even God-fearers as found in Acts. See J. Reynolds and R. Tannenbaum, Jews and God-
fearers at Aphrodisias: Greek Inscriptions with Commentary (Cambridge: Cambridge Philogical
Society, 1987), p. 65; Schrer, The History of the Jewish People, III.1, p. 168; J.M.G. Barclay,
Jews in the Mediterranean Diaspora: From Alexander to Trajan (323 BCE117 CE) (Edinburgh:
T&T Clark, 1996), p. 279; Levinskaya, The Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, pp. 51-126.
38. Munck, Paul and the Salvation of Mankind, pp. 266-67; Goodman, Mission and
Conversion, pp. 69-74; Levinskaya, The Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, pp. 36-46;
Kstenberger and OBrien, Salvation to the Ends of the Earth, pp. 63-64; W.C. Allen, A Criti-
cal and Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel According to St. Matthew (ICC; Edinburgh:
T&T Clark, 3rd edn, 1912), p. 246; A. Plummer, An Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel
according to St. Matthew (London: Stock, 1909), pp. 317-18.
39. Goodman, Mission and Conversion, p. 70.
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least plausible. Their interpretation of Torah attracted pupils and they may have
aimed at propagating their views to a wider audience. Additionally, another
Judean group, the members of the Qumran sect, being celibate, may have under-
taken missionary activity in order to survive.
40
Goodman concedes that in the
Septuagint pooqiuo, (translating Heb.rg [gr]) nearly always means a
Gentile convert. However, the term is exceedingly rare and in some instances it
can mean resident alien (e.g. Lev. 19.10; 24.16)
41
or in Exod. 22.20, Lev.
19.34 and Deut. 10.19 pooqiuo, is used to refer not to Gentiles but to the
Israelites in Egypt. Goodman concludes that pooqiuo, had both a technical
and non-technical meaning; the latter could be applied to Jews.
42
Goodmans
thesis is hampered by the fact that pooqiuo, in the Septuagint,
43
Jewish in-
scriptions,
44
Philo
45
and the New Testament
46
is predominantly a technical term
for Gentile converts to Judaism.
47
Even so, there several other factors that do support Goodmans interpreta-
tion: (1) In Sifra Kedoshim 8 it says, The rabbis say: if a proselyte takes it upon
himself to obey all the words of the Torah except one single commandment, he
is not be received which could easily apply to Gentile converts to Judaism, and
Jewish converts to Pharisaism.
48
(2) If rst-century Pharisaism is perceived fun-
damentally as a renewal movement within Israel, it becomes entirely plausible
that the quest to propagate or implement their programme of renewal may take
on a missionary character.
49
James Dunn writes, The otherwise surprising Mt.
23.15 suggests a history of some such sense of obligation on the part of some
40. Goodman, Mission and Conversion, p. 71.
41. Cf. J. Andrew Overman, The God-Fearers: Some Neglected Features, in Craig A.
Evans and Stanley E. Porter (eds.), New Testament Backgrounds (Shefeld: Shefeld Aca-
demic Press, 1997), pp. 253-62 (255-58).
42. Goodman, Mission and Conversion, p. 73.
43. Exod. 12.48-49; 20.10; 23.9, 12; Lev. 16.29; 17.3, 8, 10, 12, 13, 15; 18.26; 19.10, 33,
34; 20.2; 22.18; 23.22; 24.16, 22; 25.47; Num. 9.14; 15.14, 16, 26, 29, 30; 19.10; 35.15; Deut.
1.16; 5.14; 10.18; 12.18; 14.29; 24.14, 17, 19; 26.11, 12; 27.19; 28.43; 29.11; 31.12; Josh.
20.9; 1 Chron. 22.2; 2 Chron. 2.16; 15.9; 30.25; Pss. 93.6; 145.9; Zech. 7.10; Mal. 3.5; Isa.
54.15; Jer. 7.6; Ezek. 14.7; 22.7, 29; 47.22, 23; Tob. 1.8.
44. Williams, The Jews among the Greeks and Romans, pp. 171-72; Figueras, Epi-
graphic Evidence for Proselytism in Ancient Judaism, pp. 194-206.
45. Philo, Somn. 2.273; Spec. Leg. 1.51, 308; Quaest. in Exod. 2.2.
46. Acts 2.11; 6.5; 13.43.
47. Cf. K. Kuhn, pooqiuo,, in TDNT, VI, pp. 730; U. Becker, pooqiuo,, in
NIDNTT, I, pp. 360; Stuehrenberg, Proselyte, in ABD, V, p. 503; but see Overman, The
God-Fearers, pp. 255-56.
48. Segal, The Cost of Proselytism and Conversion, p. 353.
49. Cf. Rudolf Pesch, Voraussetzungen und Anfnge der urchristlichen Mission, in Karl
Kertelge (ed.), Mission im Neuen Testament (Freiburg: Herder, 1982), pp. 11-70 (21).
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Pharisees to ensure an appropriate level of law observance on the part of those
who claimed Israelite ancestry.
50
(3) Justin Martyr in Dial. Tryph. 122.5 writes
about ov _pioov |oi pooqiuou, ouou (Christ and his proselytes)
51
giving pooqiuo, a meaning beyond conversion to Judaism. (4) Granted the
overarching technical meaning of pooqiuo,, what other words for intra-
Jewish sectarian conversion were available? A substantive participle of tio-
pt o (turn around) is possible as is Philos preferred tqiuo, (incomers)
and cognates.
52
The term vtouo, (neophyte = new convert to Christianity)
was probably not in use yet; in any case pooqiuo,would convey a religious
transformation more sharply.
53
(5) The Qumranites apparently attracted fellow
Jews to their community since in 1QS 5.6 and CD 4.11 there is a description of
those who join the Qumran sectarians and in 4Q266 frag. 5, 1.15 initiates are
called the converts of Israel.
54
Such an attraction is arguably conrmed by
Josephus who, painting the Essenes as a philosophical school, writes, Such are
the theological views of the Essenes concerning the soul, whereby they irresistibly
attract (ou|ov titop) all who have once tasted their philosophy.
55
Pauls
own conversion is perhaps best understood as an intra-Jewish transference from
Pharisaism to a messianic sect. Indeed, the continuing mission to the tpioq,
(circumcision)
56
strongly suggests that the Christian movement began with
intra-Jewish proselytization. (6) The phrase sea and land is probably hyper-
bolic and does not necessitate a literal overseas journey; potential converts could
be easily found in the Hellenistic cities in Galilee and the Decapolis. (7) If the
logion is authentic, as argued above, then Pharisaic proselytization of fellow
Jews becomes more credible.
57
50. James D.G. Dunn, Jesus Remembered. I. Christianity in the Making (Grand Rapids,
MI: Eerdmans, 2003), p. 306 n. 236.
51. Cf. 28.2; keeping in mind also that proselyte can also describe converts to Judaism in
Dial. Tryph. 23.3; 80.1; 122.1, 3-4; 123.1-2.
52. Philo, tqiu,Flacc. 54; Exsecr. 152; tqiuq,Virt. 102, 103, 104, 182, 219;
Spec. Leg. 1.52-53; tqiuo,Virt. 104; Spec. Leg. 4.176-77; cf. Kuhn, pooqiuo,, in
TDNT, VI, pp. 731-32.
53. On further evidence of the use of pooqiuo, as meaning convert to Christianity in
later Christian literature, see Levinskaya, The Book of Acts in Its Diaspora Setting, pp. 40-46.
54. Cf. Josephus, War 2.142 ou, pooiovo, (the proselytes); Munck, Paul and the
Salvation of Mankind, p. 267 n. 2.
55. Josephus, War 2.158; cf. Pesch, Voraussetzungen und Anfnge der urchristlichen
Mission, p. 22.
56. Gal. 2.7-8; cf. Acts 2-9.
57. So also Munck, Paul and the Salvation of Mankind, p. 267; Davies and Allison,
Matthew, III, p. 288.
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Proselytizing God-Fearers by Pharisees
A third way of understanding the logion is that it denotes the attempt of Pharisees
to turn God-fearers into proselytes.
58
Scot McKnight thinks that the compounding
of oiqooi (make) and pooqiuov (convert) imply the total conversion and
circumcision of a Gentile.
59
The activity envisaged corresponds remarkably with
that of Eleazar the Galilean (Ant. 20.43-47) who compelled King Izates to be cir-
cumcised after he had already consented to follow the Jewish law.
60
This would
make him toio, Iouoio, (assuredly Jewish).
61
Thus the issue is making
partial converts into full converts with extreme zeal for the Torah: Torah prosely-
tization.
62
On this perspective the emphasis falls upon transforming God-fearers
into full proselytes through the ritual of circumcision. Yet there is no denitive
proof that either circumcision or God-fearers are the activities or persons in
question.
However, there is a variation of this view worth exploring that is wholly
plausible in a Sitz im Leben Jesu, namely, that zealous Pharisees were indeed
attempting to proselytize God-fearers, specically, with a view to recruiting them
to their nationalistic standpoint. I wish to submit several lines of evidence which
support this position.
(1) Jacob Neusner has argued that the Pharisees ceased to be a political
movement after the Hasmonean dynasty and they were consigned to political
exile during the early Herodian period. It was during this time that they meta-
morphosized into a table-fellowship movement that emphasized the emulation
of priestly holiness.
63
Despite the ingenuity of Neusners proposals, several
problems arise: (i) The Pharisees were a politically motivated group in the
58. Kuhn, pooqiuo,, in TDNT, VI, p. 742; McKnight, A Light among the Gentiles,
pp. 106-108; Davies and Allison, Matthew, III, p. 289; D.A. Hagner, Matthew 14-28 (WBC,
33; 2 vols.; Dallas: Word, 199395), II, p. 669; Paul Barnett, Jesus & the Rise of Early Christi-
anity: A History of New Testament Times (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1999), pp.
269-70; Barnett, Jewish Mission in the Era of the New Testament, pp. 271-72; Riesner, A
Pre-Christian Jewish Mission, pp. 232-34.
59. McKnight, A Light among the Gentiles, p. 107.
60. Eleazar may have even been a Pharisee since his strictness on the law resembles
Josephus description of the Pharisees in Life 191 and War 1.110; cf. Riesner, A Pre-Christian
Jewish Mission, p. 238.
61. Josephus, Ant. 20.38.
62. McKnight, A Light among the Gentiles, p. 107; cf. David Garland, The Intention of
Matthew 23 (NovTSup, 52; Leiden: Brill, 1979), pp. 129-31; Kuhn, pooqiuo,, in TDNT,
VI, p. 742; David Hill, The Gospel of Matthew (NCB; Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1972), p.
312; Flowers, Matthew xxiii.15, pp. 68-69.
63. Jacob Neusner, From Politics to Piety: The Emergence of Pharisaic Judaism (New
York: Ktav, 2nd edn, 1979); cf. Schrer, The History of the Jewish People, II, p. 394.
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Hasmonean and early Herodian period and, as Neusner admits, deliberately
sought power in the post-70 CE era.
64
It seems unlikely then that in the inter-
vening period they would be wholly apolitical given both their political origins
and their eventual political domination. It is likewise improbable that the politi-
cally savvy Romans would empower a sectarian holiness club with oversight
over the nation if the Pharisees were wholly devoid of political ambition and
inuence. (ii) One could hypothesize that the Pharisees political marginaliza-
tion was translated in an attempt to renew and reform the whole of Israelite
society. John P. Meier writes, With no direct political power, the Pharisees had
to seek levers of power by indirect means. They probably redoubled their efforts
during this period to spread their inuence among the common people, most of
whom never became Pharisees themselves.
65
(iii) Anthony J. Saldarini has
argued that the Pharisees were part of the retainer class and rmly embedded
within the political structure of Judean society.
66
This is conrmed by the report
that some Pharisees were also priests
67
and some rose to prominent positions
such as Gamaliel and possibly Nicodemus according to Christian tradition.
68
(iv) Neusner deliberately downplays the role of the Pharisees in the war against
Rome. Although Neusner is correct that some protagonists may not have been
involved because they were Pharisees, but they were Pharisees who just hap-
pened to be involved,
69
in any case one must reckon with the participation
of Pharisees in the conict which is hardly indicative of an exclusive concern
for purity. Indeed some Pharisees were against the conict as apparent from
Josephuss story where he, the chief priests and leading Pharisees met together
in an attempt to prevent a confrontation with Rome.
70
Alternatively, the dele-
gation from Jerusalem sent to dismiss Josephus of the command of the Galilee
consisted principally of Pharisees.
71
Consequently, although the Pharisees, due
to their political marginalization during direct Roman rule, became concerned
largely with manufacturing the conditions necessary for eschatological restora-
tion through a strict regime of Torah and purity observance, it would be grossly
mistaken to conclude that they were therefore apolitical. In political terms they
were the powers-that-want-to-be, and with such ambitions they were just as
factitious as any other Jewish Palestinian grouping when it came to developing a
64. Neusner, From Politics to Piety, p. 149.
65. John P. Meier, A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus. III. Companions and
Competitors (ABRL; New York: Doubleday, 2001), p. 297.
66. Anthony J. Saldarini, Pharisees, Scribes and Sadducees in Palestinian Society (Wil-
mington, DE: Glazier, 1988), pp. 41-42, 102-105, 120, 132-33.
67. Josephus, Life 197.
68. Gamaliel in Acts 5.33-40 and Nicodemus in Jn 3.1; 19.39.
69. Neusner, From Politics to Piety, p. 48.
70. Josephus, Life 21-22.
71. Josephus, Life 191-93, 197.
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strategy as to how to achieve that. Evidently, some had nationalistic or militaris-
tic leanings. A few examples sufce to demonstrate this: Josephus reports that
around 6000 Pharisees refused to take an oath of loyalty to Caesar and Herod,
resulting in severe reprisals.
72
The uprising of 6 CE was instigated by the intro-
duction of a census by Quirinius and led by Judas the Galilean and a Pharisee
named Saddok; the former threw himself into the cause of rebellion. They said
that the assessment carried with it a status amounting to downright slavery, no
less, and appealed to the nation to make a bid for independence.
73
This fourth
philosophy founded by Judas is said by Josephus to agree with Pharisaic
notions.
74
A prominent Pharisee, Simon b. Gamaliel, was an associate of John
of Gischala, one of the factional leaders of the Jewish uprising.
75
It appears that
consenting or resorting to violence to eject the foreign oppressors may not have
been out of the question for some quarters of Pharisaism.
76
(2) The word Iouoitiv (judaize) can mean anything from full conversion
to following certain Jewish customs (e.g. Gal. 2.14). Interestingly enough, this
term carried signicant political connotations. Josephus records that the Roman
commander Metilius was saved from death when captured by judaizing even to
the point of circumcision (t _pi tpioq, iouoi otiv uoo_o tvov).
77
The
implication is that judaizing was a broad category but circumcision was the ter-
minus of conversion.
78
It seems implied that Mitellius was also offering to change
sides in the conict. In another incident, Josephus recounts how the Syrians con-
trived to rid themselves of the Jews but had to be wary of the fact that each
city still had its Judaizers (iouoiovo,) and juxtaposed with the Jews it
denotes some kind of Gentile attachment to Jewish practices and alliance to their
political struggle in such a way as to be a signicant stakeholder in any offen-
sive against the Jewish population.
79
Cohen points out that in the Acts of Pilate
2 the Roman procurator tells the Jews, you know how my wife venerates god
and judaizes rather much with you [sic]. In such an instance, it can arguably
mean that she supports the Jews in the political arena.
80
According to Philo,
72. Josephus, Ant. 17.41-45; War 1.571-73.
73. Josephus, Ant. 18.1-10 (4); cf. War 2.56, 118.
74. Josephus, Ant. 18.23.
75. Josephus, War 4.159; Life 189-98; see further, N.T. Wright, The New Testament and
the People of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992), pp. 170-81, 190-95.
76. Martin Hengel (The Pre-Christian Paul [trans. John Bowden; Philadelphia: Trinity,
1991], p. 45) speculates that from 666 CE the Pharisees were politically split into pro- and
anti-revolt camps; cf. Schrer, The History of the Jewish People, II, p. 395.
77. Josephus, War 2.454.
78. Shaye J.D. Cohen, Respect for Judaism by Gentiles according to Josephus, HTR80
(1987), pp. 409-30 (416).
79. Josephus, War 2.463.
80. Cohen, Crossing the Boundary and Becoming a Jew, p. 33.
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those who convert have made their kinsfolk (ouyytvi,) into mortal enemies
(t_pou, oouoou,).
81
Juvenal remarks how the son of a God-fearer would
take to circumcision and out the laws of Rome.
82
Such negative attitudes
facilitated a sense of hostility towards converts to Judaism, one that was poten-
tially reciprocated by converts who took upon themselves the yoke of Jewish
vilication. When one converted to Judaism, it was not merely a spiritual event
but more akin to nationalization. Consequently, by converting to Judaism, one
identied with and participated in the Jewish community and, to varying degrees,
the Jewish struggle.
(3) Another factor to be considered is the participation of Gentile converts in
the Jewish war against Rome. The Idumaeans who were forcibly converted by
John Hyrcanus I
83
in the second century BCE gured prominently in the revolt.
On one occasion Josephus reports a contingent of 5000 Idumaeans actively
participating in the revolt.
84
The Idumaeans were specically aligned with the
Zealot faction during the rebellion.
85
In addition, it is reported in a later rabbinic
writing that some Idumaeans were even disciples of Shammai,
86
who arguably
inuenced the zealous faction of the Pharisees. Josephus also records how, sub-
sequent to the death of Herod the Great, many pilgrims from Galilee, Jericho,
Idumaea and the Transjordon made an assault against the interim Roman ruler
Sabinus in Jerusalem, with a signicant engagement occurring in the Temple
complex.
87
Elsewhere Josephus tells of how foreigners (tvou,) were offering
sacrices in the Temple amidst a civil war being fought out in the Temple
precincts.
88
Their presence in Jerusalem at this time may have been indicative of
their support for or even participation in the campaign against Rome. In another
episode he reports how foreigners (tvov) were employed as front-line troops
by the Jewish insurgents at the fortress at Machaerus.
89
81. Philo, Spec. Leg. 4.178.
82. Sat. 14.100-105 (GLAJJ, II, p. 301).
83. Josephus, Ant. 13.257-58, 15.254-55; for discussion of the authenticity of the accounts
of forced circumcision, see Cohen, Respect for Judaism by Gentiles according to Josephus,
pp. 422-23; Aryeh Kasher, Jews, Idumaeans and Ancient Arabs (Tbingen: Mohr/Siebeck,
1988), pp. 44-85; Steven Weitzman, Forced Circumcision and the Shifting Role of Gentiles in
Hasmonean Ideology, HTR 92 (1999), pp. 37-59.
84. Josephus, War 5.248-50; cf. 2.566; 5.358; 6.92, 148, 378-81.
85. Joseph, War 4.224-355; 5.248-50, 358. The majority of Idumaeans abandoned the
Zealots later and departed from the city with two thousand citizens and returned home to
Idumaea (War 4.353-54).
86. Sifre Zutta (ed. I.N. Epstein), Tarbiz, I (1930), p. 70; cited in Kasher, Jews, Idu-
maeans, and Ancient Arabs, p. 63 n. 56.
87. Josephus, Ant. 17.254-68.
88. Josephus, War 5.15.
89. Josephus, War 7.191.
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The jewel in Josephus crown of conversions to Judaism is the house of
Adiabene.
90
Both Jacob Neusner and Lawrence H. Schiffman think the story of
their conversion is accurate, at least in outline, as Josephus may have even been
acquainted with the Adiabenian royal family during either their time in Jeru-
salem or after the war when some princes were taken to Rome as hostages.
91
The
Adiabenians may have wanted to foster an anti-Roman coalition in the region and
in a post-Roman and post-Herodian Palestine possibly lay claim to the throne
since they already ruled over Jewish subjects in the city of Nisibis.
92
Hence, the
conversion may have been just as much politically motivated as it was religious.
Signicantly, Josephus records how they provided support for the Jewish
insurrectionists and even fought valiantly in the conict.
93
Neusner writes, the
Adiabenians not only encouraged the revolution of 66, but led the opening
action against Cestius, which precipitated the complete break between Rome
and Judea.
94
Simon Ben Giora, in Josephus reckoning, was a ruthless and tyrannical
gure
95
and deeply involved in the Jewish revolt. His name in Aramaic means
literally son of a convert ()rwyg rb). This is probably a reference to Simons
proselyte origins. Hence, the argument so far should underscore that some of the
most zealous Jews (i.e. those willing to use violence for the Jewish cause) were
those who had recently converted to the Jewish fold.
(4) Jesus message was addressed, in part at least, to Israels increasing pro-
pensity for violence against Rome.
96
Like Isaiah warning of the imminent con-
frontation with Assyria and Jeremiah with Babylon, Jesus stood before the
Jewish nation urging them to forgo their nationalistic ambitions and aspirations
90. Josephus, Ant. 20.17-49; see also a rabbinic version of the conversion of Monbazus II
and Izates in Bereshith Rabbah 46.11.
91. Josephus, War 2.520; 5.474-75; 6.356-57; see Jacob Neusner, The Conversion of
Adiabene to Judaism: A New Perspective, JBL 83 (1964), pp. 60-66 (60); Lawrence H.
Schiffman, The Conversion of the Royal House of Adiabene in Josephus and Rabbinic
Sources, in Louis H. Feldman and Gohei Hata (eds.), Josephus, Judaism, and Christianity
(Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1987), pp. 293-312 (293-97).
92. Neusner, The Conversion of Adiabene to Judaism, pp. 63-66; cf. Feldman, Jew and
Gentile in the Ancient World, p. 330.
93. Josephus, War 2.520; 5.474.
94. Neusner, The Conversion of Adiabene to Judaism, p. 64.
95. See Josephus, War 2.521; 4.503-84.
96. On this, see Marcus J. Borg, Conict, Holiness and Politics in the Teachings of Jesus
(Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press, 2nd edn, 1998), pp. 174-81; N.T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory
of God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996), pp. 246-53, 290-91; Scot McKnight, A New Vision
for Israel: The Teachings of Jesus in National Context (ed. Bruce Chilton and Craig A. Evans;
Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1999), pp. 96-97; cf. Richard A. Horsley, Jesus and the Spiral of
Violence: Popular Jewish Resistance in Roman Palestine (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1987),
pp. 318-22.
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of defeating Rome, and instead, to follow him as Gods nal envoy to the strug-
gling nation. Recently, Steven M. Bryan has objected to this perspective. Bryan
argues that tax-collectors and the like would have little need of repenting of and
thus abandoning revolutionary zeal.
97
Bryan is correct, insofar as on the indi-
vidual level such persons who were part of the domination system were unlikely
to desire a signicant re-ordering of power in the socio-economic or political
sphere. Moreover, it is true that Jesus addressed specic individuals and laid
upon them the strenuous demands of his kingdom agenda relevant to their pecu-
liar circumstance. Yet on the national level, abandoning revolutionary zeal,
among other things such as perversion of covenant justice and a failure to
realize Israels divinely appointed vocation as a light to the nations, may well
have been elements of his indictment against Israel corporately. It is, furthermore,
a characteristic theme which I think makes better sense of Jesus action in the
Temple in parabolically enacting the destruction of an apostate and obsolete insti-
tution for failing to draw the nations to Zion. Instead, when the nations came, it
would not be with gifts and offerings, but with swords, soldiers and siege engines.
What was meant to be a house of prayer for all nations (Mk 11.17; Isa. 56.7),
for some groups, had been transformed into a symbol of Jewish resistance to
Rome and its rebuilding had served to only resurrect the fallacy of Zions in-
vincibility.
98
(5) It is true that Jesus here attacks not the act of proselytizing but rather the
result. To some degree he chastises the Pharisees because the new proselyte
imitates them and replicates their error and impiety. This seems to be Matthews
understanding of the saying given its immediate literary situation.
99
But is there
more to it than that? Is there something else to what the proselyte becomes, a
son of hell, that evokes Jesus response? We should ask exactly why Jesus is
making such a strongly worded condemnation of the Pharisees if all they were
doing was drawing Gentiles out of blatant immorality and idolatrous religion,
97. Steven M. Bryan, Jesus and Israels Traditions of Judgment and Restoration (ed.
Richard Bauckham; SNTSMS, 117; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), p. 71.
98. Ezekiel 3839; Zech. 8.9-13; Sib. Or. 3.663-730 all discuss how God would defend
the Temple/Jerusalem when attacked. The signicance of the Temple as a symbol of resistance
is underscored by several accounts reported in Josephus. First, he records how the insur-
rectionists would not cease ghting the Romans while the Temple was still standing (War
6.239). Second, following the fall of the Temple, the leaders of the revolt asked Titus to let
them peacefully leave the city and to go out into the wilderness (War 6.323-26, 351). Third,
Vespasian ordered the Jewish temple at Leontopolis to be shut down in order to prevent it
becoming a new Jewish rally point (War 7.420-21, 33-35). In addition, Philo could refer to
Jews who had zeal for the Temple (Leg. Gai. 212).
99. Garland (The Intention of Matthew 23, p. 131) writes, Therefore, 23.15 condemns the
proselytism of the scribes and Pharisees who make double the sons of Hell because of their
false interpretation of the Law that denies Jesus as the Messiah and demands obedience to the
ceremonial Law for salvation.
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encouraging God-fearers to make a deeper level of commitment, or else enlarging
the Pharisaic party? Very few rst-century Judeans would have rigorously
objected to Gentiles or God-fearers becoming proselytes and joining the house
of Israel. The Diaspora, to be sure, was another matter, where Hellenistic and
Roman authorities looked upon the adoption of Jewish practices or conversion to
Judaism with suspicion, disgust and contempt.
100
There, ones theology of con-
version had to be constrained by socio-political realities. Thus some Jews seemed
quite content for Gentiles to remain at a penultimate level of commitment as
adherents or sympathizers (God-fearers or God-worshippers). Likewise, Jesus
relationship with the Pharisees cannot be understood in entirely negative terms.
Jesus was arguably closer to the Pharisees than any other Jewish party. He table-
fellowshipped with Pharisees (Mk 7.1-15; Lk. 7.36-50; 11.37-41; 14.1-4; Jn 3.1-
21), shared their belief in the resurrection,
101
and perhaps his confrontation with
them might even have been an intra-Pharisaic affair.
102
If we assume that not all
the Pharisees of Jesus day were utter hypocrites but some were genuinely devout
and pious Jews who endeavoured to live life according to the Torah, hoped for
the day of Israels restoration (however achieved) and looked forward to the
renewal of all things, why might Jesus be condemning the result of their prose-
lytizing escapade? It may be that the God-fearer adopts not only Pharisaic dis-
tinctives but inherited a nationalistic zeal for Israels liberation. Indeed, this is
possibly embedded in the phrase son of hell (uiov yttvvq,). In Matthews Gos-
pel yt tvvo (Aram. Mnhyg [ghinnm]; Heb. Mnh )yg [g-hinnm]; Lat. geheena)
appears seven times (Mt. 5.22, 29, 30; 10.28; 18.9; 23.15, 33).
103
The word
denotes the ever-burning rubbish dump south-west of Jerusalem in the valley of
Hinnom. According to Wright, Jesus warnings of judgment are not about the
end of the world but rather what will happen to Jerusalem if she keeps pur-
suing her idolatrous nationalism: she will be reduced to a rubbish heap.
104
The
viability of this interpretation depends exclusively on what one makes of geheena
in Jesus judgment oracles in view of its usage in the Old Testament and Second-
Temple literature.
100. Seneca, De Superstitione cited in Augustine, Civ. D. 6.1; Juvenal, Sat. 14.96-106
(GLAJJ, II, 301, pp. 102-103); Suetonius, Domitian 12.2; Dio Cassius, Hist. Rom. 67.14.1-3
(GLAJJ, II, 435, pp. 379-84); Dio Cassius, Hist. Rom. 57.18.5a (GLAJJ, II, 419, pp. 365-66).
101. Mark: Mk 8.31-32; 9.30-32; 10.32-34; 12.18-27; Q: Lk. 11.29-32/Mt. 12.39-42; L:
Lk. 14.12-14; John: Jn 2.19-20; 5.28-29; 6.39-40, 44, 54. See brief discussion of materials
listed in G.R. Osborne, Resurrection, in Craig A. Evans and Stanley E. Porter (eds.), Dic-
tionary of New Testament Background (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2000), pp.
931-36 (933-35).
102. See further Robert A. Wild, The Encounter between Pharisaic and Christian Judaism,
NovT 27 (1985), pp. 105-24 (124).
103. Cf. Mk 9.43, 45, 47; Lk. 12.5; Jas 3.6.
104. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God, pp. 182-86, 330-36, 454-55.
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In the Old Testament geheena denotes the Valley of Hinnom which was the
site for the worship of the Canaanite gods Molech and Baal and included ritual
child sacrice.
105
However, by the rst century geheena appears to have taken
on a more universal and metaphorical signicance in describing the place where
the souls or reanimated bodies of all the wicked went for judgment.
106
This
metaphorical dimension is retained in both the New Testament and in rabbinic
writings.
107
Duane Watson suggests the primary source of the idea of judgment
at geheena derives from Jeremiah.
108
In Jeremiah it is the place of judgment for
the Judeans who emulate pagan practices.
For the people of Judah have done evil in my sight, says the LORD; they have set their
abominations in the house that is called by my name, deling it. And they go on
building the high place of Topheth, which is in the valley of the son of Hinnom, to
burn their sons and their daughters in the rewhich I did not command, nor did it
come into my mind. Therefore, the days are surely coming, says the LORD, when it
will no more be called Topheth, or the valley of the son of Hinnom, but the valley of
Slaughter: for they will bury in Topheth until there is no more room. The corpses of
this people will be food for the birds of the air, and for the animals of the earth; and no
one will frighten them away. And I will bring to an end the sound of mirth and
gladness, the voice of the bride and bridegroom in the cities of Judah and in the streets
of Jerusalem; for the land shall become a waste (Jer. 7.30-34, NRSV).
Therefore the days are surely coming, says the LORD, when this place shall no more
be called Topheth, or the valley of the son of Hinnom, but the valley of Slaughter.
And in this place I will make void the plans of Judah and Jerusalem, and will make
them fall by the sword before their enemies, and by the hand of those who seek their
life. I will give their dead bodies for food to the birds of the air and to the wild animals
of the earth. And I will make this city a horror, a thing to be hissed at; everyone who
passes by it will be horried and will hiss because of all its disasters. And I will make
them eat the esh of their sons and the esh of their daughters, and all shall eat the
esh of their neighbors in the siege, and in the distress with which their enemies and
those who seek their life afict them (Jer. 19.6-9, NRSV).
For Jeremiah, geheena will become the valley of slaughter and it is the
designated location for the judgment of Jerusalem when the hordes of Babyloni-
ans arrive to decimate the city for their unfaithfulness to God and their mis-
placed trust in their own political and military machinations. In Isa. 31.9 (MT
and LXX; cf. 66.24) geheena will be the scene for the destruction of the forces
opposing Gods people. Signicantly, in Targ. Isa. 31.9 there is a tangible shift
105. 2 Kgs 16.3; 21.6; 2 Chron. 28.3; 33.6; Jer. 7.31; 19.4-5; 32.35; cf. Josh. 15.8; 18.16; 2
Kgs 23.10-14; Neh. 11.30.
106. Sib. Or. 1.100-103; 2.283-312; 4.179-91; 4 Ezra 7.26-38; Asc. Isa. 4.14-18.
107. E.g. m. Qid. 4.14; m. Abot.1.5; 5.19-20; b. Ro Ha. 16b-17a; b. Ber. 28b; see further
references cited in SB, IV, pp. 1022-1118.
108. Duane F. Watson, Geheena, in David Noel Freedman (ed.), ABD (ABRL; 6 vols.;
New York: Doubleday, 1992), II, pp. 926-28 (927).
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in that the furnace of re is also for apostate Jews: His rulers shall pass
away before terror, and his princes break up before the stand, says the Lord,
whose splendor is in Zion for those who perform his law, and whose burning
furnace of re is in Jerusalem for those who transgress his Memra. The context
revolves around not trusting in Egypt or military power, but instead relying
upon the might of the Lord. Indeed, the threat of the furnace may relate back to
Targ. Isa. 30.33 where the Assyrians are threatened with geheena. Jews who
trust in military power rather than the Lord may end up sharing the fate of
Israels enemies. Similarly, in several apocalyptic writings, geheena is the site
of punishment for wicked Jews. In 1 Enoch the abyss and the accursed valley
were assigned locations for unrighteous and wicked Jews on the day of judg-
ment.
109
This stands in contrast to the universalization of the metaphor as the
fate for all the wicked, particularly in later rabbinic thinking, which supposed
that most Jews would either be spared from geheena or else Jews that did endure
its consequences would do so only temporarily whilst the Gentiles would suffer
eternally. In a tragic irony, the judgment Israel longed to fall upon the Gentiles
would instead fall upon themselves. Thus, whereas contemporary interpretations
of judgment believed that the Jews would not only escape geheena, but it was to
be the fate of Israels Gentile enemies, Jesus, in contrast, brings a divergent
interpretation of Israels scriptures to bear against this through a synthesis of
traditions found in Jeremiah and other literature where geheena is the fate of the
Jewish nation at the hands of a foreign power because it would not repent and
follow Gods emissary to Israel. The subversive nature of the saying is high-
lighted further by the realization that in calling a proselyte a son of hell (cf.
b. Ro. Ha. 17b, child of hell; Jn 17.12, son of perdition) he was insinuating
that the Pharisees, like their pupils, were destined for geheena.
The vivid imagery evoked by geheena may not have been exhausted by Jesus
interpretation of it as referring to Israels fate at the hands of Rome. Nothing
precludes an eschatological-metaphorical meaning concerning individuals in
other contexts. This of course raises the question of the meaning of judgment in
Jesus message and the relationship between the destruction of Jerusalem and a
further eschatological judgment (if any).
110
Historically speaking, the idea of
God judging Israel and Jerusalem, through a foreign invader, is frequent in
Israels sacred traditions (e.g. Isa. 8.1-8; Jer. 20.4-6; Ezek. 17.12-15). By the
same token the concept of a future eschatological judgment is at least embryonic
in the Old Testament (e.g. Isa. 24.1-23; 66.16; Ezek. 3738; Dan. 12.2) and was
prevalent in Second-Temple literature (e.g. Sib. Or. 3.669-701; 1 Enoch 38.1-6;
109. 1 Enoch 27.1-5; 54.1-6; 90.26-27; 2 Bar. 59.5-12; 85.12-15.
110. See further, Bryan, Jesus and Israels Traditions of Judgment and Restoration;
Marius Reiser, Jesus and Judgment: The Eschatological Proclamation in Its Jewish Context
(trans. L.M. Maloney; Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1997).
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100.1-13). Yet I see no reason for drawing an either/or conclusion. Jesus may
have spoken about judgment in manifold ways invoking various metaphors,
images and historical examples. McKnight is probably correct to see the destruc-
tion of Jerusalem as inaugurating itself the nal judgment.
111
In sum, I have suggested that Jesus criticizes the Pharisees for judaizing a
God-fearer with a view to indoctrinating him with nationalistic propaganda
where, if he accedes and enacts such a perilous programme, the proselyte will
share the fate of his mentor and burn like Jerusalem in the ashes of geheena in
the aftermath of the terror wrought by the Roman legions. Geheena is the fate of
Jerusalem as it is propelled imminently and tragically towards its bloody and
fateful confrontation with Rome and it symbolizes the fate of the nation who
will suffer the due consequence of their rejection of Gods anointed and his pro-
gramme of national restoration.
(6) A last point to note is that Justin Martyr quotes Mt. 23.15 in Dial. Tryph.
122. There Justin reasons that the promise of Isa. 49.6, I will also make you a
light for the Gentiles, that you may bring my salvation to the ends of the earth,
is not referring to strangers or proselytes as Trypho purportedly thinks, but to
Christians. It is then that Justin makes his appeal to Mt. 23.15 as the Lords
indictment of the Jewish people who, in this case, train their converts to torture
and put to death Christians. The stark contrast of Israel failing to recognize its
vocational call as a light to the nations with the violent character of proselytes
who imitate them agrees remarkably well with the line of argumentation I have
outlined above. This is evidence that Mt. 23.15 could and was taken to refer to
the violent acts performed by the proselytes of the Pharisees (and their rabbinic
successors) implying that merely imitating the alleged Pharisaic hypocrisy was
not the sum of its meaning.
Conclusion
The foregoing arguments have attempted to demonstrate, rst, that Martin
Goodmans contention that Mt. 23.15 comprises a reference to intra-Jewish
proselytizing of fellow Jews by the Pharisees is more credible than most have
been willing to admit; and second, to advocate an alternative view whereby Mt.
23.15 signies Pharisaic efforts at proselytizing Gentile sympathizers-adherents
111. McKnight, A New Vision for Israel, pp. 148-49. I concur with McKnight that Jesus
oracles of judgment refer primarily to the fate of Israel, Jerusalem and the Temple; however,
elements of the Olivet Discourse (Mk 13) cannot be reduced whole scale to historical judgment
on the Temple. It appears to be an incipient or protological action of divine wrath which, in
some way, foreshadows or overtures the nal recompense so frequently attested in Second-
Temple literature and repeated throughout the New Testament. See also Craig A. Evans, Mark
8.2716.20 (WBC, 34; Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2001), pp. 292, 318-19, 328-29.
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(God-fearers) not with a view to securing their eternal salvation, but instead to
take up the Jewish cause by adopting the religious-political ideology of the zeal-
ous wing of the Pharisees. This later argument emerges from several aspects:
(1) The moderate evidence for the authenticity of Mt. 23.15 and the plausibility
of a Sitz im Leben Jesu for the logion. (2) the multivalent group known as the
Pharisees did have denite political aspirations, often quite revolutionary in how
they might be achieved. (3) the very notion of judaizing can imply propagating
and embracing a nationalistic viewpoint. (4) converts to Judaism frequently
exhibited a violent zeal for Judea and Judaism and even participated in the
Jewish revolt against Rome. (5) Jesus confronted the nationalistic aspirations of
inuential groups within Israel in his day and arguably synthesized traditions
from Jeremiah and other literature in his warnings of geheena where it denotes
the fate of Israel if she rejects his message and continued nurturing nationalistic
ambitions. (6) Justin Martyr further attests an understanding of Mt. 23.15 as
designating the violence rendered by the converts of the Pharisees rather than
merely replicating their purported impiety.
Even so, both Goodmans arguments and my own are admittedly contestable
and not without problems (e.g. the lack of further evidence that Pharisees prose-
lytized fellow Jews; the question of Jesus calling Israel to repent of nationalistic
ambitions). However, I contend that they are just as plausible (if not more so)
than the view that Mt. 23.15 denotes Jewish proselytizing-missionary efforts.
Thus, I concur with Shaye Cohen, that despite being the only ancient source
that explicitly ascribes a missionary policy to a Jewish group, Mt. 23.15 does
not provide substantive evidence of Jewish proselytizing-missionary activity.
112
Although Mt. 23.15 is only one fragment of evidence in the equation, nonethe-
less it appears to me that despite the fact that the rst-century Christian mission
was not without prior antecedents in Judaism, it constituted a new event.
113
That
carries several implications and raises further questions as A.T. Kraabel writes,
without a Jewish mission it will be necessary to nd another explanation for the
early, energetic and pervasive mission of the new religion. Is it one of the nova
of Christianity which derive from the message of Jesus himself?
114
That is
indeed the question.
112. Cohen, Was Judaism in Antiquity a Missionary Religion?, p. 18.
113. Contra Rokah, Ancient Jewish Proselytism in Theory and Practice, p. 223; Borgen,
Proselytes, Conquest, and Mission, pp. 58-59, 74.
114. Kraabel, Immigrants, Exiles, Expatriates, and Missionaries, p. 85; cf. Goodman,
Mission and Conversion, p. 90.
[JSHJ 2.2 (2004) 138-157]
ISSN 1476-8690
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004, The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX and 315 East
26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010, USA.
THE SEMITIC BACKGROUND TO REPENTANCE IN THE TEACHING OF
JOHN THE BAPTIST AND JESUS
James G. Crossley
University of Nottingham
Nottingham, UK
ABSTRACT
It is thought that repentance in the teaching of John the Baptist and Jesus is
grounded in the Semitic teshubah concept. The problem with this is that the LXX
largely uses tiopto for bw#/bwt whereas the gospels use tovoto which
usually translates Mxn. This problem can be solved. Mxn meaning repentance is not
attested in key documents. In contrast, words for repentance associated with bw#/
bwt are massively attested and it is probable that this was the language used by
John and Jesus. tovoto and tovoio are found in the gospels because they
are words which can be used for the conversion of gentiles. This was important
because bw#/bwt and tiopto are frequently used with reference to Jews re-
turning to God.
Key Words: historical Jesus, John the Baptist, repentance, Teshubah, Aramaic,
Semitic background
It is widely believed that the historical Jesus teaching on repentance is much
deeper than simply some kind of regret as the English, and indeed Greek, word
implies. Rather, the Semitic version of repentance is seen as the correct context.
As Geza Vermes put it:
In the Semitic mentality of Jesus the Jew, it [repentance] implied not a change of mind
as the metanoia of the Greek Gospels would suggest, but a complete reversal of
direction away from sin, in accordance with the biblical and post-biblical Hebrew dual
concept of turning, viz. turning away from or returning to, conveyed by the verb
shuv and the noun teshuvah.
1
As we will see, this sort of approach makes good sense of the teachings of
the historical Jesus and also the historical John the Baptist.
2
But the problem
1. G. Vermes, The Religion of Jesus the Jew (London: SCM Press, 1993), p. 191.
2. On bw# and John the Baptist, see e.g. R.L. Webb, John the Baptizer and Prophet: A
Crossley The Semitic Background to Repentance 139
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with this concerning the teaching of Jesus and John is well known: bw# occurs
over 1000 times in the MT and is largely rendered with tiopto (ooo-
pto is also common) but never with tovoto, the very verb (with cognates)
used in the synoptic gospels. This article will show that the historical John and
the historical Jesus did indeed employ the Semitic concept of teshubah and that
the problem of the unusual Greek translation in the gospels can be solved because
the evangelists or earlier writers in Greek had one eye on the inclusion of gen-
tiles in the Christian community.
3
There are possible solutions to this problem already available. One would be
to question whether the teshubah concept is in fact relevant. In the Anchor Bible
Dictionary entry on repentance in the New Testament, A. Boyd-Luter raises the
signicant objection to using the bw# material for understanding the New Testa-
ment concept of repentance:
In the LXX both metanoia/metanoe and metamelomai translate the Heb nham a total
of 35 times, again emphasizing the elements of change of thinking and regret. It has
been commonly held that the New Testament concept of repentance follows the mean-
ing of the frequent Heb verb b (TDNT 8.989; NIDNTT 1.357). However, such a view
cannot be sustained from LXX usage because b, which is used over 1,059 times, is
always translated by epistreph (to turn, be converted) and its kindred terminology
(TDNT 8.726-29; NIDNTT 1.354).
4
Yet this is a case where simple word correspondence between the MT and
LXX can be misleading. The massively attested Jewish concept of repentance
based on the Hebrew bw# (Aramaic: bwt or byt) root is remarkably similar to
the gospel material. John the Baptists call to repentance, for example, echoes
teshubah-repentance rather than simply a change of mind or regret associated
with tovoio.
5
It seems that it involved a complete change of practice in light
Socio-Historical Study (JSNTSup, 62; Shefeld: JSOT Press, 1991), pp. 184-89; J.E. Taylor,
The Immerser: John the Baptist within Second Temple Judaism (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1997), pp. 106-11.
3. For the sake of convenience, I will now refer to the Greek translators of the Aramaic
traditions as the gospel writers, even though these traditions may have been translated into
Greek prior to the production of the gospels.
4. A. Boyd-Luter, Repentance, New Testament, ABD, V, pp. 672-74 (673).
5. That the historical John preached repentance in some way should not be doubted: it
is certainly a pre-gospel tradition as it is independently attested, and indeed deeply embedded
in the recorded teaching of John the Baptist (Mk 1.4/Lk. 3.3; Mt. 3.7-10/Lk. 3.7-9; Mt. 3.11;
Lk. 3.10-14). Crucially, there is the embarrassing fact of Jesus being baptized for the forgive-
ness of sins which made the early church a little uncomfortable. So, for example, Matthews
portrayal: John baptizes with/in water for repentance (3.11) and is made to question why Jesus
even need undergo baptism (3.13-14). This strongly suggests that Johns baptism of repentance
(e.g. Mk 1.4/Lk. 3.3; Mt. 3.11) is authentic. For a well-known version of this sort of argument
see e.g. E.P. Sanders and M. Davies, Studying the Synoptic Gospels (Philadelphia: Trinity Press;
London: SCM Press, 1989), pp. 312-13; E.P. Sanders, Jesus and Judaism (London: SCM
140 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
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of an imminent eschatological event according to the Q tradition (Mt. 3.8-10/Lk.
3.8-9; cf. Hos. 12.6):
Bear fruits worthy of repentance (oiqoot ou v |opov oiov q, tovoi o,). Do
not presume to say to yourselves, We have Abraham as our ancestor; for I tell you,
God is able from these stones to raise up children to Abraham. Even now the axe is
lying at the root of the trees; every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is cut
down and thrown into the re.
Luke 3.10-14 adds more details of what this practice entailed for John: shar-
ing clothes and food with those who have none and not engaging in nancial
exploitation. There is a strong parallel to Johns teaching in Sirach 5.5-8 which,
as might be expected, uses tiopto/bw#:
Do not say His mercy is great, he will forgive the multitude of my sins, for both
mercy and wrath are with him, and his anger will rest on sinners. Do not delay to turn
back/return (tioptoi/bw#l) to the Lord, and do not postpone it from day to day;
for suddenly the wrath of the Lord will come upon you, and at the time of punishment
you will perish. Do not depend on dishonest wealth, for it will not benet you on the
day of calamity.
Johns general approach to repentance is carried on by the historical Jesus,
even if there are differences over specics, in that Jesus too believes that Jews
should not simply show regret but show a total change of behaviour.
6
In fact we
get the following passage which provides a very similar approach to repentance
to that attributed to John (Mt. 3.10/Lk. 3.9):
At that very time there were some present who told him about the Galileans whose
blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrices. He asked them, Do you think that
because these Galileans suffered in this way they were worse sinners than all other
Press, 1985), pp. 91-92; E.P. Sanders, The Historical Figure (London: Penguin Books, 1993),
pp. 93-94. See also Webb, John the Baptizer, pp. 168-73.
6. Cf. D.C. Allison, Jesus and the Covenant: A Response to E. P. Sanders, JSNT 29
(1987), pp. 57-78. It has been denied, most famously in the seminal work of E. P. Sanders, that
repentance was a signicant theme in the historical Jesus teaching based on the meagre occur-
rences of tovoto and tovoio in Mark and Matthew compared with their frequency in
Luke. See Sanders, Jesus and Judaism, pp. 106-113; Sanders, Historical Figure, pp. 230-35.
However, it has rightly been pointed out that the well-attested theme of repentance is crucial to
the teaching of the historical Jesus and that this should not be ignored by over-emphasizing the
(lack of) occurrences of the words for repentance. Signicantly, the theme of repentance inde-
pendently occurs in passages that assume the validity of Jewish institutions and practices in an
uncontroversial and non-polemical way (e.g. Mk 1.40-45; Mt. 5.23; Lk. 19.1-9) and so reec-
ting what is at the very least an early tradition. For these and other criticisms of Sanders see
e.g. Allison, Jesus and the Covenant, pp. 70-71; B.D. Chilton, Jesus and the Repentance of
E.P. Sanders, TynBul 39 (1988), pp. 1-18; N.T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (Lon-
don: SPCK, 1996), pp. 246-58. This does not necessarily mean all the discussed passages here
are authentic but, as will become clear, they are profoundly inuenced by the Semitic view of
teshubah.
Crossley The Semitic Background to Repentance 141
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
Galileans? No, I tell you; but unless you repent (tovoqt), you will all perish as
they did. Or those eighteen who were killed when the tower of Siloam fell on them
do you think they were worse offenders than all the others living in Jerusalem? No, I
tell you; but unless you repent (tovoqoqt), you will all perish just as they did.
Then he told this parable: A man had a g tree planted in his vineyard; and he came
looking for fruit on it and found none. So he said to the gardener, See here! For three
years I have come looking for fruit on this g tree, and I still nd none. Cut it down!
Why should it be wasting the soil? He replied, Sir, let it alone for one more year,
until I dig around it and put manure on it. If it bears fruit next year, well and good; but
if not, you can cut it down (Lk. 13.1-9; cf. Mt. 7.15-20).
The implication of bearing the fruits of repentance is a general view attrib-
uted to Jesus elsewhere in the synoptic tradition (e.g. Mk 9.42-48; 10.17-22; Mt.
7.13-14/Lk. 13.24).
7
Similarly the parables of Luke 15 make excellent sense in
the context of re-turn repentance, even though Luke uses tovoto and to -
voio in the parables of the Lost Sheep (Lk. 15.3-7/Mt. 18.10-14) and the Lost
Coin (Lk. 15.8-10). Here that which was lost re-turns to the fold, framed in the
context of Jesus association with tax-collectors and sinners (Lk. 15.1-2).
8
This
imagery of sinners coming back is echoed in the following passage from Qumran
where, as might be expected, bw# is used:
Our God, hide your face from [our] si[ns, and] wipe out [al]l our iniquities. And create
a new spirit in us, and establish in us a faithful inclination, and for the sinnersand
7. See further the articles by Chilton and Allison in the previous note.
8. As the Parable of the Lost Sheep is from Q it is clear that at least one Luke 15 parable
is an early tradition with some claim to historical accuracy. Despite the famous differences in
the Matthean version (Mt. 18.10-14), the idea of that which was lost re-turning is still present.
Sanders (Historical Figure, pp. 233-34), however, makes much of the differences: in Matthew
the shepherd goes after the lost sheep, while in Luke the lost sheep must decide to come back.
Matthews emphasis, he argues, is more consistent with the parable and reects Jesus own
view: the emphasis falls entirely on Gods search, not on the sinners repentance. This is a
parable of good news about God; it is not an illustration of the value of repentance (Historical
Figure, p. 234). However, we should exercise caution in reading this parabolic language too
literally. Compare Wrights response to Sanders: that is not how such parables work: The point
of the parable in each case was to validate and vindicate Jesus own activity in taking the ini-
tiative and seeking out the lost (Victory, p. 254). Moreover, the teshubah ideal of repentance
can cover both the sinner returning and another seeking out a sinner: there are passages such as
4Q393 1-2 ii, 4-7 which has a plea for sinners to be brought back to God; there are passages
such as T. Abr. 10.14 [A] where it is the sinner who turns back and lives; and there are passages
such as Ezek. 33.7-9, 11, 19 where both seeking out the sinner and the sinner turning back are
present. Therefore the distinction between seeking out and returning may not be too signicant.
Consequently, even if Matthew reects the earlier tradition, Luke is not so far removed from
the line of thought found in Matthew. It is also worth pointing out that there should not be a
problem with there being no discussion of a change of behaviour in passages such as Luke 15
as the Jesus traditions provide plenty of details concerning ethical behaviour and so we must
assume that this was a guideline as to how the changed sinner ought to behave.
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bring back sinners to you (Kyl)b#hMy)+xw) (4Q393 1-2 ii, 4-7; cf. 4Q393 14-17
i, 5-8; 4Q501 1, 3)
9
It is also worth speculating that the original language of the traditions associ-
ated with Luke 15 and Mt. 18.10-14 may be preserved in, or inuenced, the New
Testament epistles of James and 1 Peter. Compare the following:
My brothers, if anyone among you wanders from the truth and is brought back (tio-
ptq) by another, you should know that whoever brings back a sinner (yivoo|to
oi o tiopto, oopoiov) from wandering will save his soul from death and
will cover a multitude of sins. (Jas 5.19-20)
For you were going astray like sheep, but now you have returned to the shepherd and
guardian of your souls (qt yop o, pooo iovotvoi, oiio tiopo qt
vuv ti ov oitvo |oi tio|oov ov u_ov uov). (1 Pet. 2.25)
It would appear, then, that word correspondence in the MT and LXX does not
provide us with a simple solution in this case and that the ABD entry does not
succeed in its rejection of the teshubah concept because re-turning to God is
profoundly embedded in the gospel tradition. Another possible solution takes
this point seriously. A TDNT entry on repentance by J. Behm provides more
useful arguments concerning the specic problem of the use of tovot o and
tovoio in the gospels:
In the extant fragments of later Gk. transl. of the OT there are clear traces of a
complete equation of tovoto and bw#. In 6 cases where bw# means to convert in
the religious sense transl. it by tovoto, Is. 31:6; 55.7; Jer. 18:8; Ez. 33:12; Hos.
11:5; Job 36:10 (LXX always has tiotooi or ooopto). The same is true of
(?) at Ps. 7:12 and Hos. 7:10 The linguistic material leads to the conclusion
that for the Jewish Hellenistic world of the 2nd cent. A.D. tovoto was a common
and even preferred equivalent of tiotooi = bw#, to turn, to convert.
10
But a handful of occurrences of tovoto for bw# in Symmachus are not
strong enough pieces of evidence to establish it as the potentially preferred
equivalent in the second century CE. What about the continuing use of tio-
pto in the Second Temple period and beyond (see below)? Moreover, it is
quite possible that Symmachus was inuenced by the gospel usage. Behms
argument remains useful as it shows tovot o was a potential alternative
translation to tiopto but it cannot explain a blanket use of tovoio and
tovoto in the synoptic gospels.
9. For rabbinic teshubah material (e.g. Deut. R. 2.24) similar to the Parable of the Prodigal
Son (Lk. 15.11-32), see E.P. Sanders, Paul and Palestinian Judaism: A Comparison of Patterns
of Religion (Philadelphia: Fortress Press; London: SCM Press, 1977), pp. 176-79. This, com-
bined with the turning from non-kosher to kosher and Jewish behavioural assumptions in the
Parable of the Prodigal Son (e.g. negative association with pigs, the joyous kosher meal) may
point to an early intra-Jewish tradition that reects the historical Jesus.
10. J. Behm, tovoto, tovoio, TDNT, IV, pp. 989-1022 (990).
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It is therefore necessary to establish the language used by the historical John
and the historical Jesus concerning repentance and to provide an explanation of
how this was later translated by the gospel writers and why in particular they
found tovoio and tovoto attractive. This will rst require a discussion of
the relevant Semitic literature where the forms of bw#/bwt and Mxn occur. I will
argue that, in addition to the arguments made above, it is possible to show bey-
ond any reasonable doubt that some form of bw#/bwt was used by John and Jesus
and that it is highly unlikely that Mxn would have been used. I will then move on
to discuss Jewish literature in Greek to bring out the translation process from
Aramaic source to Greek gospel, from bwt/hbwtt to tovoto/tovoio. I will
argue that the language of re-turn was associated with Jews re-turning to God
which does not necessarily include gentiles. This idea, I suggest, is found both
in the Semitic tradition received by the gospel writers and in the broader Semitic
context. The gospel writers needed more suitable words to deal with this tradition,
not least because of a concern for the inclusion of gentiles in the Christian com-
munity, and so they chose tovoio and tovoto because they were words
associated with the conversion of the gentiles and not wholly unrelated to the
teshubah concept.
Semitic Background to Repentance in the Teaching of the Historical John
and the Historical Jesus
Texts available in Hebrew and Aramaic are crucial for the teaching of the
historical John and the historical Jesus for two major reasons. First, Aramaic
was almost certainly the rst language of John and Jesus.
11
Second, Jewish
scriptures in Hebrew may also have been known by John and Jesus.
12
With
reference to the present study, it might be added that the Hebrew bw# and the
Aramaic bwt are virtually indistinguishable so there is justication in discussing
them alongside one another. In this section I will show, through a discussion of
the relevant literature in Hebrew and Aramaic, that bw#/bwt was widely available
language for the teaching of John and Jesus and that Mxn was almost certainly not.
Masoretic Text
In the MT, bw# generally means something like turn, return, turn back and
the like.
13
The general image of re-turning can be employed in a variety of
11. For a recent detailed discussion of Aramaic as the language in which Jesus (and, by
implication, John) spoke, with bibliography, see M. Casey, Aramaic Sources of Marks Gospel
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998).
12. So Casey, Aramaic Sources, pp. 86-89; cf. A. Millard, Reading and Writing in the
Time of Jesus (Shefeld: Shefeld Academic Press, 2000).
13. Cf. G.M. Moore, Judaism in the First Centuries of the Christian Era: The Age of the
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situations, including the frequent secular uses of a person or animal physically
turning or returning (e.g. Gen. 8.12; 21.32; 37.30; Exod. 4.20; Josh. 11.10;
1 Kgs 13.9; 2 Kgs 1.5) and restore or repay (e.g. Judg. 9.56-57; 2 Sam. 16.8,
12; 1 Kgs 2.32-33; 2 Kgs 5.10). However, the most important use for present
purposes is the prophetic-style use of bw# in the sense of repentance. Here,
crucially, bw# is used consistently and unambiguously of Israel (or Ephraim,
Judah etc.) re-turning to God (or failing to do so), turning away from the sinful,
indeed apostate, life and back to Yahweh (e.g. Deut. 4.30; 30.1-2; Isa. 31.6;
44.22; Jer. 3.10, 12, 14, 22; 4.1; 5.3; 8.4; 15.19; 24.7; 38[31].16; Hos. 2.7[9];
3.5; 5.4; 6.1; 7.10; 14.2; Amos 4.6, 8, 9, 10, 11; Joel 2.12-14; Zech. 1.3; Mal.
3.7; Neh. 1.9).
14
hbw#t does not occur in the sense of repentance. But it is always
used to denote return in some form or other: to return home (1 Sam. 7.17); the
return of the year, i.e. spring (2 Sam. 11.1/1 Chron. 20.1; 1 Kgs 20.22, 26; 2
Chron. 36.10); and to answer (Job 21.34; 34.36). It is, therefore, of some impor-
tance for the New Testament material that hbw#t is used in the sense of re-turn
as opposed to simply turn.
The suggestion that Mxn is the most signicant background for the synoptic
tradition does have some support from the Hebrew Bible. In the MT Mxn (niphal)
is used in the sense of relent or of a change of mind (e.g. Gen. 6.6-7; Jer. 4.28;
18.10; Amos 7.3, 6; Joel 2.13-14; Jon. 3.9-10; 4.2; Zech. 8.14) and, signi-
cantly, repent (Jer. 8.6; 38[31].19). Another important use of Mxn in the MT is
with the meaning console or comfort (e.g. Gen. 37.35; 50.21; Isa. 40.1; 51.3, 12,
19; 61.2; 66.13).
15
The MT then, as is widely recognized, certainly has a well-developed concept
of repentance in the sense of Israelites re-turning to God based on the root bw#,
in addition to a more banal use of, for example, people physically re-turning.
But while bw# is the dominant word used for repentance, there is also Mxn. It is
only when we get closer to the time of Jesus that the evidence in favour of bw#
and against Mxn becomes much stronger and it is that to which we must now turn.
Tannaim, I (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1927), p. 507; C.G. Monteore,
Rabbinic Conceptions of Repentance, JQR 16 (1904), pp. 209-57 (212-13). For a full list of
uses of bw#/bwt in the MT see BDB, pp. 996-1000, 1117. See also G. Bertram, tiopto,
tiopoq, TDNT, VII, pp. 722-29 (723-25) and W.L. Holladay, The Root Subh in the Old
Testament (Leiden: Brill, 1958). E. Wrthwein, tovot o, tovoio, TDNT, IV, pp. 980-89
(984) is also useful but some caution should be exercised when using this article as it contains
some serious misunderstandings of repentance in biblical thought coloured by antipathy towards
the Torah and cult.
14. Cf. Wrthwein, tovoto, tovoio, pp. 984-88.
15. For further references of Mxn see BDB, pp. 636-37.
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Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature
The Dead Sea Scrolls (DSS) and related literature known to us are important
because they are largely written in Hebrew and Aramaic chronologically closest
to the historical John and the historical Jesus. The potential signicance of bw#/
bwt and Mxn in the DSS cannot therefore be underestimated for John and Jesus.
In the DSS the Hebrew and Aramaic Mxn (and derivatives) occurs occasion-
ally, mainly in the basic sense of comfort or console (e.g. 4Q260 5, 1; 4Q302
3 c, 1; 4Q428 8 i 20; 4Q432 3, 3; 4Q434 2, 1-6; 4Q436 1 i, 1; 4Q437 2 i, 12;
11Q10 38, 6; 11Q13 2, 20) but I am unaware of it being used in the sense of
repentance or related uses. In direct contrast, the Hebrew bw# and the Aramaic
bwt are widely attested and are frequently used. bw#/bwt are used of re-turning in
a basic, secular way. So, for example, they can be used in the senses of answer-
ing (e.g. 4Q302 3 ii, 8; 4Q381 76-77, 9-10; 4Q382 21, 4; 4Q420 1 ii, 1; 4Q427 7
ii, 18-20; 4Q508 1, 3; 11Q10 9.2; 21.6; 25.5; 30.1; 34.3; 37.7), returning goods
(e.g. 4Q267 9 vi, 3; 4Q270 2 ii, 10; 4Q270 7 i, 12; 4Q368 10 ii, 5; 4Q417 1 i, 22),
and someone, something, or group turning, retreating, returning to previous places
and so on (e.g. 4Q161 5-6, 2; 4Q248 8; 4Q252 1, 19-21; 4Q254a 3, 4-5; 4Q269
7, 2; 4Q272 1 i, 6a; 4Q405 20 ii-22, 9; 4Q491 1-3, 7; 4Q491 1-3, 15; 4Q491 1-3,
16; 4Q491 11 ii, 11; 4Q493 1, 10; 4Q504 1-2 v, 6; Gen. Apoc. 20.25, 30; 21.3,
19; 22.12, 29; 4Q204 4.6, 8; 4Q212 5.19; 11Q10 32.3; 33.4; cf. 4Q504 1-2 ii,
11; 4Q504 1-2 v, 6; Gen. Apoc. 22.24). More importantly for present purposes,
it is used in the prophetic tradition of Israel or the true Israel/remnant turning
away from sin and turning or re-turning to the Torah, frequently with reference
to the Qumran community (e.g. 1QS 3.1; 10.20; 4Q171 1, 3-10 iv, 24; 4Q171 1-
2 ii, 3; 4Q171 11, 1; 4Q178 3, 3; 4Q256 9, 7; 4Q266 5 i, 15; 4Q266 8 i, 3/
CD15.12; 4Q266 8 iii, 3/CD 10.3; 4Q266 11, 5; 4Q267 2, 11/CD 6.5; 4Q267 5
ii, 3; 4Q271 4 ii, 4/CD 16.1; 4Q271 4 ii, 6/CD 16.4; 4Q375 1 i, 2; 4Q398 14-
17i, 7; 4Q398 11-13, 4; 4Q504 1-2 v, 13; cf. 1QS 7.17; 8.26; 4Q266 10 ii, 1;
4Q267 9 vi, 2, 5; 4Q270 7 i, 13-14; 4Q381 15, 1; 4Q400 1 i, 16; 4Q461 1, 9;
11Q13 2, 22). The following example is an eschatological application of the clas-
sic prophetic call to the sinful in Israel to re-turn to the way of righteousness:
And we are aware that part of the blessings and curses have occurred that are
written in the b[ook of Mos]es. And this is the end of days, when they will return
(wbw#y#) in Israel to the L[aw] and not turn bac[k] (wbw#y )wlw) (4Q398 11-
13, 3-5). Vitally for the study of Jesus and John, it is at Qumran where we get the
earliest-known occurrence of hbw#t in a similar way to the rabbinic concept.
16
CD 19.16 speaks of entering into the covenant of conversion (hbw#t tyrbb).
The DSS are, therefore, similar to the Hebrew Bible in their use of bw#/bwt
and Mxn. bw#/bwt is massively attested suggesting that it was readily available
16. R.H. Bell, Teshubah: The Idea of Repentance in Ancient Judaism, Journal of Pro-
gressive Judaism 5 (1995), pp. 22-52 (23 n. 3, 33).
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for John and Jesus to use. Moreover, it is consistently used in the sense of Jews
re-turning to God, the general idea which appears to be present in the messages
of John and Jesus. But there are also noticeable developments from the MT. For
example, we get the earliest-known occurrence of hbw#t in the DSS which means
that it was certainly used at the time of John and Jesus. Perhaps the most signi-
cant development is that Mxn in the sense of changing mind, repenting, or regret is
not, as far as I am aware, present. This raises the distinct possibility that Mxn was
not a word available to John and Jesus. It could of course be that the develop-
ments in the DSS were particular to the Qumran group or that Mxn is coinciden-
tally omitted at Qumran or that Mxn could have been present in undiscovered
documents associated with the Qumran group. We therefore require further in-
vestigation by looking at other literature in Hebrew and Aramaic to see if these
patterns are continued.
Rabbinic Literature
As with the DSS, Mxn (and derivatives) is not common and when it does occur it
tends to be found in the sense of console, comfort, consolation and condolence
(e.g. m. Ber. 2.7; m. Sanh. 2.1; m. M. Qat. 3.7; m. Ab. 4.18; m. Mid. 2.2; Targ.
Onq. Gen. 5.29; 46.30; 50.21; t. Sanh. 4.1-2; 6.6; 8.3; t. Suk. 2.10; t. Hul. 2.24;
Targ. Neof. Gen. 24.67; 37.35; 45.28; Num. 10.29; Targ. 2 Sam. 10.2-3; 23.1, 4;
Isa. 54.10-11; 66.13; Ezek. 14.22; 31.16; 32.31). While Mxn does occur in the
sense of regret, it is infrequent.
17
Mxn does occur in texts as late as the Mid-
rashim based on relevant scriptural passages (e.g. Gen. R. 27.4; Exod. R. 45.1;
Num. R. 23.8). But note that there are authorities such as R. Nehemiah in Gen.
R. 27.4 who would rather translate Mxn in Gen. 6.6 (And the Lord was sorry
[Mxnyw] that he had made humankind on the earth) as comfort, in the sense that
God was comforted that he had created people below rather than above for it
would have incited rebellion in the heavens! In the Mishnah and Tosefta
important for present purposes because they are the earliest rabbinic collections
in their nal form and thus closest chronologically to the New TestamentI am
unaware of any occurrences of Mxn or derivatives in the sense of repent, change
of mind, remorse and so on. There is a signicant use of bwt translating Mxn in
the Targumim which must be noted, not least because they reect the language
in which John the Baptist and Jesus spoke: when Mxn occurs in the MT in the
sense of regret, changing mind, remorse and so on, the Targumim frequently
alter the MT and often by using bwt (e.g. Targ. Ps.-J. Gen. 6.6, 7; Targ. Onq.
17. It is worth mentioning that there is no mention of Aramaic Mxn in the sense of repent,
regret, change of mind etc. in the Aramaic entries of Mxn in M. Jastrow, A Dictionary of the
Targumim, the Talmud Babli and Yerushalmi, and the Midrashic Literature, II (New York:
Pardes Publishing House, 1950), p. 895, and M. Sokoloff, A Dictionary of Jewish Palestinian
Aramaic of the Byzantine Period (Ramat-Gan, Israel: Bar Ilan University Press, 1990), p. 346.
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Gen. 6.6, 7; Exod. 32.12, 14; Targ. Judg. 2.18; 1 Sam. 15.11, 35; 2 Sam. 24.16;
Isa. 57.6; Amos 7.3, 6).
18
As with the virtual absence of Mxn in the sense of
repentance, change of mind, regret and so on in the DSS, Mishnah and Tosefta,
and combined with the images of return in the gospel traditions, this use of Mxn
in the Targumim further suggests that Mxn was probably not the word for
repentance underlying the traditions concerning John the Baptist and Jesus.
In rabbinic literature bw#/bwt and derivatives are frequently used in the basic
sense of return. So it can be used to describe a physical return (e.g. m. Yad. 4.4;
m. Av. 4.19), restoring property (e.g. m. B. Qam. 5.7; m. B. Mes. 2.7; 3.6; 7.4;
m. Shebu 6.1; m. Hor. 3.7; m. Kel. 27.12), and answering, responding or a rebuttal
(e.g. m. Ber. 2.1; m. Abod. Zar. 3.4; m. Av. 2.14; 5.7; 6.6; m. Yeb. 8.3; m. Kel.
7.1; 13.7; m. Teb. Y. 4.6; m. Yad. 4.3; m. Ker. 3.9; Targ. Neof. Num. 22.8; Targ.
Josh. 1.16; 7.20; Judg. 7.14; 1 Sam. 14.39; 2 Sam. 15.21; 1 Kgs 18.21; 2 Kgs
1.10; Isa. 14.10; 65.12; cf. m. Ber. 5.1; Targ. Neof. Gen. 37.14). It is also used in
the religious sense of repenting (e.g. m. Yom. 8.9; m. Av. 2.10; m. Git. 5.5). It is,
of course, hbw#t/hbwtt that is the most famous word used for repentance in rab-
binic literature (e.g. m. Yom. 8.8; m. Av. 4.11, 17; m. Ned. 9.3; m. B. Mes. 4.10;
y. Mak. 2.6, 31d; b. Yom. 86a-b; b. Pes. 54a; b. RHSh.17b; b. Yeb. 105a; Targ.
Neof. Gen. 6.3; 18.21).
19
And when this, or any other derivative of bwt/bw#, is
used of repentance, it is almost always assumed that it is Jews re-turning to God.
20
So, for example, m. Yom. 8.8-9:
Sin offering and the unconditional guilt-offering effect atonement; death and the Day
of Atonement effect atonement if there is repentance (hbw#th). Repentance (hbw#t)
effects atonement for lesser transgressions against both positive and negative commands
in the law; while for graver transgressions it suspends punishment until the Day of
Atonement comes and effects atonement. If a man said, I will sin and repent (bw#)w),
and sin again and repent (bw#)w), he will be given no chance to repent (tw#(l
hbw#t)
The rabbinic evidence therefore contributes to an argument of collective
weight. As with the DSS, Mxn in the sense of repent, change mind, regret and so
on is not present in early rabbinic texts. It does occur in other rabbinic literature,
18. Another word used for the Hebrew Mxn is wht, regret, repent (e.g. Targ. Ps.-J.
Exod. 32.12, 14; Targ. Neof. Gen. 6.6, 7; Exod. 32.12, 14; cf. Pesh. Gen. 6.6, 7). The fact that
the parallel Aramaic texts use bwt highlights the overlap between these similar words, just as
has been argued for the other words discussed in this article.
19. For useful overviews of the rabbinic concept of teshubah, with further references, and
coming in from different perspectives, see e.g. Moore, Judaism, I, pp. 507-34; Monteore,
Repentance; J. J. Petuchowski, The Concept of Teshuvah , Judaism 17 (1968), pp. 175-
85; Behm, tovoto, tovoio, pp. 995-99; Sanders, Paul and Palestinian Judaism, pp.
157-80; Bell, Teshubah, pp. 34-45.
20. See Monteore, Repentance, pp. 250-52, for the rare discussions of gentiles in late
rabbinic literature.
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not least due to the scriptural usage, but there is good evidence that it was not
popular as there is a tendency to replace it with words deemed more suitable. As
with the DSS, the rabbinic literature vigorously continues the prophetic concept
of repentance which entails Jews re-turning to God and is focused on the verb
bw#/bwt and the noun hbw#t/hbwtt. Unlike Mxn in the sense of repent, these
words are massively attested from earliest rabbinic literature onwards and this
contributes to the argument that they were certainly available for John and Jesus
to use. Moreover, the general usage of bw#/bwt and hbw#t/hbwtt in rabbinic lit-
erature clearly complements the idea of Jews returning to God in the traditions
associated with John and Jesus. It is noteworthy that hbw#t/hbwtt is the domi-
nant noun for repentance, from the earliest rabbinic collections onwards, because
combined with the occurrence in the DSS and the clear echoes in the teachings
of John and Jesus it can probably be assumed that something like hbwtt was the
Aramaic noun underlying the synoptic tovoio.
At this point it is worth briey mentioning the Syriac translations of the
synoptic tovoto and tovoio, not least because they reect the language in
which John and Jesus spoke. They consistently use some form of the root
bwt/bwt. In fact tovoio is always rendered with )twbyt/)twbYt. This is
presumably because, as we saw with the DSS and rabbinic literature, the idea of
repentance in the sense of Mxn was not readily available and because the concept
of re-turning came naturally to a Semitic translator.
21
There should be no doubt, therefore, that the teshubah concept is the correct
background for understanding the message of John and Jesus. Mxn, on the other
hand, is not. But this does not explain why the gospel writers used tovoio
and tovoto, known Greek translations of Mxn, and not tiopoq and tio-
pto, the obvious words to translate hbw#t/hbwtt and bw#/bwt. It is to the
issue of the translation of the repentance traditions that we must now turn.
Jewish Literature in Greek and the Gospel Translations tovoto and
tovoio
To further aid our understanding of repentance in the Greek gospels, especially
the question of the seemingly unusual use of tovoio and tovot o, Jewish
literature in Greek is the obvious place to turn. Here the LXX is conventionally
seen as being important because it provides us with an example of how a
potential translator might act.
21. The anonymous reader of this article pointed out that Shem-Tobs Hebrew Matthew
prefers the bw# root to Mxn when the Greek Matthew has tovoio and tovoto. Late
though this may be, it too suggests that a Semitic writer would be more comfortable with
teshubah repentance. I am grateful for this fascinating point.
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LXX
As mentioned above, in the LXX tiopto (or related words) most frequently
translates bw# in a wholly expected and uncontroversial way, namely in the gen-
eral sense of something like turn, return, turn back and the like, including
the prophetic sense of Israel (or Ephraim, Judah etc.) re-turning to God (e.g.
Deut. 4.30; 30.1-2; Isa. 31.6; 44.22; Jer. 3.10, 12, 14, 22; 4.1; 5.3; 8.4; 15.19;
24.7; 38[31].16; Hos. 2.7[9]; 3.5; 5.4; 6.1; 7.10; 14.2; Amos 4.6, 8, 9, 10, 11;
Joel 2.12-14; Zech. 1.3; Mal. 3.7; Neh. 1.9).
22
As noted above, hbw#t does not
occur in the sense of repentance but it is used to denote return in some way: to
return home (1 Sam. 7.17); the return of the year, i.e. spring (2 Sam. 11.1/
1 Chron. 20.1; 1 Kgs 20.22, 26; 2 Chron. 36.10); and to answer (Job 21.34;
34.36). The LXX is not uniform in its translations and consequently not of much
help for attempting to understand a potential gospel translation of an underlying
hbw#t/hbwtt tradition. In fact a different Greek word is used every time to
translate hbw#t, including tiopto (2 Sam. 11.1).
23
Note also that tiopoq
occurs five times in the LXX including the sense of a physical return, translating
bw# (Judg. [B] 8.9; Ezek. 42.11), and attention or desire (Song 7.10[11] for
hqw#t, longing).
24
As mentioned above, the LXX tovot o translates Mxn (niphal) in the sense
of relent or of a change of mind (e.g. Jer. 4.28; 18.10; Amos 7.3, 6; Joel 2.13-14;
Jon. 3.9-10; 4.2; Zech. 8.14) and, signicantly, repent (Jer. 8.6; 38[31].19).
25
In
fact, when used in the sense of repentance, there are echoes of bw#/tiopto,
thus making it possible for someone to use tovoto as a translation of bwt/
bw#.
26
So, for example, Jer. 31[38].18-19:
Indeed I heard Ephraim pleading: You disciplined me, and I took the discipline; I was
like a calf untrained. Bring me back, let me come back, for you are the Lord my God.
For after I had turned away I repented (MT: ybw#; LXX: ttvoqoo); and after I was
discovered, I struck my thigh; I was ashamed, and I was dismayed because I bore the
disgrace of my youth. (Cf. Isa. 46.8-9; Jer. 8.6; 18.8; Joel 2.14.)
22. Cf. Wrthwein, tovoto, tovoio, pp. 984-88.
23. For the words and references see T. Muraoka, Hebrew/Aramaic Index to the Septu-
agint. Keyed to the Hatch-Redpath Concordance (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1998), p. 160.
24. E. Hatch and H.A. Redpath, A Concordance to the Septuagint and the Other Greek
Versions of the Old Testament (Including the Apocryphal Books) (Grand Rapids: Baker Books,
1998), p. 534, unusually give tiopoq for +p#m in Ezek. 42.11. Muraoka, Hebrew/Aramaic
Index, p. 90, puts tiopoq in double square brackets denoting Muraokas judgment that this
is implausible (cf. p. 10). tiopoq also occurs in Ezek. 47.11 with no Hebrew equivalent.
25. There are other occurrences of Mxn in the MT, including uses in the sense of repent,
regret, change mind etc. (e.g. Gen. 6.6, 7; Exod. 32.12), and translated with a variety of Greek
words, notably totiooi. For references see Muraoka, Hebrew/Aramaic Index, p. 95.
26. Behm, tovot o, to voio, pp. 989-90. On p. 991 Behm also notes that Sir. 48.15
has tovoto for bw# and, as the Greek version also uses tiopto for bw# (5.7; 21.6;
48.10), it is further evidence of some overlap between tiopto and tovoto.
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Unfortunately, tovoio does not have a direct Hebrew or Aramaic equiva-
lent in the LXX.
27
It is found once where the LXX adds it to Proverbs 14.15 and it
is used in the sense of change of mind or reection: The simple believe every-
thing, but the clever give time for a change of mind (tp_toi ti, tovoiov).
To restate the basic issue, the LXX consistently uses tiopto for bw# and
tovoto for Mxn and, if John and Jesus did indeed use some form of bw#, this
is of limited use in understanding the translations tovoio and tovoto in
the synoptic gospels. Although the evidence is not strong, there are, however,
some potential explanations based on a study of the LXX translations. For exam-
ple, there is some overlap between bw#/tiopto and Mxn/tovot o thereby
raising the possibility of translating bw# with tovot o. There is, however,
some further signicant evidence in favour of the possibility of this translation
in the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha.
Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
28
In the apocryphal and pseudepigraphal literature, tiopto is used in a
similar way to the LXX and would seem to be the obvious translation of bw#/bwt
for a Greek gospel. tiopto can be used in the sense of a person physically
turning around (e.g. Sus. 47) and in the sense of to answer (e.g. Tob. 5.17 [S]).
It is commonly used to describe returning from some kind of journey, large or
small, or in some related sense such as retreating (e.g. 1 En. 99.5; 107.3; T. Levi
17.10; T. Naph. 4.3; T. Zeb. 9.7; T. Benj. 12.4; T. Jos. 11.5; 13.3; Par. Jer. 3.10-
11; 4.8; 7.27; Tob. 2.3, 5; 3.17; 6.13[S]; 10.1[S]; 1 Macc. 1.20; 3.33; 4.16, 24;
5.19, 54, 68; 7.25, 35; 9.9, 16, 50, 57; 10.55, 66, 87; 11.7, 51, 72-74; 12.24, 26,
35, 45, 51; 13.24; cf. Sir. 40.1; 1 Macc. 2.63; 3 Macc. 7.8). The prophetic sense
of Israel re-turning to their God from sin is also continued in this literature (e.g.
T. Iss. 6.3; T. Dan 5.9, 11; T. Abr. [B] 12.13; Tob. 13.6; Jdt. 5.19; Sir. 17.25; 21.6;
cf. Sir. 5.7; 18.13; Wis. 16.7; 4 Macc. 13.5; cf. T. Benj. 5.1) or in the related sense
of Israel returning to rebuild the Temple and Jerusalem (e.g. Tob. 14.5-6). Some
uses have interesting parallels to the teaching of Jesus, further suggesting that
tiopto might be the obvious translation in the gospels. So, for example,
T. Abr. [A] 10.14:
For behold, Abraham has not sinned and he has no mercy on sinners (ou, oopo-
iou,). But I made the world, and I would not want to destroy any one of them; but I
delay the death of the sinner (ou oopoiou) until he should convert (tioptoi)
and live. (Cf. T. Abr. [B] 12.13.)
27. Behm (tovoto, tovoio, p. 991) makes an important qualication: Sym-
machus Isa. 30.15 has tovoio for hbw#.
28. The view of Monteore (Repentance, p. 211) that nothing of great importance about
repentance can be obtained from this literature and that its quality on the whole is poor is a
little unfair as the following material shows.
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There is even one rare use of tiopt o with reference to the conversion of
gentiles:
And thereafter the Lord himself will arise upon you, the light of righteousness with
healing and compassion in his wings. He will liberate every captive of the sons of men
from Beliar, and every spirit of error will be trampled down. He will turn all nations to
being zealous for him (|oi tioptti ovo o tvq ti, opoqiooiv ouou).
(T. Zeb. 9.8)
Notable too is that tiopoq is also found in the sense of repentance, turn-
ing/re-turning to the Lord (e.g. Sir. 18.21; 49.2; Pss. Sol. 9.10; 16.11; cf. Ps. Sol.
7; Vit. Proph. 12.8; 16.1).
In many ways the apocryphal and pseudepigraphal literature uses tovoto
in a fairly conventional manner. It is used in the sense of changing ones mind
(e.g. T. Abr. [A] 10.15) and, most importantly, repenting of sins, particularly in
the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs (e.g. T. Reub. 1.9; 4.4; T. Zeb. 9.6-7;
T. Gad 5.6; 6.3, 6; 7.5; T. Ash. 1.6; T. Jos. 6.6; T. Benj. 5.4; Gk Apoc. Ezra 2.25;
T. Abr. [B] 12.13; Par. Jer. 8.9; Wis. 5.3; Sir. 17.24; 48.15; Pr. Man. 13). Simi-
larly, tovoio is often used in the sense of repenting of sins (e.g. T. Reub. 2.1;
T. Jud. 19.2; Jos. Asen. 16.14; Aristeas 188; Sib. Or. 4.168; Wis. 11.23; 12.10,
19; Pr. Man. 8; cf. Sir. 44.16).
29
T. Gad 5.6-8, in a way which has some overlap
with tiopto/tiopoq, conveniently spells out these uses of tovoto
and tovoio with more substance after explaining the details of right and
wrong:
I understood this at the last, after I had repented (to o tovoqooi t) concerning
Joseph, for according to Gods truth, repentance (tovoio) destroys disobedience,
puts darkness to ight, illuminates the vision, furnishes knowledge for the soul, and
guides the deliberative power to salvation. What it has not learned from human agency,
it understands through repentance (tovoio,).
But there is another similar and striking use of tovot o and to voio
which is of some importance for understanding the gospel translations, namely
when they are used in the context of conversion of gentiles. Aseneth, in the
conversion text par excellence, is said to have wept with great and bitter weep-
ing and repented (ttvoti) of her gods whom she used to worship, and spawned
all the idols (Jos. Asen. 9.2). Both tovoto and tovoio are amboyantly
used to describe the heavenly female gure of Repentance (tovoio) in an
extremely positive sense concerning the conversion of gentiles (Jos. Asen.
15.7-10).
30
29. For what it is worth, the heavily Christianized Apocalypse of Sedrach frequently uses
tovoto (e.g. 12.4-5; 13.6; 14.8-9; 15.2) and tovoio (1; 12.4; 13.1; 14.2-3; 15.2) in the
sense of repenting.
30. C. Burchard (Joseph and Aseneth, in J.H. Charlesworth (ed.), Old Testament Pseu-
depigrapha, II [ABRL; New York: Doubleday, 1985], pp. 177-247 [227 n. v]) notes the
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On the whole, then, the apocryphal and pseudepigraphical literature weighs
in favour of tiopto as the Greek equivalent to bw#. As with the LXX, it is
used with the meaning of re-turning, including the prophetic sense of Jews re-
turning to God. This literature is also consistent with the LXX in its use of to-
voto and tovoio in that these words are used in the sense of regret, change
of mind, repent and so on, echoing the Semitic Mxn. However, analysis of this lit-
erature also raises further potential explanations of the gospel translation process.
In addition to the overlap between tiopto/tiopoq and tovot o/
tovoio, tovoto and tovoio can be used for the conversion of gentiles,
something of obvious signicance for gospel translations. Moreover, this kind
of usage of the relevant words in Greek is also found in Philo.
Philo of Alexandria
In Philos works tiopto is used in a general secular way to describe
returning. It is used in the sense of turning attention to something or attraction
(e.g. Poster. C. 106; Mut. Nom. 209; Flacc. 30; cf. Agr. 143; Jos. 230) and in the
sense of physically turning around, retreating, returning from a journey and so
on (e.g. Conf. Ling. 130; Migr. 195; Rer. Div. Her. 46; Fug. 124; Somn. 1.247;
2.144; Jos. 175, 200; Vit. Mos. 2.247; Praem. Poen. 95; Vit. Cont. 45; Leg. Gai.
272). It is also used with the meaning of a complete life change (Conf. Ling.
131; Fug. 142; Somn. 2.174-75). The following is a classic example of such ideas
in the hands of Philo: Then if you too, O soul, follow Leahs example and turn
away from mortal things, you will of necessity turn (tioptti) to the Incor-
ruptible One, who will cause all the springs of mortal beauty to pour their streams
upon you (Poster. C. 135).
Philo uses tovoto in the sense of changing ones mind (e.g. Somn. 182;
Vit. Mos. 1.167; Spec. Leg. 4.18; Virt. 208; Praem. Poen. 169; Leg. Gai. 337,
339), including the view found in the Hebrew Bible that God does not change
his mind (e.g. Deus Imm. 72; Vit. Mos. 1.283), ethical repentance (e.g. Leg. Gai.
2.60; 3.211; Deus Imm. 8; Fug. 99; Somn. 91; Jos. 87; Vit. Mos. 2.167; Spec.
Leg. 1.103; 4.221; Leg. All. 303), and repentance associated with the cult (e.g.
Mut. Nom. 235; Spec. Leg. 1.239, 241, 253; cf. Deus Imm. 8-9). Similarly, to -
voio is used in the sense of changing mind (e.g. Flacc. 181), including God not
changing his (e.g. Aet. Mund. 40; Deus Imm. 33), ethical repentance (e.g. Leg.
All. 2.78; 3.106, 213; Det. Pot. Ins. 96; Mut. Nom. 235; Somn. 2.108, 109, 292;
Abr. 17; 26; Spec. Leg. 1.102; Praem. Poen. 15, 22; cf. Spec. Leg. 1.58), and
similarities between Lk. 15.7, 10 and the joyful gure of Repentance in Jos. Asen. 15.8. It
might be worth speculating (and it can be nothing more than speculation) that Luke deliber-
ately wrote upan extremely strong case can be made for Lk. 15.7, 10 as being editorialhis
source full of assumptions concerning teshubah with tovoto and tovoio if it could be
established that sentiments such as Jos. Asen. 15.8 were well known in the rst century CE.
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repentance associated with the cult (e.g. Sacr. 132; Mut. Nom. 235; Spec. Leg.
1.187, 236; cf. Fug. 158-159; Mut. Nom. 124). to voio can also have a similar
function to hbw#t, in the sense that it requires a change of behaviour as well as
mind (e.g. Abr. 26; Praem. Poen. 15-16; Spec. Leg. 1.236). Most crucially for pre-
sent purposes is Philos use of tovoto and tovoio in relation to conversion
and proselytesreminiscent of hbw#t in that it involves a complete change
in a typically ostentatious passage (Virt. 175-82; cf. Praem. Poen. 169). Here
repentance means passing from ignorance to knowledge of things which it is
disgraceful not to know, from senselessness to good sense, from incontinence to
continence, from injustice to justice, from timidity to boldness and so prose-
lytes become at once temperate, continent, modest, gentle, kind, humane, seri-
ous, just, high-minded, truth lovers, superior to the desire for money and
pleasure (Virt. 180-82).
So with Philo we once again get the familiar pattern of tiopto being
used in a very similar sense to bw# and tovoto/tovoio being used in a very
similar sense to the MT Mxn, particularly in the sense of regret, repent, change of
mind and so on. But, as with the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, we get both
the overlap between tiopto/tiopoq and tovoto/tovoio and, cru-
cially, tovoto and tovoio being used for the conversion of gentiles. Before
the signicance of this for the gospel translations is discussed further, we should
turn to Josephus to complete the picture of the Jewish literature in Greek.
Josephus
In the writings of Josephus tiopto is frequently used in a general secular
way. It is used to describe turning attention/being attracted to something (e.g.
War 3.232; 4.180, 657; 5.377; 6.64, 154; Ant. 2.232; 13.431; 17.62), the twists
and turns of a wall (e.g. War 5.145, 506), and physically turning around, return-
ing from a journey, and retreating, whether it be a horse, an individual, an army
or any other group of people (e.g. War 1.101, 306, 368; 2.90, 453, 619; 3.17;
4.60, 108, 131, 174, 202, 369, 427, 491; 5.59, 77, 80, 112, 416, 483, 487; 6.85,
248; Ant. 5.161; 6.285, 371; 7.15, 179, 265, 299; 16.351). Most importantly, it
can also be used of changing a way of life. For example, in Josephus version of
Joseph and the advances of his masters wife (Gen. 39.6-18), he comments, he
endeavoured to curb the womans impulse and to turn (tiopttiv) her pas-
sion into the path of reason (Ant. 2.53; cf. Ant. 12.396). It is worth noting that
tiopoq is used with the meanings of attention (e.g. Ant. 2.293; 8.314; 9.237;
12.149; 17.275; 18.349; 19.151) and physical return (Ant. 8.235).
Josephus uses tovoto frequently in the sense of regretting, repenting and
changing ones mind, and it is not often clear which translation should be pre-
ferred (e.g. War 1.278; 2.303; 3.138, 389; 4.284, 350, 375; 5.319, 572; 6.123;
7.378; Ant. 2.309, 315, 320, 322; 5.108, 151, 240; 6.143, 284, 297; 7.153, 264;
8.225, 301; 9.168; 10.60, 123; 11.317; 12.273; 14.390; 18.118; Life 17, 110,
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113, 262). Interestingly, when Josephus uses tovoto in his discussion of
John the Baptist (Ant. 18.118) it is not used to discuss Johns ministry but only
in a banal sense, namely of Antipas changing his mind. Elsewhere, though,
Josephus does use tovoto in a more religious sense, namely for repenting
of sins (e.g. Ant. 4.313; 7.320, 362; 8.301, 362; War 5.415; 6.103; cf. Ant. 4.142,
195). Similarly, Josephus uses tovoio in the sense of repentance, a change of
mind, reconsideration and remorse (e.g. War 1.10, 92, 444, 555; 3.127, 128;
4.354; 5.360; Ant. 2.107, 163; 3.22; 4.144; 5.166; 6.38; 7.54; 9.176; 13.314;
16.240, 352, 392; 20.178; Life 370; Apion 1.274). Again, the religious sense of
repentance of sins is also present. In the context of Ezras reading of the Law at
Tabernacles, Josephus talks of the peoples repentance (tovoiov) and sorrow
over the sins they had formerly committed (Ant. 11.156; cf. War 6.364; Ant.
2.23, 51; 4.191; 16.125).
Josephus uses tiopto/tiopoq in an unexceptional manner in that it
is consistent with LXX usage: it is used in the sense of re-turn, including some
echoes of the prophetic sense of repentance. Likewise, tovoto/tovoio is
used in the sense of changing mind, repent, regret and so on. This may not seem
like much but it does help provide an argument of collective weight for fairly
consistent uses of tiopto/tiopoq and tovot o/tovoio in Jewish
literature in Greek from close to the time of the gospels and again suggesting
that tovot o/to voio is not the obvious choice to translate words associated
with bwt/bw#.
Before we turn to the New Testament, the Jewish literature in Greek should
now be summarized. The use of tiopt o/tiopoq quite naturally follows
the Semitic use of bw#. This is a highly important point because tiopto/ti-
opoq is often used in the sense of re-turn, including the prophetic sense of
Jews re-turning to God. This would hold obvious problems for the Greek-writ-
ing translators of the gospels faced with traditions of John and Jesus preaching
at Jews while at the same time having to preach these traditions with gentiles in
the Christian community. On the other hand, tovoto/tovoio could provide
a potentially useful alternative which would solve such difculties: not only does
tovoto/tovoio overlap with tiopto/tiopoq, but it can also be
used to describe the conversion of the gentiles. With these thoughts in mind, we
can now turn to New Testament usage.
New Testament
In the New Testament tiopto is used in the conventional senses of physi-
cally returning, turning around, and so on (e.g. Mk 5.30; 8.33; Mk 13.16/Mt.
24.18/Lk. 17.31; Mt. 12.44; Lk. 2.39; 8.55; 17.4; 22.32; Acts 9.40; 15.36; 16.18;
2 Pet. 2.22; Rev. 1.12; cf. Mt. 10.13) and in the more religious sense of turning
or re-turning to the Lord, both of Jews (e.g. Mk 4.12/Mt. 13.15; Lk. 1.16; Jn
21.20; Acts 3.19; 9.35; 28.27; cf. Lk. 1.17; 17.4; 2 Cor. 3.16; Jas 5.19-20) and,
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with the context made absolutely clear, gentiles (e.g. Acts 11.21; 15.19; 26.18,
20; 1 Thess. 1.9; cf. Acts 14.15; Gal. 4.9), where turn as opposed to re-turn is
the obvious sense. The synoptic use of tiopto in a religious sense is signi-
cant in the gospels because it in no way contradicts the possibility of gentile
conversion. It is used only in a religious sense once in Matthew and Mark (Mk
4.12/Mt. 13.15) and this is in the context of a biblical quotation from Isa. 6.10
with reference to outsiders, presumably Jews who rejected Jesus message:
And he said to them, To you has been given the mystery of the kingdom of God, but
for those outside, everything comes in parables; in order that they may indeed look,
but not perceive, and may indeed listen, but not understand; so that they may not turn
again (tioptooiv) and be forgiven. (Mk 4.11-12)
In the Gospel of Luke, tiopto explicitly occurs once in a religious
sense with an unambiguous reference to the salvation of Jews and Jews alone,
which ts in neatly with Lukes salvation history where John belongs more to
the period of the Law and Prophets (cf. Lk. 16.16): He [John the Baptist] will
turn (tioptti) many of the people of Israel to the Lord their God (Lk. 1.16;
cf. 1.17; 17.4; 22.32). Noteworthy is the only New Testament occurrence of tio-
poq in Acts 15.3 where it is made absolutely clear that it refers to the con-
version of gentiles, again tting in neatly with Lukes salvation history, namely
the time of the post-resurrection church.
tovoto is always used in some kind of religious or ethical sense in the
New Testament (Mk 1.15/Mt. 4.17; Mk 6.12; Mt. 3.2; 11.20; 11.21/Lk. 10.13;
Mt. 12.41/Lk. 11.32; Lk. 13.3, 5; 15.7, 10; 16.30; 17.3-4; Acts 2.38; 3.19; 8.22;
17.30; 26.20; 2 Cor. 12.21; Rev. 2.5, 16, 21-22; 3.3, 19; 9.20-21; 16.9, 11). Like-
wise tovoio is always used in a religious or ethical sense (Mk 1.4/Lk. 3.3;
Mt. 3.8/Lk. 3.8; Mt. 3.11; Lk. 5.32; 15.7; 24.47; Acts 5.31; 11.18; 13.24; 19.4;
20.21; 26.20; Rom. 2.4; 2 Cor. 7.9, 10; 2 Tim. 2.25; Heb. 6.1, 6; 12.17; 2 Pet.
3.9). Notice that, importantly, tovot o can be tied in with tiopto in the
sense of repenting and turning to God (Acts 3.19; 26.20; cf. Joel 2.14; Isa. 46.8;
Jer. 18.8).
On one level, the gospel material is therefore consistent with the Jewish uses
of tovoto/tovoio and tiopto/tiopoq but there are notable devel-
opments. tiopt o/tiopoq is used in the sense of returning, including the
prophetic sense of turning or re-turning to God but it is used of both Jews and
gentiles. However, when it is used of Jews alone the context is absolutely clear
and it does not contradict the possibility of gentile conversion in any way. More-
over, it is not used in the recorded teaching of Jesus, other than in the signicant
sense of the rejection of his message. This is surely no coincidence. I would sug-
gest that this is because of the potential interpretation, which would have been
present in the Semitic tradition, of Jesus teaching being limited to Jews alone.
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Conclusions
We can, therefore, see that there was a stable and consistent use of all the relevant
words for the background to the call to repentance in the teaching of both the
historical John the Baptist and the historical Jesus. The Semitic background
makes it overwhelmingly likely that the teshubah concept of repentance is the
correct background for the teaching of John and Jesus on repentance. Not only
is it massively attested but the idea of Jews returning to God is exactly what we
nd in the messages of John and Jesus. In contrast to this, Mxn, the Hebrew equi-
valent of tovot o, is not well attested, at least not in the sense of repent,
regret or remorse. In fact this sense of the word appears to be absent from a wide
range of Jewish sources from around the time of John and Jesus and so it is over-
whelmingly likely that Mxn is not the correct Semitic background for the teach-
ings of John and Jesus. In addition to this it is worth recalling that the Syriac
translations of the gospels avoid Mxn and consistently use some form of bwt for
tovoto and tovoio.
It has also been explained why the gospel writers avoided the most obvious
word for the translation of bw#/bwt, namely tiopto. In Jewish literature in
Greek, tiopto (and tiopoq) is consistently used to describe a re-turn
of some form and when used in the sense of repentance it is used to describe
Jews re-turning to God. In this sense it is notable that the New Testament vir-
tually avoids it in the sense of repentance until the post-Jesus church. The gos-
pel writers instead develop the repentance traditions with the words tovoto
and tovoio. This was no doubt useful for at least two reasons: not only is
there some overlap with tiopto, but tovot o and tovoio can also be
used to describe the conversion of gentiles in Jewish literature. This provided a
perfect solution for the gospel writers to the problem of the language associated
with Jews re-turning to God without reference to gentiles. The gospel writers
could theoretically have used tiopt o with gentiles in mind, as Luke does in
Acts when the context makes it unambiguously clear that he is dealing with
gentiles (e.g. Acts 11.21; 15.19; 26.18, 20),
31
but what we know of the messages
of John and Jesus indicates that they were dealing with Jews almost exclusively.
The gospel writers knew this (e.g. Mk 7.26-27; Mt. 10.5-6; Lk. 1.16; see also
Acts 13.24, before his [Jesus] coming John had already proclaimed a baptism
of repentance [tovoio,] to all the people of Israel). But the message of repen-
tance remained important for gentile Christians and so the seemingly exclusive
reference to Jews re-turning had to be dropped. This explains why tiopto
is avoided by the gospel writers when describing the teachings of John and
31. Recall that Luke can use tiopto for Jews when the context makes it unambigu-
ously clear that Jews alone are in mind (Lk. 1.16).
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Jesus. Yet a message of repentance was always going to remain important for
the early Christians. For example, Johns baptism of repentance, initially aimed
at Jews, became important, of course, for all Christians entering the church and
so it almost goes without saying that this had to be made clear and it was made
clear by avoiding tiopto and tiopoq and using language more suited
to gentile converts: tovoto and tovoio.
This study of the linguistic background can also help in evaluating further
alternative proposals put forward at the beginning of this article. The consistent
use of tovoto, tovoio and tiopto again indicates that Behms sug-
gestion that tovot o was the preferred alternative to tiopto for the trans-
lation of bw# is not strong, although it should be mentioned once again that the
increasing use of tovoto to translate bw# remains an important point which
would have contributed to the translations of the gospel writers, helped in part
by the overlap between tovoto and tiopto. In fact, given the virtual
absence of any concept of Mxn repentance in the relevant Semitic literature of
the period,
32
it is quite possible that tovoto was translating bwt/bw# in those
Jewish works from the Second Temple period which were originally written in a
Semitic language. The other alternative suggestion made in Boyd-Luters ABD
entry, namely that the idea of a change of mind is more relevant than the Semitic
concept of turning and returning, is further damaged in the light of this study as
another criticism can now be added: given the virtual absence of any concept of
Mxn repentance in the relevant Semitic literature, it is extremely difcult to under-
stand what Aramaic word would have been used by John the Baptist and Jesus
other than some form of bwt.
32. Cf. Monteore, Repentance, p. 212.
[JSHJ 2.2 (2004) 158-189]
ISSN 1476-8690
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004, The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX and 315 East
26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010, USA.
JESUS AS POWER TACTICIAN
Donald Capps
Princeton Theological Seminary
Princeton, NJ, USA
ABSTRACT
Psychological studies of Jesus have been neglected, but they may, in fact, make a
contribution to historical Jesus studies. Jay Haleys 1969 essay, The Power
Tactics of Jesus Christ, is suggestive in this regard. Haley emphasizes Jesus
appeal to the poor through healings, his rhetorical skills against the establishment,
and his creation of an organization of dedicated men. His views that Jesus
organization was hierarchically ordered and that Jesus made a fateful miscalcula-
tion leading to his execution are evaluated and reinterpreted in light of more
recent scholarship.
Key Words: historical Jesus, power tactics, psychological study of Jesus, hier-
archy, temple incident
In an earlier article,
1
I suggested that Albert Schweitzers stinging critique of
psychiatric studies of Jesus published in the rst decade of the twentieth cen-
tury
2
has cast a very long shadow, as it has discouraged the use of psychological
theories and methods in historical Jesus studies. When such studies have
appeared, they have received little attention, and their status in historical Jesus
studies has been extremely marginal. In this article, I will discuss Jay Haleys
essay, The Power Tactics of Jesus Christ, originally published in 1969,
3
thus
coinciding with a renewed interest among biblical scholars in the study of the
1. Donald Capps, Beyond Schweitzer and the Psychiatrists: Jesus as Fictive
Personality, HTS Theological Studies (University of Pretoria) 49 (2003), pp. 621-62.
2. Albert Schweitzer, The Psychiatric Study of Jesus: Exposition and Criticism (trans.
Charles R. Joy; Boston: Beacon Press, 1948 [1911]).
3. Jay Haley, The Power Tactics of Jesus Christ, in his The Power Tactics of Jesus
Christ and Other Essays (Rockville, MD: The Triangle Press, 2nd edn, 1986 [1969]), pp. 24-51.
Capps Jesus as Power Tactician 159
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
historical Jesus. In my view, this essay by a leading authority in strategic family
therapy offers an insightful psychological portrait of Jesus, as it focuses on Jesus
as a man who was skilled in the use of power. After presenting Haleys portrait
of Jesus, I will discuss an important implication of his view that all organiza-
tions are hierarchical, namely, that Jesus was uncompromising in his opposition
to all human paternal authority. I will also address his contention that Jesus
miscalculated the outcome of the temple disturbance.
Haleys Portrait of Jesus
Haley is known in family therapy circles for his emphasis on the problem of
how to change the locus of power in a family. If such a change is to be realized,
the therapist must use power tactics to counter the power tactics of the family.
These tactics, however, need to be subtle and often indirect, as the overt use or
exhibition of power is likely to be counterproductive. An example of the thera-
pists use of power is dening the problem to which the therapy will be directed
in such a way that it not only expresses what the family or the individual client
wants changed, but is also put in a form that makes it solvable.
4
Another is
establishing himself as the gatekeeper of information:
In actuality or illusion, he should be dened as the one who allows or permits infor-
mation to pass. Therefore, his power is enhanced if he is provided with secrets to be
protected. The more an individual or group give a therapist information it wishes
concealed, the more power and status the therapist is given.
5
Haley also discusses the relationship between power and organization, noting
that, If there is one generalization that applies to humans and other animals, it
is that all creatures capable of learning are compelled to organize. To be organ-
ized means to follow patterned, redundant ways of behaving and to exist in a
hierarchy. Creatures that organize together form a status, or power, ladder in
which each creature has a place in the hierarchy, with those above and those
below.
6
While groups will have more than one hierarchy because of different
functions, the existence of hierarchy is inevitable because it is in the nature of
organization that it be hierarchal. We may dream of a society in which all crea-
tures are equal, but on this earth there are status and precedence and inequality
among all creatures.
As hierarchy is unavoidable, all groups must deal with the issue of organiz-
ing in a hierarchy, and rules must be worked out about who is primary in status
4. Jay Haley, Problem-Solving Therapy (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2nd edn, 1989),
p. 38.
5. Haley, Problem-Solving Therapy, p. 240.
6. Haley, Problem-Solving Therapy. This and following quotations are from pp. 107-110.
160 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
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and power and who is secondary. When the status positions in a hierarchy are
confused, or unclear, there will be a struggle that an observer would characterize
as a power struggle. An observer who has a theory of innate aggression or of a
need for power may say that the participants are satisfying an inner drive by
struggling for power. But a more useful theory is that this struggle is an effort
to clarify, or work out, the positions in the hierarchy of an organization.
How Jesus Acquired Power
Haleys title, The Power Tactics of Jesus Christ, makes clear that he intends to
understand Jesus public career from the same perspective that informs his
therapeutic work with families, focusing on power and power relationships. He
denes power in this way: A person has achieved power when he has estab-
lished himself as the one who is to determine what is going to happen.
7
Power
tactics are those maneuvers a person uses to give himself inuence and control
over his social world and so make the world more predictable. Thus, a man
has power if he can order someone to behave in a certain way, but he also has
power if he can provoke someone to behave in that way. One man may order
others to lift and carry him, while another might achieve the same end by col-
lapsing. Both men are determining what is to happen in their social environment
by the use of a power tactic.
Gaining power appears to be more important to some individuals than any
subjective distress they might experience. For example, The alcoholic who says
to the bartender, If you want me out of here, throw me out, may suffer pain
and indignity, but he determines the outcome of the interchange. It is even pos-
sible to determine what is going to happen from beyond the grave, as victims of
wills and those whose intimates have committed suicide will testify. Haley
concludes: When we examine the tactics of Jesus, it is useful to consider power
tactics dened this broadly.
Besides the synoptic gospels, Haleys primary sources for his analysis of
Jesus power tactics are Schweitzers The Psychiatric Study of Jesus and The
Quest of the Historical Jesus, and Josephuss The War of the Jews, Or The His-
tory of the Destruction of Jerusalem. He also has footnote references to Eric
Hoffers The True Believer, which focuses on leaders of mass movements and
their followers. Haley recognizes that what we know of Jesus is based on the
writings of members of his organization, so questions about Jesus own contri-
bution to organizational strategy can always be raised due to doubts about the
objectivity and authenticity of these writings. Still, one can discern the basic
7. Haley, The Power Tactics of Jesus Christ. The following quotations are from this
essay.
Capps Jesus as Power Tactician 161
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pattern of Jesus organizational strategy. Basically, what Jesus was able to do,
where others had failed, was to organize the poor and powerless into a force
capable of a sustained threat to the establishment rather than the occasional
sporadic riot. How did he do this? It involved several stages.
Stage 1: Becoming Known
The problem that any aspiring leader who was not born into a royal or priestly
family faces is that of becoming known. What Jesus had going for him in this
regard were several factors. One was the discontent of the populace which was
directed to a large degree against a priestly hierarchy made up of families
which were exploitative and were maintained in power by the occupying Roman
colonists. Another was that the power structure was divided. The geographical
division after the death of Herod had left conict and resentment. The wealthy
class and the priests had their differences, the priestly hierarchy was in internal
conict, and the Romans were sufciently hated to cause a cleavage between the
governor and the populace. The establishment could not offer a united front
against a bid for power.
A third was the mythology of the time, that is, the
persistent myth among the populace that all difculties could be magically alleviated
by the Lord or a Messiah who would relieve all misery, strike down all enemies, and
place the tribes of Israel in power At the time Jesus stepped into the public road,
there seems to have been an accepted general belief that a single man could arrive and
put everything right.
In thus emphasizing Messianic expectations, Haley seems to be drawing very
explicitly on Schweitzers portrayal of Jesus.
A fourth was that in Judaism a man could rise from low to high estate by
following a religious life. This is the path chosen by Jesus, who was outside the
pale of organized power, but appeared in public as a religious prophet, using the
popular tradition of itinerancy which stood against and contrasted with the
settled and entrenched establishment with its power base in the cities. This
tradition was also helpful if one wished to gain a reputation before too much
opposition was aroused: The state and the priestly hierarchy were accustomed
to criticism within the prophetic framework so that by custom a man could be
heard without being immediately extinguished.
In order to attract and keep an audience, an itinerant prophet would need to
speak in a certain way. If he said only what was orthodox, no one would listen,
as they could hear the same or similar ideas from the established religious lead-
ers. But to say the unorthodox risked losing an audience by antagonizing a
people devoted to an established religion that was built into their lives and very
being. Jesus handled this dilemma with unusual adroitness by managing to call
attention to himself as an authority who was presenting new ideas while
dening what he said as proper orthodoxy. He achieved this feat in two ways.
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He insisted that he was not advocating a change and then he called for change,
and he claimed that the ideas he was presenting were not deviations from the
established religion but a truer expression of the ideas of that religion.
His skill in calling simultaneously for conformity and change is best
expressed in his discussion of the law and its demands (Mt. 5.17-22). On the one
hand, he claimed that he was not advocating the destruction of the law but its
fulllment. Thus, whoever breaks even the least of the commandments and
teaches others to do so will be called the least in the kingdom of heaven, but
whoever teaches and does them shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven
(Mt. 5.17-19). (Note that Haley selects a text that has to do with the hierarchy in
all organizations, and that this text assumes a similar hierarchy in the kingdom
of heaven.) On the other hand, if Jesus had only conformed to this teaching, no
one could have had the slightest objection to what he might have said. He would
have been collecting followers for the establishment rather than himself. So, he
proceeded to offer himself as the authority by providing major revisions of the
law. He says:
You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, You shall not murder; and
Whoever murders shall be liable to judgment. But I say to you that if you are angry
with a brother or sister, you will be liable to judgment; and if you insult a brother or
sister, you will be liable to the council; and if you say, you fool, you will be liable to
the hell of re (Mt. 5.21-22).
One could hardly consider this anything but a basic revision of the law, for he is
saying that persons should be punished for their thoughts as well as their deeds.
He also advocates revisions in the laws of adultery, divorce, revenge, the proce-
dure for taking oaths, for giving charity, the method of prayer, and the way to
fast. In fact, Little is left of the established law when he has redesigned itafter
stating that he has not come to change a letter of the law. Thus, By calling for
conformity to the law, Jesus disarms opposition. By then redesigning the law, he
sets himself up as an equal in power and authority to the entire religious estab-
lishment of the state. Not surprisingly, Matthew claims that his listeners were
astonished at his doctrine. For he taught them as one having authority, and not
as the scribes (Mt. 5.28-29).
The culture that Jesus inherited provided him with a special opportunity to
be an authority, as it was assumed in Israel that the laws to be followed had been
established in the beginning and one could only discover and interpret them. In
other cultures, similar laws may be viewed as the product of consensus; the citi-
zenry makes its own laws and agree, more or less, to abide by them. But when
it is assumed that laws exist independent of man and one can only discover
what they are, a single individual can speak with as much authority as an estab-
lishment because he can claim to have discerned the true law. He can therefore
request or even demand a change by claiming that his opponents have deviated
from the law. Throughout his career, then, Jesus attacked the leaders of the
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establishment consistently and cleverly, but he based his attack within their
religious framework. He said they deviated from the true religion, setting him-
self up as the authority on what the true religion should be. Nowhere in the
Gospels does Jesus compliment any established religious leader, except those
long deceased: The nearest to a compliment he pays [to a contemporary] is to
his fellow and competing prophet, John. Yet, even here, while asserting that
John is the greatest among those born of women, he adds that in the kingdom of
heaven the one who is least of all is greater than John (Mt. 11.11).
Jesus brought himself to the attention of the populace by making use of the
popular tradition of the itinerant prophet. But this would not account for the fact
that he appears to have become much better known than other itinerant Galilean
prophets. Saying things that people hadnt heard openly voiced before may
arouse an audience, but an insurgent religious leader also needs to offer some-
thing tangible and concrete. What Jesus had was an ability to cure people of
their physical and mental distress. Thus,
the reputation of Jesus as a healer gave him his greatest notoriety. It is the nature of
the healing trade to strike a deep chord of wishful thinking in people. Legends build
quickly and success in healing breeds belief in success and therefore more success.
Certainly once a man had a reputation as a healer a touch of his robes could produce
cures (which was why a guard was maintained to keep the masses of diseased people
from touching the robes of the Roman emperor).
Whether Jesus had more than usual skill is impossible to determine, but the fact
that he chose to be a healer demonstrates his ability to select a way to become
immediately famous. Perhaps no other device would have spread his name so
quickly, particularly in an age when medicine was inadequate against disease
and people were emotionally wrought up over the possession of devils. More-
over, Since illness knows no class, this reputation also gave him access to the
rich and he was begged for his assistance by the leader of a synagogue and
others.
The fact that Jesus downplayed his cures was also evidence of his strategic
ability. In refusing to boast about his cures and so arouse investigations and
resistance, he advised his patients to keep their cure a secret. Since no one who
has been cured of a lifelong distress is likely or able to conceal the cure, the
result was that cures were broadcast by others. As a result, only the statements
of others could be refuted. It was only when messengers sent by John to ask if
he was the one who was to come that Jesus referred to his healings as evi-
dence, and even then he makes no claims relating to himself. He merely states:
The blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the leper are cleansed, and the
deaf hear (Mt. 11.4-5).
There is another power tactic that an unknown can use if he wishes to
become known quickly, but it has certain risks: If a man wishes to be thought
of as an equal, or a superior, to a powerful opponent, he can make audacious
164 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
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personal attacks upon him. The more audacious the attack, the more prominent
does the attacker become if it is widely known. Such attacks may place the
leader of a small mass movement on the same plane as the powerful opponent.
Jesus used this tactic when he called the established religious leaders serpents, a
generation of vipers who will not escape the damnation of hell (Mt. 23.33), and
when he made a physical assault on the religious hierarchy by attacking the
money changers in the temple. Haley believes, however, that this attack was a
tactical miscalculation that cost Jesus his life. Thus, an audacious attack on a
powerful opponent may pay great dividends, but it can also backre.
Stage 2: Building an Organization
Haley next takes up the fact that Jesus built an organization. He contrasts Jesus
with prophets such as John the Baptist, a solitary man who lived outside of
society, who are dependent on transient followers who might be attracted to
them out of curiosity or because they sought a touch of divinity. As a member
of Johns group, Jesus may have perceived that it was too loosely organized and
that it did not require long-term loyalty and commitment. In any event, he began
his own public career by choosing men to join him in his movement. According
to Matthew (4.18-19), one of his rst acts was to recruit a cadre who would
recruit others. He had at least twelve in his organization and, if Luke is to be
believed (10.1, 17), he had an additional seventy, which is an organization of
some size (p. 30).
In his selection of this elite, he did not recruit among the members of the
establishment but from the lower strata of the population, from which he was
also gathering his public following: When he recruited his men, he asked of
them what is now typically asked of any small revolutionary cadre. They had to
give up everything related to ambition in the society as it was and abandon all
other commitments to others, including family ties, when they joined him. Thus,
he declared that anyone who loved father, mother, son or daughter more than he
was not worthy of him (Mt. 10.37), and he said to the young man who wanted to
do his lial duty to his father before joining his movement, Let the dead bury
the dead (Lk. 9.60). In making this demand, however, he did not ask more of
the others than he asked of himself. When informed that his mother and brothers
were outside and wished to speak with him, he said, Who is my mother? And
who are my brothers? Again he stretched forth his hand toward his disciples,
and said, Behold my mother and my brethren (Mt. 12.48-49).
In return for their absolute commitment, Jesus gave his men elite status.
They had authority to heal the sick, cleanse lepers, cast out demons, and raise
the dead, all the activities from which he had achieved personal fame. He also
melded them together with promises. When Peter is said to have asked what
they would gain by following him, he promised them that they would sit on
thrones of their own, as judges over the twelve tribes of Israel (Mt. 19.28). Thus,
Capps Jesus as Power Tactician 165
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his promise to his men included what they would achieve once he came into
power, and not merely what they might gain from listening to him, as they
might to a teacher. He also effectively threatened them, saying, But whoever
denies me before others, I also will deny before my Father in heaven (Mt.
10.33). As the story of Peters denials suggests (Mt. 26.69-75), this was a threat
that would come back to haunt the men following his untimely death.
He also kept his men unsure as to their personal future in the kingdom. By
raising doubts whether they would be nally acceptable to him, he insured that
they would remain actively dedicated in following him. As Mt. 7.22-23 puts it:
On that day many will say to me, Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your
name, and do many deeds of power in your name? Then I will declare to them,
I never knew you; go away from me, you evildoers. He also used the per-
secutory actions of others as a tactic for securing group unity, declaring that he
sent them out as sheep in the midst of wolves, and enjoining them therefore to
be as wise as serpents, but as harmless as doves (Mt. 10.16). This dual approach
to their adversaries was itself the device of a shrewd tactical leader.
Another indication of his careful attention to tactics was in instructing his
men to go out as poor men without money or extra clothes (Mt. 10.9-10). The
point was not that they were to present themselves as ascetics, akin to John the
Baptist, but that they were to present themselves as being just as poor as the
people among whom they were seeking to win a following: One can take a
second coat and still cure, but one cannot win followers among the poor with
money or a second coat or even shoes.
If he taught his cadre his own methods and encouraged them to use them,
how did he insure that no member of his group tried to usurp his position? If
there were power struggles in the group, why were they not directed against
him? Haley thinks that Jesus forestalled any challenge to his leadership position
by putting his men in their places by criticizing their obtuseness in not under-
standing his teachings, their inability to heal people properly, and their jealousy
over who was closest to him now and who would hold the highest rank next to
him when success came. Even as Jesus paid no member of the religious estab-
lishment a compliment, he paid no special compliment to any member of his
cadre. The nearest thing to such a compliment is his response to Peters sug-
gestion that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of the Living God, declaring that
Peter is surely blessed, as this insight was revealed to him by Jesus Father in
heaven (Mt. 16.17). Yet, when Peter protested Jesus subsequent declaration
that he must go to Jerusalem and be put to death, he charged that Peter was now
speaking with the voice of Satan and was therefore an offense to him (Mt.
16.23).
Whether Jesus was justied in criticizing his men in this way is open to
interpretation, but, in any case, the gospels indicate that he did not succeed in
training them to be as skillful as he was at handling the criticism of others:
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Whenever Jesus was attacked or questioned, he responded with attack or
question, always putting his critics in their places and never using defensive
behavior. Yet, after his death, when his men were amazing a crowd by speak-
ing in various tongues, a critic said, contemptuously, These men are full of new
wine. Peter responded to this attack for the whole group, noting that they could
not be drunk because it was only the third hour of the day (Acts 2.13-15). Haley
drily observes: That was hardly a reply worthy of the master.
Stage 3: Collecting a Following
Haley next takes up Jesus method of collecting a following. Ordinarily, if a man
seeks power in a society he must work his way up within the existing established
political structure. Some might argue that Jesus did not seek political power
because he made no attempt to secure a position within the established religious
hierarchy, just as he emphasized the more supernatural Son of Man rather than
the more political Son of David. But this is to overlook the new strategy that
he employed, one that bypassed the current political establishment and appealed
for support among the dispossessed of society: His basic tactic was to dene
the poor as more deserving of power than anyone else and so curry their favor.
With the rst statements of his public life he pointed out that the poor were
blessed, that they were the salt of the earth, the light of the world, and that
they, the weak, would inherit the earth. By the same token, he consistently
attacked the rich, saying that they would have difculty entering his kingdom, and
speaking to audiences of the last he emphasized that the last would be rst. Not only
did he send his elite out as poor men, but he himself gained a reputation for wining
and dining with the outcasts of respectable society. Nowhere does he criticize the
poor, but only the rich, the learned, and the priestly establishment.
He offered those who agreed with him the opportunity to suffer for a good
cause by pointing out to them that their reward would be great in the kingdom
if they are reviled, persecuted and falsely accused for his sake (Mt. 5.11-12). In
return, he offered to take all problems upon himself, encouraging his hearers
who labor and are heavy laden to come to him and he would give them rest (Mt.
11.28-30). He also assured them that if they heard his words and acted on them
they would be like the man who built his house on a rock; but if they didnt, he
warned that they would be like the man who built his house on sand so that it
comes crashing down in the turbulent times to come (Mt. 7.24-27).
Jesus manner of collecting a following indicates that he was establishing
long-range plans for his organization. This is evident from the fact that he pinned
his hopes on separating the young from ties to their parents and the current
establishment. Leaders of mass movements have typically emphasized reaching
the young people, and have used the young against dissidents among their own
followers. Jesus called for the breaking of family ties and the pitting of the
young against their elders. The conservative force of the family is an impediment
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to any mass movement, and only after becoming the establishment does a revolu-
tionary group call for family solidarity. Also, revolutionary leaders generally say
that they are not to be followed for their own person but for what their person
represents. Thus, as individuals, they do not take full credit, or blame, for what
they say, because they are only spokesmen for a greater force. Jesus insisted
that he did not speak for himself but only expressed the will of his heavenly
Father. But this meant that he dened opposition to himself as opposition to his
Father, and he inhibited resistance to himself and accusations of self-aggrandize-
ment by consistently pointing out that he was a mere instrument. He also dened
himself as the only instrument who was able to interpret the heavenly Father
correctly, because he was on intimate terms with the Father.
Finally, an important tactic that Jesus used in collecting a following was to
point to the inevitability of his coming to power. This way, the irresistible was
on his side. This is a tactic that other revolutionary leaders have subsequently
employed: By arguing that they are only shortening the time of arrival, or
clarifying the progress of an inevitable event, such leaders encourage recruits to
accept an established fact and inhibit opponents who might fear going against
the course of history. Because Jesus endorsed the same tradition to which the
religious establishment and the overwhelming majority of the people subscribed,
he could count on the reluctance of the religious establishment to challenge him,
not only because they feared his power among the people, but also because they
feared that he might be right both in his interpretations of this tradition and in
what these interpretations predicted regarding the coming of the kingdom of
God. After all, they shared his view that the earthly powers and principalities
would, one day, be supplanted by the reign of God. Evidence of their reluctance
to silence him altogether is the fact that, while they disputed things he said, he
was allowed to teach in the synagogues.
The Major Tactical Contribution of Jesus
Haley believes that Jesus major tactical contribution, used by all revolutionary
leaders subsequently, was to mobilize the poor against the establishment. While
revolutionary leaders have condemned Jesus for the tactics he introduced, these
objections are not based on a study of the tactics as Jesus used them, but on the
way established powers learned to use them later. Established powers, often
using Christian rhetoric, have been able to remain in power by persuading the
oppressed to look to a future life for their reward. In contrast, while Jesus prom-
ised a paradise in some ill-dened future for those who followed him, he im-
plied that the day was in the not too distant future. If he was pinning his hopes
on the younger generation, he nonetheless declared that some persons standing
in his midst would not taste death until the kingdom of God comes in power
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(Mk 10.1). Thus, unlike later Christian established powers, who promised a
reward in heaven, Jesus envisioned a new world order with the arrival of the
kingdom of God on earth. Therefore, when he promised a reward, he did not use
this as a way of persuading the poor to accept their misery, but in order to enlist
them in accelerating the coming of the Kingdom. He also presented them with a
choice having real consequences. He promised that if they followed him and
resisted the establishment, they would be amply rewarded, but if they followed
the establishment, they would suffer dire consequences. As Mt. 13.41-43 puts it:
The Son of Man will send his angels, and they will collect out of his kingdom
all causes of sin and all evildoers, and they will throw them into the furnace of
re, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Then the righteous will
shine like the sun in the kingdom of their father. Let anyone with ears listen!
Revolutionary leaders who have condemned Christians for using tactics of
weakness also misunderstand Jesus own strategic position: While Bolsheviks
might argue that force must be met by force, and when Hitler said that terror
must be met with equal terror, they were adapting to a quite different situation.
There was no way that Jesus could marshal force against the force of Rome or
terror equal to the actions of the establishment: A leader at that time might
achieve sporadic riots, but organized attack against the occupying Roman force
was futile, as Roman executions regularly demonstrated. Insofar as the Romans
were supporting the religious establishment and permitting it authority over the
people, those who opposed the religious establishment risked being extermi-
nated: In this situation Jesus developed the surrender tactic, a procedure which
has been used by the powerless in the face of the invincible to this day.
The Surrender Tactic
Haley gives considerable attention to the specic tactic of surrender, as he
believes that it played a signicant role in Jesus personal confrontation with the
establishment and was a major factor in his execution. What is the surrender
tactic? Noting that Jesus advises his listeners to consider the beasts of the eld
and the birds of the air, and to emulate them, Haley suggests comparing this
particular tactic to those employed by animals. Citing the observations of the
ethologist, Konrad Lorenz, he notes that when two wolves are in a ght and one
is about to be killed, the defeated wolf will suddenly lift his head and bare his
throat to his opponent: The opponent becomes incapacitated and he cannot kill
him as long as he is faced with this tactic. Although he is the victor, the van-
quished is controlling his behavior merely by standing still and offering his vul-
nerable jugular vein. The turkey does the very same thing.
In his study of Gandhis tactics of nonviolence, Erik H. Erikson also invokes
Lorenzs studies, citing not only the example of wolves but also the antler
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tournament of the Damstags. This is a contest that ends when the loser concedes
the tournament by a ritualized disengagement which normally stops the attack of
the victor. Yet, Erikson cites Lorenzs observation that the ritual may fail, and
end in violence to the death. Skeletons of stags whose antlers are entwined in
death have been found; but they are victims of an instinctive ritual that failed.
8
Haley cites Lorenzs own connection between Jesus and animal behavior.
Commenting on the lessons to be learned from the behavior of wolves, Lorenz
wrote, I at least have extracted from it a new and deeper understanding of a
wonderful and often misunderstood saying from the Gospel, which hitherto had
only awakened in me the feelings of strong opposition. And unto him that
smiteth thee on the one cheek offer also the other (Lk. 6.29). A wolf has en-
lightened me: not so that your enemy may strike you again do you turn the other
cheek toward him, but to make him unable to do it.
Haley points out that Jesus did not originate the surrender tactic. In his Anti-
quities (Book 18, Chapter 3), Josephus reports that Pilates troops surrounded a
mob of protesters and told them that they would be killed if they did not dis-
perse. Instead of dispersing, the unarmed protesters ung themselves in a body
on the ground, extended their necks, and exclaimed that they were ready to die
rather than to transgress the [ancient Jewish] law. By extending their necks,
they were acting precisely like the wolf in Lorenzs example. The banners of
Caesar which Pilate had erected in Jerusalem, the provocation for this protest,
were taken down.
The surrender tactic is not merely a device by animals and humans to suf-
fer defeat without being extinguished, for it is also possible to see the procedure
as a way of determining what is to happen. You cannot defeat a helpless
opponent; if you strike him and your blows are unreturned, you can only suffer
feelings of guilt and exasperation as well as doubt about who is the victor. This
tactic has proven itself effective by anxious parents who nd that helplessness
will enforce their directives more tyrannically than giving orders. And, of
course, the extreme tactic of threat of suicide falls in a similar category.
It is not, however, without its risks. It seems to be a tactic that either wins or
provokes murderous extermination. The fact that Jesus, Gandhi and Martin
Luther King died violent deaths, just as surely as if they had lived by the sword,
does not seem coincidental. This raises the question why it works in some situ-
ations but not in others? Haley believes that the use of weakness to determine
what is to happen in a power struggle works most effectively if there is a threat
of violence in the background to support the meek tactic. If the opponent
believes that he will not be able to control the violent actions that may follow
from the murderous extermination of the one who surrenders, or will suffer an
8. Erik H. Erikson, Gandhis Truth: On the Origins of Militant Nonviolence (New York:
W.W. Norton, 1969), p. 426.
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unacceptable number of casualties in achieving this control, he is more likely to
allow the user of the surrender tactic to win, and may explain his seemingly weak
behavior as an act of mercy. Thus, the opponent needs to believe that his exter-
mination of the one who bares his neck, so to speak, carries unacceptable risks.
But if he believes that he will be able to control any residual consequences of the
extermination without unacceptable risks to himself, he may take advantage of
the opportunity that has been handed him, virtually on a silver platter, and
exterminate his tormentor.
There is also the risk that even if the one to whom one surrenders capitulates,
he may not be in a position to insure that others will do likewise. An individual
or group who is enraged by the fact that the surrender succeeded may decide to
do what the original adversary would not do. Thus, the surrender tactic is risky
because one cannot control every aspect of the process that it sets in motion. A
case in point is Josephuss account of what happened after the protesters achieved
their goal of forcing Pilate to remove the banners of Caesar. Pilate sought to
bring a current of water to Jerusalem, paying for the project with sacred money.
Tens of thousands of Jews, displeased by this action, made a clamor against
Pilate and also publicly reproached and abused him. So he organized his sol-
diers to surround them, and when the crowd refused to disperse but instead hurled
more reproaches upon him, Pilate gave the soldiers a prearranged signal to move
against the crowd. But the soldiers laid upon them much greater blows than
Pilate had commanded them, and they indiscriminately attacked those who
were tumultuous, and those that were not. They did not spare them in the least;
and since the people were unarmed, and were caught by men prepared for what
they were about [i.e. carried concealed daggers], there were a great number of
them slain by this means, and others of them ran away wounded; and thus an end
was put to this sedition.
9
Thus, Pilate lost control over his own soldiers, and this
confrontation, unlike the previous confrontation, ended in bloodshed. In the very
next paragraph, Josephus mentions that Jesus appeared at about this time and
at the suggestion of the principal men around him, Pilate condemned him to
the cross.
The Climax of the Struggle for Power
Following his discussion of Jesus surrender tactic, Haley focuses on the out-
come of Jesus struggle for power against the establishment. In his view, the pre-
ceding examination of Jesus as a tactician not only increases our understanding
of the nature of the power struggle in which he was engaged, but also suggests
9. Flavius Josephus, The Works of Josephus (trans. William Whiston; Peabody, MA:
Hendrickson, 1987), p. 480.
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a possible resolution of some of the contradictions in the gospels relating to
the nal days of his life: In their determination to prove him innocent [the gos-
pels] neglect to state what charges were made against him, and their attempts to
t his actions into complicated prophecies about the Messiah compound the
confusion. But what is clear is that when Jesus went into the nal struggle he
arranged a situation where there was no hope of compromise. He condemned
the clergy, he condemned the temple, and nally he made a physical assault on
the temple. While he took care not to call for open rebellion against the priestly
hierarchy, he thoroughly discredited them. As Mt. 23.4 indicates, he made this
accusation against them: They tie up heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them
on the shoulders of others; but they are unwilling to lift a nger to move them.
A series of woe to you condemnations follow, in which he declares that they
are blind guides and hypocrites.
Such verbal attacks would have rung hollow if he did not also take action with
his audacious assault on the temple. In attacking the commercial aspect of the
temple and not violating the altar or intruding on the Holy of Holies, he chose
his opponents most vulnerable area for his attack, thus again demonstrating
his skill as a tactician. Accusing them of turning a house of prayer into a rob-
bers cave, he could win immediate fame throughout the city while not giving
his opposition an advantage. It was awkward for the priesthood to retaliate
against him for his violent ways because he was quoting their own scripture to
them, attacking a point difficult to defend. In addition, he offered himself as an
alternative to the establishment, pointing out that he could tear the temple down
and rebuild it in three days, thus ushering in a new order to replace the old, cor-
rupt order presided over by the priests who had forfeited their claim to legitimacy.
The message was clear: He and his men would replace the old establishment with
a new rule whose legitimation derived from the heavenly Father, not from Rome.
The position that he had taken was too extreme for the establishment not to
take action of some kind. Apparently, they sought to lay their hands on him but
feared the multitude who had come for the Passover (Mt. 21.46). There was an
attempt to stone him but he escaped. The only remaining alternative was to arrest
him. His successful escape from stoning but surrender to arrest indicates that he
sought the publicity of arrest and trial. Despite the confusion in the gospels about
the events that followed his audacious assault on the temple, these points, in
Haleys view, are reasonably clear:
1. Over his followers objections, Jesus insisted on going to Jerusalem
to be arrested. When he arrived, he behaved in such an extreme man-
ner that he forced his arrest. He either arranged that the arresting of-
cers would nd him, or waited patiently for them to come to him. He
may even have planned Judass betrayal by, in effect, designating him
as the betrayer (i.e. the one who was to lead the authorities to where
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he was staying) during the nal week with his disciples. After all, he
announced the fact that there was a betrayer in their midst, yet appar-
ently did nothing to stop him. This is not to say that he manipulated
Judas into revealing his whereabouts to the authorities, but he did take
advantage of Judass weakness.
2. He was tried and condemned to death by the Sanhedrin and was passed
to the Roman government for execution.
3. Pilate declined to execute him since he found no evidence that he had
broken Roman law.
4. Pilate turned to the populace for a decision and the crowd called for
Jesus death.
Up until the time of his trial, Jesus behavior could have been interpreted in
several ways, all consistent with his aggressive behavior and his willingness to
be arrested: (1) He was actually the coming Messiah and this meant that he must
therefore go through the prophetic pattern of being handed over to his enemies
and executed; (2) he was sacricing himself for the sins of the world as part of
the messianic pattern, and this was his individual choice; (3) he went mad and
decided that he was the Messiah and must die so that the kingdom of Heaven
would immediately arrive; or (4) he did not intend to die but wanted to be
arrested because he was pitting himself and the strength of his organization in a
nal power struggle with the establishment.
In Haleys view, Jesus behavior after his arrest indicates that only the fourth
interpretation ts the facts: After permitting, or arranging, his arrest, he made it
almost impossible for the establishment to condemn him and execute him. If he
merely wished to be executed as part of the Messianic prophecy or to sacrice
himself for the sins of the world, he could have announced that he was the Mes-
siah, opposed Roman rule, and his execution would have been routine. Or, if he
had gone mad and sought to sacrice himself in a suicidal manner, he would
have behaved in a provocative way and made the execution simple. But, accord-
ing to the gospel accounts, Jesus neither announced that he was the Messiah nor
acted in a manner that would force the authorities to kill him. Rather, he refused
to say that he was the coming Messiah and to speak in opposition to Rome: In
fact he behaved in such a way that execution appeared impossibleafter ami-
cably surrendering himself into the hands of the establishment. He did not curse
or revile the religious and political establishment, or individual members of them,
and did not even defend himself or assert his own authority. He said nothing
through many hours of interrogation and the futile calling of witnesses. His
response to direct questioning whether he claimed to be the Messiah was non-
committal. His responseYou have said sois taken as afrmative by the
high priest and as a denial by Pilate. Since only one of the four gospels have him
making this claim (Mk 14.62), while all agree that he maintained a remarkable
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silence throughout the proceedings, Haley concludes that he made no such
admission, and that this would be consistent with indications that he had never
announced that he was the Messiah in his whole career.
Therefore, Jesus was counting on the strict application of rules of evidence
to gain his acquittal, and thus to prove that the religious authorities were
powerless to control him: By remaining silent and providing only a nal and
ambiguous answer, Jesus made it legally impossible for them to condemn him to
death. Thus, in handing him over to Pilate for execution, they broke their own
rules, acting in a t of pique, on impulse.
A remarkably similar situation occurred when he was brought before the
Roman governor: Although the establishment was given surprising autonomy
for a subjected colonial people, they could not execute a man except with permis-
sion of Pilate. Once again, if Jesus was determined to be executed, he would
have to persuade Pilate to give the order. Instead, he made it extremely difcult,
if not impossible, for Pilate to order his execution. Throughout his public career,
Jesus had been extremely circumspect in his behavior with the Romans. Nowhere
in the gospels is there a statement by him which could be considered an attack
on Rome. He did not stir up the populace against Rome, or oppose Roman taxa-
tion, though he did object to the temple tax (Mt. 17.26). At most, he included
the Romans among all Gentiles and placed them outside the pale, instructing his
disciples to deal only with Jews, saying, I was sent only to the lost sheep of the
house of Israel (Mt. 15.24). Attempts to provoke him into expressing anti-
Roman sentiments are cleverly countered (Mt. 22.19-21).
While Haley considers the possibility that the gospel writers did not want to
antagonize Rome and therefore suppressed Jesus anti-Roman sentiments, he
believes, instead, that Jesus made no statements against Rome, and did so for
tactical reasons: Roman power must have appeared clearly invincible and a
power strategist does not directly attack invincible power, he seeks other means
of undermining it. Attacking the more vulnerable religious establishment which
worked closely with the Roman governor was a much better strategy.
Without evidence that Jesus had even spoken against the Roman govern-
ment, much less advocated action against it, Pilate had no legal grounds for exe-
cuting him. But this placed him in a political quandary, one that Jesus may well
have intended to provoke, as it pitted Pilate and the priestly hierarchy against
each other. (In family systems terms, Jesus used the method of triangulation.)
Placing the decision in the hands of the crowd that had gathered for the public
trial was a counter move by Pilate designed to extricate himself from the dilemma
into which Jesus behavior had placed him.
Haley acknowledges that the crowds decision to call for Jesus death is a
puzzling one, especially if he was so popular that he had to be arrested secretly.
He cites Schweitzers explanation in The Quest of the Historical Jesus that the
crowd was informed that Jesus had claimed at the private trial before the
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Sanhedrin that he was the Messiah, and on the basis of this misinformation they
called for his death on the grounds of blasphemy, the very basis on which the
high priest judged him guilty (Mt. 26.65-66). While more or less persuaded by
Schweitzers explanation, Haley remains sufciently puzzled by the crowds
action to wonder if the episode is authentic, especially since there is no known
tradition of a release of a prisoner at Passover. But, in the end, he concludes that
the gospel version would seem as adequate as any other, basing this conclusion
on the assumption that Jesus actions would have forced the priestly hierarchy
to deal with him, and the Romans must have had a problem legally executing
him when he had broken no Roman law.
Instead of offering his own solution to the puzzle, Haley turns the issue
around and suggests that, precisely because this outcome was puzzling, Jesus
may not have considered it in his strategic planning or, if he did so, would not
have thought it very likely. He proposes that we place ourselves in Jesus posi-
tion prior to his arrest and strategically examine what we would gain and what
we would lose by arranging to be arrested, with our gains and losses estimated
in terms of the probabilities in a situation where the outcome was uncertain.
The most probable outcomes, in the order in which they were most likely to
happen, are these:
1. Faced with no adequate witnesses and a silent victim, the Sanhedrin
would be forced to release Jesus for lack of evidence. He would
prove the impotence of the religious establishment in the face of his
movement and of his aggressive statements and his physical assault
on the temple.
2. The Sanhedrin might, in exasperation, break their own laws and con-
demn him even without evidence. They would take him to the Roman
governor for execution. Since he had been careful to break no Roman
law, the governor would order him released and at most scourge him.
He would have discredited the temple hierarchy and proven its impo-
tence, and he would be released as a leader who could openly oppose
the temple and be tolerated by Rome.
3. By chance, and therefore it could not be predicted, the unexpected
might happen and Pilate would put the decision up to the crowd.
With the following Jesus had built, he would be freed by the popu-
lace and triumphantly lead a popular movement which could not be
defeated by the temple hierarchy.
4. The Sanhedrin might convict him illegally, Pilate might turn to the
crowd, and the crowd might call for his death. This seems the least
likely possibility. Yet, if the gospel accounts are to be believed, this
is what actually happened.
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This being the case, Haley concludes:
It would seem possible to interpret the execution of Jesus as the result of a miscalcu-
lation on his part. Who could have guessed the Sanhedrin would condemn him without
evidence, that Pilate would happen to ask the crowd for a decision, and that the crowd
[Jesus] had never wronged would ask for his death? Even a master tactician cannot
take into account all the possibilities, including chance occurrences.
Thus, the very fact that the crowds demand for Jesus death is so puzzling is
grounds for believing that Jesus did not consider this outcome in his strategic
planning, or, if he considered it, did not think it very likely.
If Jesus made a fateful miscalculation, Haley suggests that the reason for this
may be discovered by examining his life more carefully. When we do so, we
recognize that it would t his character to move prematurely to gain the whole
world. All the evidence indicates that Jesus was a man with a passion to deter-
mine what was to happen in his environment. The ultimate resistance to him
resided in Jerusalem, the seat of religious and political power, and he chose that
place for what was to be his nal struggle for power. His arrest occurred at a place
and time of his own choosing. It was provoked by his actions and therefore deter-
mined by them. After his arrest, he behaved in such a way that his opponents
were incapacitated and forced to respond to his terms. What else could they do
but to release him, allowing him to walk out a free man, exonerated of all charges
against him, and proclaiming victory before the massive crowd that was gathered
in Jerusalem for the Passover celebration?
His basic miscalculation was his failure to factor into his strategic planning
the desperation of his opposition when he forced them into a corner. They could
not legally condemn him, but neither could they release him without seriously
damaging their power and control. By leaving them no graceful way out, he
created a situation where what happened was beyond his control. Invoking his
cry from the cross, My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? (Mt. 27.46),
Haley also implies that a related factor in Jesus miscalculation was that he
believed his heavenly Father would surely not allow the situation to get out of
control. Moreover, even those who argue that he deliberately sought his exe-
cution, a view that Haley discounts, support the argument that Jesus was
determined to control whatever happened to him. Until this nal and fateful
miscalculation, he had succeeded brilliantly in this regard.
Haley concludes his analysis of Jesus power tactics, however, by noting that
even though it appears that his plans failed on those last days, there was still the
fact that he had built an organization, and in this he did not fail. In fact, the very
act of being executed extended his control from beyond the grave. Haley does
not consider whether this may have played a part in Jesus calculation, but he
does suggest that this extension of his control from beyond the grave ts the
character of a man who would nally say, All power is given unto me on
heaven and on earth (Mt. 28.18).
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The Tactical Displacement of the Father
I will now take up two issues in Haleys portrait of Jesus as power tactician. The
rst concerns an implication of his view that all organizations are hierarchical:
If Jesus created an organization that placed the heavenly Father at the top of the
hierarchy, the primary target of this organization is the human father, the person
who held the top position in the human family.
For Haley, a key element in Jesus recruitment of the men who would form
the core of his movement was that he asked of them what is now typically
asked of any small revolutionary cadre. They had to give up everything related
to ambition in the society as it was and abandon all other commitments to
others, including family ties, when they joined him. He adds, Once they have
done this, it is difcult for them to defect and abandon the movement; they have
sacriced too much and have no place to go.
If we were in Jesus position, and wanted to have clear evidence that a young
man has in fact given up all ambitions in the society as it is and has
abandoned all other commitments to others, where would we look for it? Quite
simply, in the young mans severance of his ties with his father. Why is the tie
to the father so important? Because a young mans father would hold the key to
his ambitions in the existing society. A Jewish father had ve principal responsi-
bilities toward his son: to circumcise him, redeem him, teach him Torah, teach
him a trade, and nd him a wife. By pledging himself to Jesus and his move-
ment, a young man renounced or set aside these paternal blessings. In addition,
a sons social position was determined by his fathers position and the promise
and bestowal of a portion of his property. In return, the son would be expected
to fulll certain obligations to his father, such as working for him, marrying the
daughter of a man of use to his fathers own ambitions, and so forth.
If we were in Jesus place, we would want concrete, indisputable evidence
that a recruit had broken his emotional and legal ties to his father. He would be
expected to make a clear, irrevocable choice: Either his human father and all
that this represents, or the heavenly Father and all that this implies: No one can
serve two masters. Either he hates the one and loves the other, or he is loyal to
the one and despises the other (Mt. 6.24; Lk. 16.13). The importance of break-
ing both legal and emotional ties to ones father is expressed in the most stark
and uncompromising terms in Jesus response to the son who agreed to follow
him but proposed to attend to his fathers burial rst: Let the dead bury their
own dead; but as for you, go and proclaim the kingdom of God (Lk. 9.59-60;
also Mt. 8.21-22). The implication is not merely that others can see to the care
of the dead, but that if he cannot treat as dead his claims on his father, and
obligations to him, he is not yet ready to join Jesus organization. Haleys view
that power and control can be exercised from beyond the grave is especially
relevant here.
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An illustration of sons who were ready to sacrice the claims and obligations
of the father-son relationship is the story in Mk 1.19-20, where Jesus sees James
son of Zebedee and his brother John, who were in their boat mending the nets.
When he called them, they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired
men and followed him. Whether authentic or not, this story indicates that it was
the father-son relationship that Jesus required his men to sacrice. In leaving
their father, they abandoned their claims to propertysymbolized by the boat
that would be theirs on their fathers death. The hired men, who received wages
rather than a paternal legacy, remained with Zebedee.
Later, the brothers demonstrate that they have in fact transferred their ambi-
tions and commitments associated with their father Zebedees world to the world
in which the heavenly Father is the highest authority. This is indicated in the story
of their request to be placed immediately to Jesus right and left in the kingdom
of the Father (Mk 10.35). Matthews account of the same episode (20.20-28)
adds a wrinkle to the story that, even if more imaginative than factual, under-
scores the point that it was the severing of the sons relationship to his father
that proved he was ready to join Jesus organization. This is Matthews sug-
gestion that it was the mother of the sons of Zebedee who came to him with
her sons, and kneeling before him, she asked a favor of him (v. 20). That it was
their mother, not their father, who asked this favor indicates that breaking the tie
to the father was the essential thing. Jesus tolerated, possibly even welcomed,
the sons continuing tie to his mother, as she may well have encouraged her son
to join the organization, thus subverting the fathers authority over his son. Thus,
Jesusthe skillful tacticianmay have used the mother-son relationship to his
advantage.
John Dominic Crossans discussion in The Historical Jesus (1991) under the
heading, Against the Patriarchal Family, is relevant in this regard.
10
While he
wants to argue that Jesus pronouncements on family issues reect his social
egalitarianism, in which women are fully included, his citation of the various
relevant texts makes clear that the central feature of these pronouncements was
the breaking of the lial tie between son and father. For example, Crossan cites
the Gospel of Thomas versions of two narratives that also appear, respectively, in
Lk. 14.25-26 and Mk 3.31-35. The rst reads: A woman from the crowd said to
him, Blessed are the womb which bore you and the breasts which suckled you.
He said to [her], Blessed are those who have heard the word of the father and
have truly kept it (Thom. 79.1-2). The second reads, The disciples said to him,
Your brothers and your mother are standing outside. He said to them, Those
here who do the will of my father are my brothers and my mother. It is they who
will enter the kingdom of my father (Thom. 99). In the rst case, Luke has the
10. John Dominic Crossan, The Historical Jesus (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco,
1991). The following quotations are from pp. 299-300.
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word of God rather than the word of the father, and in the second case, Mark
has the kingdom of God instead of the kingdom of my father. Thus, the Gospel
of Thomas makes explicit what the other gospels obscure, that in these narratives
where family relations are paramount, Jesus emphasizes the word and kingdom
of the heavenly Father.
Crossan notes that what the text in Mark and parallel text in Thomas both
agree upon is excluding the father. But then he adds: This exclusion might be
interpreted in many ways: Joseph was busy that day, was already dead, or was
omitted to protect either the virgin birth or God as Jesus true father. Therefore,
Crossan wants to emphasize less the fathers exclusion than the mothers inclu-
sion. Even so, he goes on to say that however we explain the literal absence of
Jesus father, his new metaphorical family lacks one as well. Thus, even though
his point is that women were to be included in the kingdom, these texts actually
emphasize the exclusion of the human father and the central prominence of the
heavenly Father. Gospel of Thomas 16, a variant form of Mt. 10.34-36, makes
this unmistakably clear: Jesus said, Men think, perhaps, that it is peace which
I have come to cast upon the world. They do not know that it is dissension which
I have come to cast upon the earth: re, sword, and war. For there will be ve in
a house: three will be against two, and two against three, the father against the
son, and the son against the father. And they will stand solitary (my emphasis).
Crossan claims that this single examplethe dominant male oneobscures the
point of the saying, that is, that the split is not only between the generations but
also across genders. But the fact that the dominant male division is the single
example cited must certainly reect the fact that this is the one with which Jesus
and his closest cohorts were most concerned. Either a man serves his human
father or his heavenly Father. No man can serve two masters.
The variant form of this statement in Matthew makes the same point: Do
not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have not come to bring
peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, and a
daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law;
and ones foes will be members of ones own household (my emphasis). Crossan
cites Bruce Malinas astute observation that there is no mention of the son-in-
law, since it was the new wife who moved into her husbands house, not the
husband who moved into the wifes house. But, again, this obscures the basic
point that the central division will be between son and father, and father and
son, and that other divisions will follow from this one. It may also be noted that
an even more conspicuously absent relationship here than that of the son-in-law
is the one between a man and his mother. This makes the division between the
son and his father all the more striking.
Crossan concludes that it is the normalcy of familial hierarchy that is under
attack and that Jesus threatens to tear the hierarchal or patriarchal family in two
along the axis of domination and subordination. But following Haleys argument
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that all organizations are necessarily hierarchical, Jesus attack on the hierarchi-
cal family does not mean that he replaces this hierarchy with an egalitarian form
of organization. Rather, what the kingdom is fundamentally about is the displace-
ment of the fatherpaternal authority and powerby establishing the heavenly
Father at the top of the hierarchy. If Jesus does not emphasize that he has also
come to set a man against his mother, this is less because he is interested in the
inclusion of women in his organization than because he recognizes that the son-
mother alliance is one means by which the power of the father has traditionally
been effectively undermined.
In fact, Crossan provides evidence that supports this very point. In his chapter
on Bandit and Messiah, he cites Josephuss account of a somewhat paradig-
matic encounter in Galilee between Herod the not yet Great and the bandit chief
Ezekias shortly after Herod was appointed ruler of Galilee in 48 BCE by his
father Antipater, prime minister under Hyrcanus II. Herod caught Ezekias and
put him and many of his brigands to death. When he was accused by a number
of malicious persons at court for having killed people without trial in violation
of Jewish law, Hyrcanus acquitted him on orders from the Syrian legate, for the
brigands were ravaging the district on the Syrian frontier. But the episode
angered Hyracanus because it underscored his political weakness, and his anger
was further kindled by the mothers of the men who had been murdered by
Herod, for every day in the temple they kept begging the people to have Herod
brought to judgment in the Synhedrion for what he had done.
11
Crossan views
this appeal by the mothers as evidence that Ezekias had great popular support. It
also suggests that this support was especially strong among the murdered mens
mothers. We might ask: Where were the fathers of the murdered men? Why did
they not come forward?
A parable often used to make the case that, for Jesus, the human father is a
gure for the heavenly Father, is that of the two sons (Lk. 18.1-18). In Jesus at
Thirty, John W. Miller claims that a strong, fatherly-type man is a recurrent
gure in the forty or so stories that Jesus told, and cites in this regard that unfor-
gettably gracious father in the story of the prodigal son and his upright elder
brother.
12
While noting that several of the men who play the leading role in
these parables are not of especially good character, nonetheless, the dominant
gures in the great majority of Jesus stories are fatherly types in positions of
responsibility who are shown executing these responsibilities in forceful, compe-
tent, but often surprisingly gracious ways. Miller believes that Jesus could not
have spoken of fathers and the father-child relationship so often and in such
utterly realistic yet positive terms, had he not had a deeply meaningful
experience somewhere along the way with his own personal father.
11. Crossan, The Historical Jesus, p. 175.
12. John W. Miller, Jesus at Thirty: A Psychological and Historical Portrait (Minne-
apolis: Fortress Press, 1997). Quotations from Millers text are from pp. 39-41.
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Miller also points to several individual sayings, besides the stories, where
fathers are explicitly referred to and instruction given regarding them. One is
Jesus citation of the command to honor father and mother in his reply to a
young man who asked him what he should do to inherit eternal life (Mk 10.19
and parallels in Mt. 19.19 and Lk. 18.20). Another is his critique of the practice
among the rabbinic elite whereby a son could avoid nancial obligations to his
father or mother by dedicating the support he owed them to the temple instead
(Mk 7.9-13). He acknowledges Jesus saying in Lk. 14.26 (also Mt. 10.37) that
ones father, all other relations, and even life itself, must be hated, but suggests
that Jesus enjoins such hate if this would prevent someone from becoming his
disciple. He cites the most sharply formulated saying of this type, Jesus leave
the dead to bury the dead saying, but claims that, At issue, perhaps, was his
[i.e. Jesus] treasured new-found experience of God as gracious father, devotion
to whose will (as this was unfolding through his mission) takes priority over
everything else. He adds, A moving testimony to the depth of his faith in this
regard is his beautifully off-hand statement about the greater goodness of God
as father compared to the awed goodness of human fathers. Miller has
reference here to Mt. 7.9-11 (with a parallel in Lk. 11.11-13): Is there anyone
among you who, if your child asks for bread, will give a stone? Or if the child
asks for a sh, will give a snake? If you then, who are evil, know how to give
good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give
good things to those who ask him!
In my view, Millers effort to portray Jesus as a religious leader who held
human fathers in high esteem is fundamentally misguided. The rst two sayings
that he adduces in support of his view that Jesus attitude toward human fathers
was unusually positive may be accounted for by Haleys point that Jesus in-
sisted that the ideas he was presenting were not deviations from the established
religion but a truer expression of them. Thus, to the young mans question about
what he needed to do to inherit eternal life, Jesus cited, among others, the com-
mandment to honor his father and mother (Exod. 20.12; Deut. 5.16). In the dis-
cussion of the sons nancial obligations to his father and mother, he opposed the
diverting of these monies to the temple instead. Both responses reect Haleys
point that revolutionary leaders need to dene what they do as orthodox while
making the changes necessary to establish a power position. Moreover, since
Jesus positioned himself against the temple establishment, he invoked the tradi-
tion against its recent innovations.
Millers interpretation of the hatred saying introduces the very sort of quali-
cations that Jesus would have considered evidence that the speaker was not yet
ready to join his movement. His suggestion that Jesus is merely saying that one
must hate a family member if, otherwise, he would be unable to commit him-
self to Jesus movement is, in fact, directly countered by the let the dead bury
the dead saying, which makes very clear that one cannot have it both ways:
Capps Jesus as Power Tactician 181
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Either your loyalty is to your father or to the heavenly Father. There is no middle
ground on which to stand. In contrast, Miller introduces another qualication, that
of priorities. Whereas Jesus is demanding an absolute commitment, one where
there is no turning back, for the recruit has burned his bridges behind him,
Miller suggests that Jesus made this harsh-sounding comment because of his
own experience of God as a gracious father, devotion to whose willtakes pri-
ority over everything else (my emphasis). A leader cannot depend on a member
of his organization who merely promises that devotion to the head of the
organizationin this case, the heavenly Fatherwill take priority over all the
other persons to whom he is also devoted. Such an arrangement is simply un-
acceptable. Had the son in this story agreed to Jesus terms and not gone off to
bury his father, he would then have met the critical test for membership in Jesus
organization.
As for Millers interpretation of the saying, supported by examples, about
fathers who give good gifts to their children, Jesus does make a comparison
between the heavenly Father and earthly fathers. But this is not a comparison
between the awed goodness of the one and the greater goodness of the other,
but between evil fathers and the good heavenly Father. As Haley indicates,
the leader of a revolutionary movement must promise rewards in return for the
sacrices he requires, and the rewards must be of such magnitude that the things
that have been sacriced pale in comparison. There is an implied disparagement
if not ridicule in Jesus examples of the father who gives bread and sh, not
stone and serpent, in response to his sons entreaties. Since giving a stone or ser-
pent would be downright perverse, the fathers gift of bread and sh is better
than the hypothetical alternatives. But giving his son exactly what the son
requests can hardly be compared with the manner in which the heavenly Father
gives gifts, or with the magnicence of the gifts themselves. Jesus promised his
men that they would one day be rulers with him in the kingdom of the Father.
For this, they were willing to sacrice whatever gifts they might receive from
their earthly fathers, gifts that, in any case, have strings attached.
In short, Jesus tactical displacement of the human father both supports and
gives concreteness to Haleys point that, in joining Jesus organization, a young
man would be giving up everything related to ambition in the society as it was
and abandon all other commitments to others (p. 30). The requisite evidence that
such a sacrice had been made is that a man had severed emotional and legal
ties to his father. In stark contrast to their father Zebedee, who shes for sh,
James and John will sh for people (Mk 1.16). As Haley puts it, in exchange
for this sacrice, the leader gives them a sense of mission and purpose in life.
In turn, he places his hopes in the young who do not yet have an investment in
the establishment, and he deliberately incites the young against their elders, to
break the family ties that solidify the strength of the establishment. What is per-
haps most remarkable about Jesus in this regard is his candor: Do not think that
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I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a
sword. I have come to set a man against his father (Mt. 10.34, my emphasis). A
leader could not be any more explicit than this.
Did Jesus Miscalculate?
The second issue I want to consider is Haleys argument that Jesus made a fate-
ful miscalculation as far as the outcome of his trial was concerned, and that this
miscalculation provides a glimpse into Jesus character, the fact that he was a
man with a passion to determine what was to happen in his environment (p. 50).
In one sense, Haley seems to want to give Jesus the benet of the doubt. If,
hypothetically, we were in Jesus position and were examining what we might
gain or lose by arranging to be arrested, Our gains and losses would be estimated
in terms of the probabilities in a situation where the outcome was uncertain.
This being the case, we would know that we were taking a risk, and that in this
case we were risking our very lives. In other words, being the skillful strategist
he had proven himself to be, Jesus surely calculated the risks involved and acted
on the basis of this calculation. In addition, skillful as he was, Jesus could not
have foreseen that the least probable of all the possibilities would in fact occur:
Even a master tactician cannot take into account all the possibilities, including
chance occurrences. The factor of chance occurrences is well known to mili-
tary strategists.
On the other hand, Haley is critical of Jesus, for he also claims that it would
t his character to move prematurely to gain the whole world. The fault, then,
lies not with Jesus tactical prowess but in a more deeply rooted personality or
character trait, a man with a passion to determine what was to happen in his
environment. This passion caused him to act precipitously, or to seek to force
events to bend to his will rather than waiting patiently for the opportunity or
propitious moment to act. His impatience with Peters objections, which were
probably shared by others in Jesus organization, to his decision to go down to
Jerusalem at this time (Mt. 16.21-23) appears to give evidence of this per-
sonality trait.
Haleys view that Jesus was a man of passion who might act precipitously,
however, requires careful examination. In my judgment, it is not self-evidently
true. In order to assess its accuracy, we need to locate this alleged personality trait
in the context of the nal days of Jesus life. While efforts to reconstruct what
happened have not led to a consensus opinion, a consideration of two scholars
attempts to reconstruct what happened after his disturbance in the temple pro-
vides a perspective from which to assess Haleys view that Jesus made a fateful
miscalculation that was due, in effect, to a personality trait, namely, a tendency
to act precipitously, that worked against his tactical acumen.
Capps Jesus as Power Tactician 183
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Crossans Reconstruction
Crossan believes that Jesus would have been arrested on the spot for his distur-
bance in the temple, and would have been executed without a trial. In his view,
Jesus symbolic destruction of the temple simply actualized what he had already
said in his teachings, effected in his healings, and realized in his mission of open
commensality.
13
(Commensality is Crossans term for Jesus use of table fellow-
ship to break down societys vertical hierarchy and lateral separations.) But,
while there was nothing new or surprising in Jesus action, the conned and
tinderbox atmosphere of the Temple at Passover, especially under Pilate, was not
the same as the atmosphere in the rural reaches of Galilee, even under Antipas,
and the soldiers moved in immediately to arrest him. Immediate arrest and exe-
cution, without the formalities of a trial, would be entirely consistent with the
fact that brutal crowd control was Pilates specialty. That he would release any
prisoner during the Passover festival is also against any administrative wisdom.
A decent governor could postpone an execution until after the festival, or allow
burial of the crucied by his family, but there is no evidence to suggest that Pilate
was anything but a ruthless governor who acted rst, and asked questions later.
Thus, the narrative in Mk 15.6-15 about Pilate throwing the matter up to a clam-
orous crowd, is absolutely unhistorical, a creation most likely of Mark himself.
The very idea of Pilate meekly acquiescing to a crowd stirred up by the chief
priests would itself be utterly contrary to his brutal crowd control, which was the
reason for his arrest and execution of Jesus in the rst place.
Assuming that the followers of Jesus dispersed after his arrest and went into
hiding, Crossan is also very suspicious of the gospel accounts of Jesus trial,
death (including what he allegedly said from the cross) and burial. If none of
them were there, How did Jesus rst followers know so much about his death
and burial? How did they know those almost hour-by-hour details given in fairly
close and remarkable agreement by all four New Testament gospels and by the
Gospel of Peter outside the New Testament? What we have in these accounts is
not history remembered but prophecy historicized (his emphases). He con-
cludes:
My best historical reconstruction of what actually happened is that Jesus was arrested
during the Passover festival and those closest to him ed for their own safety. I do not
presume at all any high-level consultations between Caiaphus or Pilate about or with
Jesus. They would no doubt have agreed before such a festival that fast and immediate
action was to be taken against any disturbance and that some examples by crucixion
might be especially useful at the start.
13. John Dominic Crossan, Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography (San Francisco: Harper-
SanFrancisco, 1994). Quotations are from pp. 133-52.
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Furthermore, I doubt very much if Jewish police and Roman soldiery needed to
go too far up the chain of command in handling a Galilean peasant like Jesus. It
is we who have trouble bringing our imagination down low enough to see the
casual brutality with which he was probably taken and executed.
If one accepts this view of what happened, a host of questions follow, such
as whether Jesus was aware that his action would provoke his arrest and sum-
mary executionwithout trialand, if so, what would be his motivation for
arranging his almost certain death? In The Historical Jesus, Crossan says he
doubts that poor Galilean peasants went up and down regularly to the Temple
feasts. I think it quite possible that Jesus went to Jerusalem only once and that
the spiritual and economic egalitarianism he preached in Galilee exploded in
indignation at the Temple as the seat and symbol of all that was nonegalitarian,
patronal, and even oppressive on both the religious and the political level.
14
In
Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography, he notes that What would happen to Jesus
was probably as predictable as what had happened already to John. Some form
of religiopolitical execution could surely have been expected, and his symbolic
destruction of the Temple, in the volatile atmosphere of Passover, would have
been quite enough to entail crucixion by religiopolitical agreement.
15
These statements suggest that Jesus knew that he was likely to die a violent
death, that he had always lived with the possibility of arrest, and that his action
in the temple may have been prompted by some combination of a longstanding
hatred of what the temple stood for and an unpremeditated emotional reaction
when he actually set foot on the temple grounds. If this is a reasonably accurate
summary of Crossans views, derived from two different sources, it leads to the
conclusion that Jesus probably did not miscalculate. Even if he did, the mis-
calculation would not have been that he thought he could get arrested and then
be acquitted, thus winning the power struggle with the establishment, but that he
had not calculated upon the likelihood that his action in the temple would lead
to his immediate arrest. In this case, the miscalculation would have been due to
his having previously got away with similar provocative actions in Galilee with-
out being arrested. Even this miscalculation, however, would not be very likely.
As Pilate governed from 2636 CE, and Josephus recounts episodes in which his
soldiers acted brutally at his request well before Jesus execution, we may assume
that Jesus would not have been surprised that his explosion of indignation at the
temple would provoke such brutality. If his disciples sought to dissuade him
from going to Jerusalem in the rst place, and apparently none participated in
the action that resulted in his arrest, we may further assume that Jesus knew the
risks involved and acted anyway.
14. Crossan, The Historical Jesus, p. 360.
15. Crossan, Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography, p. 196.
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While Crossans reconstruction of the arrest and execution call into question
Haleys view that Jesus made a fateful miscalculation, they do not undermine
his portrayal of Jesus as a man who was oriented toward power and used it skill-
fully. In his discussion of Jesus understanding of the kingdom of God in Jesus:
A Revolutionary Biography, Crossan admits there are problems with the word
kingdom as a translation of the Greek word basilea, but
what we are actually talking aboutis power and rule, a process much more than a
place, a way of life much more than a location on earth The focus of discussion is
not on kings but on rulers, not on kingdom but on power, not on place but on process.
The Kingdom of God is what the world would be if God were directly and
immediately in charge.
16
If the kingdom of the heavenly Father is about power and process, not place,
then Jesus power tactics exemplied the way of life that Jesus both envisioned
and actualized. After all, the kingdom is about the empowerment of those who,
by necessity or choice, are outside or alien to the religiopolitical establishment.
Sanders Reconstruction
If Crossan believes that there was no trial before the execution of Jesus, there
are many biblical scholars who disagree. In The Historical Figure of Jesus, E.P.
Sanders notes that it was the responsibility of the high priest to maintain good
order in Judaea in general, and in Jerusalem in particular. Since Caiaphus served
longer than any other high priest during periods of direct Roman rule, this is
evidence that he was very capable in this regard: If the high priest did not pre-
serve order, the Roman prefect would intervene militarily, and the situation
might get out of hand.
17
But, as long as the Temple guards, acting as the high
priests police, carried out arrests, and as long as the high priest was involved in
judging cases (though he could not execute anyone), there was relatively little
possibility of a direct clash between Jews and Roman troops.
Sanders cites an episode which occurred about thirty years after Jesus was
executed in which another Jesus, the son of Ananias, went to the temple during
the Feast of Booths (Tabernacles) and proclaimed the destruction of Jerusalem
and the sanctuary. This action led to his being interrogated and ogged, rst by
the Jewish authorities, then by the Romans. He answered questions by reiterating
his dirge over the city, and was nally released as a maniac. Sanders uses this
case to explain why Jesus was executed rather than merely ogged. To him, the
offense of Jesus of Nazareth was much worse. He had a following, perhaps not
16. Crossan, Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography, p. 55; emphasis added.
17. E.P. Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus (London: Penguin Books, 1993). Quota-
tions are from pp. 265-76.
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very large, but a following nonetheless. He had taught about the kingdom for
some time. He had employed physical action in the temple. He was not a mad-
man. For these reasons, he was politically dangerous: Conceivably he could
have talked his way out of execution had he promised to take his disciples,
return to Galilee, and keep his mouth shut. He seems not to have tried.
Sanders believes that Caiaphus was primarily or exclusively concerned with
the possibility that Jesus would incite a riot. He had Jesus arrested, gave him a
hearing, and recommended execution to Pilate, who promptly complied. The
blasphemy charge against Jesus was a smokescreen for the real issue, which was
that Jesus threatened the Temple and gave himself airs. The high priest had him
arrested because of his action against the Temple, and that was the charge
against him. The testimony was thrown out of court because the witnesses did
not say the same things. The high priest, however, had decided that Jesus had to
die, and so he was not willing to drop the case (his emphasis). Whatever Jesus
replied in response to the high priests question as to whether he considered him-
self the Messiah would not have mattered: We do not have to decide whether
Jesus answered yes or maybe. The high priest had already made up his mind.
Why did Pilate order Jesus execution? Because the high priest had recom-
mended it and had charged that Jesus thought he was the king of the Jews. It is
doubtful that Pilate thought Jesus was a serious threat for he had no army, so he
made no effort to track down and execute his followers. But he probably consid-
ered him a religious fanatic whose fanaticism had become so extreme that it
posed a threat to law and order. In all probability, he received Caiaphuss charge,
had Jesus ogged and briey interrogated, and, when the answers were not
completely satisfactory, sent him to the cross without a second thought. That he
put the matter to the clamoring crowd is more than doubtful; this story derives
from the desire of the early Christians to get along with Rome and to depict Jews
as their real opponents. That Pilate probably ordered the execution without a
trial is supported by an appeal that his contemporary, Philo, wrote to the emperor
Gaius (Caligula). Among other injustices, this appeal cited the executions with-
out trial that marked Pilates rule.
This version of the trial supports Haleys view that the most improbable of
all the likely outcomes of Jesus audacious attack on the temple would be
Pilates decision to let the crowd decide. In the end, Haley nonetheless accepted
the Gospel account while Sanders does not. But if Sanders is correct, then Haleys
assumptions that the Sanhedrin would not violate its own laws (option 1) or, if it
did, no Roman governor would execute Jesus without sufcient evidence (option
2) are simply incorrect; in which case options 3 (the crowd clamoring for his
release) and 4 (the crowd calling for his death) are irrelevant. Sanderss view
that it didnt matter much what Jesus may have replied to the high priest also
casts doubt on Haleys view that, by remaining silent, Jesus made it impossible
for the Sanhedrin to convict him. Also, Sanders seems to entertain the possibility,
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however remote, that Jesus might have avoided execution had he been more
forthcoming with Pilate, whereas Haley believes that his refusal to speak deprived
Pilate of cause to execute him.
On the other hand, Sanderss reconstruction of the trial and execution sup-
ports Haleys conclusion that Jesus at last found himself in a situation where
what happened was beyond his control. But his explanation for this is not that he
miscalculated the desperateness of his opposition, as Haley suggests, but that
he knew his only realistic hope would be divine intervention. Thus, in Sanderss
view, it is highly probable that Jesus knew he was a marked man. Conceivably,
he may have thought that God would intervene before he was arrested and
executed, but, In any case he did not ee. He went to the Mount of Olives to
pray and to waitto wait for the reaction of the authorities and possibly the
intervention of God. The garden of Gethsemane prayer attributed to him (Mk
14.32-42; Mt. 26; 3646; Lk. 22.40-46), although represented as private, is
perfectly reasonable, for it suggests that he not only prayed to be spared and
hoped he would not die, but also resigned himself to the will of his Father. This
would be thoroughly consistent with everything that he had taught regarding the
absolute commitment of his organization, and members within it, to the heav-
enly Father.
Sanders also considers it possible that, when Jesus drank his last cup of wine
[at the Passover meal] and predicted that he would drink it again in the kingdom,
he thought that the kingdom would arrive immediately. If so, the cry attributed
to him from the cross from Psalm 22.1, My God, my God, why have you for-
saken me (Mk 15.34) may well have been his own reminiscence of the psalm,
not just a motif inserted by the early Christians. In which case, he may have
died disappointed. This, too, supports Haleys view that Jesus had at last found
himself in a situation where what happened was beyond his control.
In short, whether Haleys views regarding the trial and execution of Jesus are
credible depends, in part, on which biblical scholar is considered to have put for-
ward the most compelling reconstruction of what Jesus did and what happened
to him in Jerusalem. While Crossan and Sanders agree that it was the temple
disturbance that precipitated Jesus arrest, and that he intended his actions there
as a symbolic destruction of the temple, and not merely an objection to its busi-
ness practices, they agree on little else. Still, their reconstructions suggest that,
in acting as he did at the temple grounds, Jesus had knowingly behaved in a man-
ner that precluded his retaining control of the situation from that time forward.
He had, quite self-consciously, placed his fate in the hands of his heavenly Father.
If so, the saying attributed to him from the crossIt is nished (Jn 19.30)
expresses what he may have thought or felt following his audacious attack on
the temple. As he had not built an organization of militia ghters, he must have
been aware that this attack on the temple was the culminating act of his career as
a prophet of Israel. After this action, nothing from then on would be the same.
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Both Sanders and Crossan agree that it was not the size of Jesus following
that caused the authorities to consider him a political threat. Rather, it was the
fear that he could incite a crowd to riot. But this is to view his threat from a
purely sociopolitical perspective. Haleys analysis of Jesus power tactics sug-
gests a psychological element as well. If one accepts Sanderss view that Jesus
was accorded some sort of audience before the high priest and members of his
council, this would mean that for the rst time in his life, Jesus was face-to-face
with the highest religious authorities in Israel. He was no longer dealing with
their proxies in Galilee. What happened in this face-to-face encounter is a matter
of conjecture, but Haleys view that Jesus was especially skillful in putting his
critics in their places and never using defensive behavior must have been im-
pressed upon this group of men as well. As its direct targets, they would not
have taken kindly to it. What they had that the religious authorities in Galilee
did not have was the power to recommend his execution to Pilate, and thereby
wash their hands of a man who threatened their authority.
Following the Synoptic gospel accounts, Haley believes that Jesus remained
silent and noncommital, his strategy being that he would not say anything that
would incriminate him. However, it would be more consistent with his general
portrait of Jesus to suggest that Jesus demeanor before the high priest and
members of his council was no different from his rhetorical tactics against his
opponents and detractors in Galilee. Had Haley not been warned, perhaps by his
reading of Schweitzers The Psychiatric Study of Jesus, to avoid the Gospel of
John, he might have made this very point. According to John, Jesus did not
remain silent during the interrogation conducted by the high priest. In Johns
version, Jesus responded to the high priests questions about his disciples and
teaching, I have spoken openly to the world; I have always taught in syna-
gogues and in the temple, where all the Jews come together. I have said nothing
in secret. Why do you ask me? Ask those who heard what I said to them; they
know what I said (18.20-21). Whereupon one of the police standing nearby
struck Jesus on the face, saying, Is that how you answer the high priest?, to
which Jesus responded, If I have spoken wrongly, testify to the wrong. But if I
have spoken rightly, why do you strike me? (18.22-23).
Thus, in Johns version, Jesus did not alter his usual tactics at all. To be sure,
he did not respond directly to the questions put to him, but his non-response
was not one of silence. Rather, he told the high priest that he should not rely on
the testimony of the accused but on that of eyewitnesses, of whom there were
many, as he had acted publicly, not conspired in secrecy. This response, of course,
was viewed as one of insolence and lack of deference toward the high priest. If
Sanders speculates on what Jesus could have said to talk his way out of execu-
tion, a more intriguing question, in my view, is what he may actually have said
to talk his way into it.
Capps Jesus as Power Tactician 189
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In any event, if Haley had been less impressed by Lorenzs analogy of the
wolf whose acceptance of defeat incapacitates his more powerful opponent,
together with its parallel in Josephuss account of the mob of protesters, and had
instead applied to Jesus nal days in Jerusalem his earlier account of the alco-
holic who says to the bartender, If you want me out of here, throw me out, he
might not have claimed that Jesus miscalculated, and did so on account of his
alleged tendency to act precipitously. In fact, the story of the alcoholic would
have enabled him to claim that Jesus was in fact the one who determined what
was to happen through to the very end. This conclusion, which is the one that
makes most sense to me on the basis of Haleys own contention that Jesus was a
master tactician, casts doubt on Sanderss view that Jesus expected his heavenly
Father to intervene at the last minute, and underscores Haleys related observa-
tion that it is even possible to determine what is going to happen from beyond
the grave, as events have borne out.
In the surrender tactic, one extends ones neck, and allows the victor to make
the nal determination, that is, to dishonor himself by going for the jugular or to
dignify himself by allowing the vanquished to get up and walk away. In the
parable of the alcoholic, one refuses to leave the premises when ordered to do
so. The alcoholic declares, I will not go peacefully. If you want me out of here,
you will have to throw me out bodily. This is a very different power dynamic,
and one that is congruent with the temple disturbance, Jesus last symbolic
action. If Jesus told his disciples that he was sending them out among wolves,
he must also have known that the surrender tactic can only work if there is
honor among wolves or that there exists a plausible threat of retaliation against
the wolf who takes unfair advantage of the other wolfs act of surrender. Absent
these assumptions, one must be wise as a serpent and harmless as a dove (Mt.
10.16). Because he exhibits both simultaneously, the alcoholic who has become
a disruptive nuisance in another mans tavern determines the outcome of the
interchange.
18
18. Haley, The Power Tactics of Jesus Christ, p. 37. I assume that it is unnecessary to
point out to readers of this journal that, according to various Gospel accounts, Jesus, unlike
John, was no stranger to the local tavern scene.
[JSHJ 2.2 (2004) 190-208]
ISSN 1476-8690
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004, The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX and 315 East
26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010, USA.
HOWI STOPPED WORRYING ABOUT MEL GIBSON AND LEARNED
TO LOVE THE QUEST FOR THE HISTORICAL JESUS:
A REVIEW OF MEL GIBSONS THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST
Alan F. Segal
Barnard College, Columbia University,
New York, NY, USA
ABSTRACT
The Passion of the Christ by Mel Gibson has proven to be a mass-cultural
phenomenon. This article compares it with the recent lm The Gospel of John and
then evaluates the lm under three rubrics: (1) artistic and religious merit, (2)
historical accuracy, and (3) anti-Semitism. The relationship between these two
lms and the problem of the historical Jesus is investigated.
Key Words: The Passion of the Christ, Mel Gibson, The Gospel of John, historical
accuracy, anti-Semitism, historical Jesus, Isaiah 53
Like most who have seen The Passion of the Christ, I left the theater with an
array of complicated responses and complex feelings. I want to explore these
under three rubrics: (1) artistic and religious merit, (2) historical accuracy, and
(3) anti-Semitism. In conclusion I would like to propose a new resolve for
nding the historical Jesus as an antidote to the Hollywood Jesus.
Artistic and Religious Merit
I am not a fan of this lm. But I want to start out by saying that I do not impugn
Mel Gibsons right to make this lm or the right of the movie-going public to see
it. On the other hand, anyone who sees it has the equal right to comment on it and
even offer a critique without being automatically called anti-Christian. There
are some beautiful things in this lm. I was particularly impressed by the por-
trayal of Mary, Jesus mother. She is the real center of the lm, since all the
events are ltered through her perspective. The performance of Maia Morgenstern
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as Mary, the mother of Jesus, was deeply powerful and a high point of the other-
wise dismal lm. A great deal has been made about her identity as an actor, as
she is often described as an Israeli and the child of a Holocaust survivor. This
neither indicts nor exonerates the lm from the charge of anti-Semitism. That
she happens to be Jewish is as wonderful a coincidence as is the fact that she
also happens to have a name, Morgenstern, that signies the stella maris, a
traditional symbol of the Virgin Mary.
1
I also appreciate the deep Catholic spirituality in the lm. I have myself
walked the Stations of the Cross on two occasions, once with a person who
humbled me with her deep and sincere faith. The emotions of that pilgrims act
of piety can be found in this lm as well. So I can appreciate some of the
emotional depth that the lm creates.
On the whole, however, I was alternately disappointed and appalled by the
lm. Before seeing the lm, I read press reports about the lms violence and
anti-Semitism. I hate violence in lms, and so I believed the press reports about
it. But I expected that the press about the lms anti-Semitism was hyped. I
went to see the lm as a professional responsibility. But I found that neither the
violence nor the anti-Semitism was hyped. Both were amply in evidence. Un-
fortunately, there is little in the lm to redeem it after nding both those primary
qualities of the lm to be true. I will leave the issue of anti-Semitism for later,
and focus now on the lms artistry.
True, when one impugns the lm for moral features, the aesthetic features of
the lm are pretty much ruined. The spooky camera angles, the suspense and the
absolutely unbearable violence are obvious conventions taken out of the action/
adventure lms that Mel Gibson has spent his career perfecting. It is no surprise
to me that The Passion has garnered a hefty share of the desirable market of
single-male, aged 17 to 30, audience.
2
Its technique is meant more to appeal to
that audience just as surely as its script is meant to appeal to a legitimate Cath-
olic spirituality. The result is an action/adventure passion play, not a Gospel, a
tough-guy Jesus who can take it. The lm seems to me to ask the question how
much punishment can Jesus take, a theme that runs throughout Gibsons lm
oeuvre. As such, questions of the historical accuracy of the lm to the New Testa-
ment are moot. It would have been more honest to consider it as macho-man lm
meets medieval passion play.
1. Morgenstern means morning star, a reference to the planet Venus in German. The
same planet can be called the stella maris in Latin and commonly refers to the Virgin Mary, as
the Italian personal name Maristella does. Masses to Mary as the stella maris are a feature of
Catholic Church music. I think particularly of the haunting compositions of Josquin Desprez
(c. 14401521) who wrote a Mass for the Virgin Mary (messe ave maris stella) as well as a
motet for the Queen of Heaven under the name Ave Maris Stella.
2. For discussion of the early viewing audience, see www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/
entertainment/special_packages/passion_of_christ/8199068.htm.
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One might make the case that the violence in the lm serves the lms stated
aim: to portray Jesus as the bruised suffering servant of Isa. 53.5; in particular
to illustrate the verse: But he was wounded for our transgressions; he was
bruised for our iniquities. This is what the superscription of the lm maintains.
Indeed, by depicting Jesus as mutely enduring a violent beating that would have
killed a normal man several times over, the lm depicts that biblical passage
more completely than any other has, as if to say: Surely this man must be God to
have superhumanly endured this beating for the remission of our sins. The lm
amply reports the inhumanity of Jesus captors but without Maia Morgenstern it
would totally miss the more important religious emotion, the more traditional
emotions of grief, as a meditation on Good Friday.
This is, of course, a long-standing and important aspect of Christian piety. The
depiction of the violence outgrows its theological basis and becomes a physical
ordeal for the movie-goer. Anyone schooled in Christian spirituality throughout
the centuries would respond to this depiction. It is valid and authentic because it
is a prominent theme in medieval Christian spirituality. The question is: Are the
emotions earned or are they just elicited? does the lm have integrity as an artistic
creation? I submit that we cannot just excuse all violence even if it is used in
service of eliciting religious emotions, just as we would not excuse a tear-jerker
for its use of sentimentality. Unfortunately, the American lm-going public
knows how to judge the issue of maudlin sentiment better than it knows how to
deal with supererogatory violence.
I am not sure it is as at home in American culture with its interests in rational
cultural pluralism, but it certainly is attracting a following right now, with the
Gospels message constantly under pressure from the secular world and with the
Catholic churchs leadership under moral indictment for covering up an uncon-
trolled sex scandal. I am not saying that these are the only motivations for seeing
the lm. I assume the reasons that the lm has been so popular and so liked are
varied. There are multiple reasons why someone might like the lm; it is, of
course, affecting; the emotions raised by seeing it can be transmuted into reli-
gious sentiment at a time when even the bishops are suspect for covering up the
scandal. But I cannot understand why people such as Pat Robertson, who has
otherwise preached for removing violence and sexuality from lm, are now
recommending that parents take their thirteen-year-old children to see it.
3
Summarizing its artistic merit, I would say that it attempts to portray a basi-
cally Catholic spirituality which is affecting and interesting and valuable in itself
3. See his interview on the show Hannity and Colmes of the Fox Cable Television
network in the week that The Passion opened. Hannity and Robertson both stated that it would
be appropriate for a thirteen year old to see the lm (with a parent, of course, since it has an R
rating). The Fox Network has been an especially strong proponent of the lm; the parent
company will produce the DVD.
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but its excessive violence and its misleading claims to historical accuracy, as
well as the anti-Jewish content mar that portrayal beyond redemption for me.
Historical Accuracy
But is this historically accurate to the New Testament? The New Testament
surely proclaims that Jesus is the martyred messiah whose death and resurrec-
tion bring salvation for all. But does it proclaim that Jesus suffering is the means
of human salvation using Isaiah 53, as the superscription to the lm states? Paul,
the earliest Christian writer, believes in vicarious atonement. But neither Paul
nor the Gospels use Isaiah 53 explicitly for that purpose. While Paul speaks of
Jesus vicarious atonement as grounded in scripture, he does not reveal his text.
Although Isaiah 53 is mentioned several times in the New Testament, this par-
ticular usage of the suffering servant is appropriate to the church fathers and not
to the New Testament.
The use of Isaiah 53 in the New Testament is easy to trace. In Acts 8.32-33,
Isaiah 53 is quoted. The Ethiopian Eunuch asks whether the passage refers to
Isaiah himself, who was by then viewed as a martyr. The text both demonstrates
the antiquity of the Isaianic martyr tradition and argues against that tradition to
the effect that Isaiah 53 refers to the messiah, who must suffer and die. Once this
is established, Philip can explain to the Ethiopian the good news of the Christ.
Matthew 8.17 uses Isa. 53.5 very literally (by his stripes we are healed) to
demonstrate that Jesus healings were prophesied. 1 Pet. 2.22 uses the passage to
offer encouragement and consolation to slaves with hard masters by bidding
them to identify with the suffering of Jesus. The later and very moving tradition
surely begins humbly here in 1 Peter, but it is not the New Testaments interpre-
tation itself which has so affected Christian piety. But the later generality which
the tradition has is not gained until the church fathers. So the issue is not the
authenticity of the spirituality in the lm but the claim that it is depicting what
the New Testament tells us. The historical claim is inauthentic, though the spiri-
tuality is real enough, for a later period.
In fact, The Passion most often takes as its base text the Gospel of John.
4
But using the Gospel of John makes the historicity of the traditions about Jesus
even more problematic. The Gospel of John is written at the end of the rst cen-
tury; virtually all the sayings of Jesus in it are better understood as sermons which
early Christians gave for the mission and encouragement of the community.
4. This is both my opinion and the opinion of Father Andrew Greeley, in an interview
on Hard-Ball, the Bill OReilly opinion show for Fox Cable News Network, 1 March 2004
and in Passion: Fails to Nail Key Point, his column for the Chicago Sun Times, 5 March
2004. See www.suntimes.com/output/greeley/cst-edt-greel05.html.
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They are important documents of that time. Some of the sermons are quite
moving and others are polemical attempts to understand the friction between the
church and the synagogue. But virtually every scholar agrees that they are not
the actual words of Jesus. Nor does The Passion spend very much time on the
words of Jesus in John. The effect of the sparse subtitles to the Aramaic is to pre-
sent a kind of tableau vivant. The lm does weave in incidents taken from Chris-
tian tradition and from the other Gospels but these additions are not employed to
bolster the authenticity of the lms plot-line.
Though Gibson and his fans have constantly stressed the authenticity of the
lm, I have found that authenticity is a very difcult goal for a lm. I worked
with a team of scholars to produce a lm adaptation, The Gospel of John, for
Visual Bible International (VBI), a lm that attempted to be as true to the Gospel
as the group could make it. Every word that was in the Gospel is in the lm, and
no word which is not in the Gospel has been added to the lm. We attempted to
interpret every scene in a neutral and historical context. Although one could legi-
timately argue over the translation, it is as close as one can come to depicting
that Gospel on lm. The costumes and the set are as close to authentic as we
could make them. Even the music was designed with ancient instrumentation as
its skeletal structure. In order to give a complete a picture of The Gospel of John
on lm, it needs to be three hours long. I believe it is the only attempt to bring
the complete Gospel of John to the screen.
The most important bid for authenticity in Gibsons lm is the use of Aramaic
and Latin, with subtitles. As we all know, however, this is not actually historical
since we have no Aramaic versions of the Gospels; they are only extant in Greek.
Strangely, nobody speaks Greek in the lm, though it is likely that Pilate would
have addressed his forces in that language, even though it is possible that they
knew Aramaic, as they were likely raised in the Eastern Mediterranean. It is un-
likely that Pilate could speak Aramaic with any facility. The legionnaires of
Gibsons lm sometimes speak Aramaic and sometimes speak street Latin,
giving voice to words that I have only heard in medical terminology before.
Even the slang Latin is unlikely if the troops were raised in Syria. At one point,
Jesus and Pilate converse with each other in good church Latin, which is a mir-
acle, actually, as it anticipates the holy language of a later time.
I spent a good deal of time listening to the Aramaic and thinking of verb
paradigms to avoid watching the violence. I admit I have some pedantic Ara-
maic grammar and syntax corrections for the script. But the main point must be
that no Aramaic can be authentic, no matter how carefully translated, since it is
always a theoretical back-translation from the Greek of the New Testament or
the screenplays English. So why not just translate the whole into English, using
one of the available translations, which have long histories of scholarly scrutiny
and correction? Or, ironically, it might even be authentic to the Catholic tradition
portrayed in the lm for everyone to speak Latin, as if to say that this Passion is
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based on a tradition that begins with the Vulgate and moves forward through the
Latin Church tradition. That might have yielded a very different and more authen-
tic lm. If the authentic Greek is wanted, it could be played quite convincingly
with a modern katharevusa pronunciation, which is close to the New Testaments
koine Greek. Using Aramaic makes the lm seem historically accurate when his-
torical accuracy to the Gospels and the historical Jesus is hardly even attempted
in the lm. Putting the whole lm into Latin would have at least told the movie-
going public that this was a traditional portrait of the Latin Church. And that
would have been ne. The difculty is that Gibson consistently argues on the air-
waves that his is an accurate view of the Gospels.
5
Gibsons Passion is not only historically unauthentic, it is also replete with
non-biblical elements. Unfortunately, most of the additions have anti-Jewish or
anti-Semitic implications.
6
And this is, unfortunately, where a rightful charge
of anti-Semitism does arise. Again and again, defenders of the lm have said
that the depiction of Jews in it is no worse than the New Testament. I beg to dif-
fer; the New Testament should be defended against such a calumny. The lm is
much worse than the New Testament on the issue of anti-Semitism. Here are
some of the innovations in the text: Satan tempts Jesus by asking Who is your
father? No one can carry this burden of sin, I tell you, even though Satan hardly
appears in any passion narrative. The Jewish authorities arrest Jesus, though it is
the Romans with the Temple guards in the Gospel of John. The Jewish soldiers
(dressed, by the way, in outrageously unhistorical and supernaturally evil-looking
uniforms), throw Jesus, shackled in chains off a bridge, where demonic creatures
lurk below. His fall is brought up just short of the ground by the chains in one
excruciating jerk. This is gratuitous and sadistic violence that has no precedent in
any Gospel. What is more, the Jews exclusively are its agents in Gibsons lm.
Shortly thereafter, representatives of the priests pay the crowds to assemble and
to demand Jesus death, a detail present in no New Testament source. The Jews
then shackle Jesus to a jail wall. Mary Magdalene and Mary, Jesus mother,
5. Strangely enough a number of people who worked on the lm do not think so.
William Fulco, Benedict Fitzgerald and Barbara Nicolosi all defend Gibson on the grounds
that he does not have to be true to the gospels, as an artist. See http://ascweb.usc.edu/
asc.php?page10-110&story=200. I agree but they irrationally keep maintaining that Emmerich
did not inuence Gibson or the screenplay. Furthermore, Gibson maintains that he has stayed
strictly true to the Gospels, especially on the Diana Sawyer interview. After a limited showing,
Gibson was asked by an evangelical Christian where he got the scene with the devil suckling a
demon-child. Obviously, irked by the question, Gibson replied that he had pulled the scene
out of his ass. The hostile use of this slang expression to a religious person should not be
missed. In a variety of different ways, this suggests little deep appreciation for the Bible.
6. See Philip A. Cunningham, Executive Director of the Center for Christian-Jewish
Learning at Boston College, whose article Gibsons The Passion of the Christ, A Challenge
to Catholic Teaching, is available at www.bc.edu/research/cjl/meta-elements/texts/reviews/
gibson_cunningham.htm. He adduces these additions and discusses the lm in more detail.
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wake up above the place where Jesus is incarcerated and speak the rst of the
four questions: Why is this night different from all others? in Hebrew, present
in no Gospel, but emphasizing the change of faith that is at hand, though there is
no reason for them to be reciting that liturgy otherwise. It is not the right moment
to recite liturgy; its purpose is theological and anti-Jewish. Mary Magdalene,
who is depicted as the woman taken in adultery in John 8 (without any textual
evidence), entreats the soldiers to help Jesus. They excuse themselves by saying
that the Jews are trying to hide their crime from you. Jesus is physically as-
saulted by a crowd of Jews, many wearing prayer shawls, fringes and caps.
Inexplicably, neither Jesus nor any of his disciples wear these garments, which
is an obvious attempt to make Jesus appear less Jewish. Although the Pharisees
are all but absent from the passion narrative, they are blamed by an aide of Pilate
for the arrest. Judas is driven to suicide by Jewish children wearing caps, and who
are transformed on screen into demons. Pilate sums up the Jewish abuse of Jesus
by asking the priests: Do you always punish your prisoners before they are
judged? Pilate and his wife are depicted as benevolent middle-management
bureaucrats who personally sympathize with Jesus but are unable to assuage the
ravening Jewish mob. Pilates wife seems almost to be converted to Christianity,
as in later tradition. There is a large audience for the scourging: while Satan stirs
up the crowd of Jews to encourage the scourgers, Mary Magdalene and Mary,
Jesus mother and a large, sneering crowd look on, though no Gospel reports
this kind of audience. Satan appears as a woman, even once with a demon child
at her breast, adding anti-feminism to Gibsons list of faults. One short verse nar-
rating the scourging of Jesus is translated into long, long minutes of screen-time,
adding all kinds of details about the legionnaires sadistic torture of Jesus, which
is absent from the biblical text. Pilates wife gives linen to the two Marys,
presumably for Jesus funeral, but they use them to soak up the pools of blood
after the scourging. Although the Jews encourage the Romans, Pilate himself is
shocked by the ferocity of the scouring and condemns Jesus to death reluctantly.
Jesus carries an enormous cross while one of thieves taunts him: Why do you
embrace your cross, you fool? The statement perhaps expresses the later ven-
eration of the cross, exceptionally important to Christian piety but not part of the
early Christian devotion. Veronica wipes the face of Jesus and, presumably, cap-
tures his likeness in her veil, as in later tradition. The soldiers drive the nails into
Jesus palms. While the camera moves in for a close-up, blood drips through the
nail holes to the other side of the cross. The soldiers turn him over while nailed
to the cross and back-drive the nails into the wood, which seems illogical if they
wish to reuse such valuable instruments of torture. The nails are then shown
straight again after the crucixion and, inexplicably, left at the cross. A raven
takes out the eye of one of the thieves. Enormous amounts of blood and water
are released by the lance-blow. The earthquake at Jesus death virtually splits
the Temple in half.
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After all this torture and pain, it is a special pleasure and relief to witness the
events of Easter morning. I think it is one of the most moving and successful
scenes in the lm and obviously a depiction of the central event of the Christian
faith, though the martial music is somewhat disconcerting. But, narratively, this
explicit depiction of the resurrection shows us an event which the New Testa-
ment never describes. The camera goes where no disciple ever did. In fact, none
of the above incidents are mentioned in the New Testament at all, though some
are established parts of later Catholic piety.
The issue, however, is not the addition of these elements, per se, but the
gratuitously anti-Semitic nature of many of these added details. They change the
telling of the passion from the story of a Jewish prophet executed by the Romans
to a Christian executed by the Jews.
7
To capture the piety that is rightfully Cath-
olic in these scenes, is it necessary to depict the Jews so negatively? I would
suggest that it is not. The Catholic Church, through its hierarchy, has ruled that
it is not.
8
A schismatic Catholic such as Mel Gibson would cross these lines with
fewer scruples.
9
But religious faith is no excuse for moral lapses. He should be
criticized, not praised, for these stereotypic images of Jews and Judaism.
Anti-Semitism
Part of the problem with the term anti-Semitism is the difculty in dening it.
After having seen The Passion of the Christ, both Joel Siegel and Michael
Medved, two esteemed lm critics who happen to be Jewish, said that there was
no anti-Semitism in the lm. Before they saw the lm, the ad-hoc committee of
academics who had a copy of the script said it was not anti-Semitic, though it
could be easily misunderstood by people with the wrong inclinations. I wonder
what they think now that they can actually see the lm with all the images
displayed to the public. I am well aware that the term anti-Semitism is bandied
about with abandon and has become cheapened by meaningless rhetoric. How-
ever, the lm surprised me by its ferocity in depicting the Jews, which goes way
beyond the New Testament even in its least generous moments. The list above
tends to make me incline toward a harsher verdict than the ad-hoc committee.
At the very least, the screenwriter, Benedict Fitzgerald, ought to have known
better.
7. See James Shapiro, Oberammergau: The Troubling Story of the Worlds Most
Famous Passion Play (New York: Vintage, 2000), p. 214.
8. The Bible, the Jews, and the Death of Jesus: A Collection of Catholic Documents
published by the Bishops Committee for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (Washington:
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2003), see especially pp. 48-53.
9. I believe the technical term for a Catholic who refuses to acknowledge the authority
of Vatican II, as well as various subsequent guidelines, is schismatic.
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Obviously, it depends on what one calls anti-Semitic. By some denitions, it
will not be anti-Semitic. I can only think that Medved and Siegel had something
like modern Nazi, racially based anti-Semitism in mind and so they could say
there was nothing in the lm that comes close to that. Nothing like Nazi anti-
Semitism existed in the world until the twentieth century.
10
However, that is not the end of the matter. A different denition was tried by
Pat Robertson, who said on Fox Cable that it couldnt be anti-Semitic because
the Gospels were written by Jews to Jews.
11
This seems to me to be tendentious
and wrong in a number of ways. First, the Gospels were not written by Jews.
Only two had signicant Jewish input (Matthew and John) and those two were
signicantly redacted by non-Jews before reaching us. More to the point, the
lm only rarely corresponds with the Gospels. Lastly, it seems to me illogical to
think that Jews cannot be anti-Semitic, if other people can. No one wants to
criticize the scripture of another religious community, much less ones own. But
I see no reason to privilege either the New Testament or Jews from charges of
anti-Semitism. There have certainly been anti-Semitic Jews. There may not be
any anti-Semitism in the New Testament. But if it is present, it ought to be dis-
cussed openly so that it can be squarely repaired by teaching and deed.
What is anti-Semitic is bound to be subjective. My borderline for ancient
anti-Semitism in the New Testament would depend on whether the Jews are
depicted as being supernaturally evil or responsible as a whole and without
exception for the death of Jesus. That means that two short passages in the
GospelsMt. 27.23 and Jn 8.44are dangerously close to my denition and
need to be investigated very carefully. It is not clear to me that the ancients
would have understood this distinction, in the midst of their polemics. I would
say that they both were polemical statements written at a time before our current
understandings of hate-speech. They are both later than the time of Jesus. Mt.
27.25 must actually date from after 70 CE, trying to exploit the destruction of the
Temple to make a theological point: God remains active in history and the
destruction of the Temple is Judaisms punishment.
John 8.44 marks a generation of the intense polemic between the Johannine
church and a non-rabbinic synagogue at the turn of the rst century. Neither one
10. J.N. Sevenster, The Roots of Pagan Anti-Semitism in the Ancient World (Leiden:
Brill, 1975); Marcel Simon, Verus Israel (Oxford: Oxford University Press: 1986) [Paris 1964,
1948]; Peter Shaefer, Judeophobia: Attitudes Towards the Jews in the Ancient World (Cam-
bridge: Harvard University Press, 1997); Shaye Cohen, Anti-semitism in Antiquity: The
Problem of Denition, in D. Berger (ed.), History and Hate: The Dimensions of Anti-Semitism
(Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society, 1986), pp. 43-47; John Gager, The Origins of Anti-
Semitism (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983); Elaine Pagels, The Origin
of Satan (New York: Vintage, 1996); Rosemary Ruether, Faith and Fratricide: The Theologi-
cal Roots of Anti-Semitism (London: Wipf and Stock, 1996).
11. See above, same interview on Hannity and Holmes.
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can be accurately placed in the time of Jesus. But, having said that, I would clas-
sify them as suspiciously anti-Semitic statements, especially as understood by a
later and more vindictive church.
Watching a lm about the Gospels, I also learned a lesson about the less
severe anti-Jewish passages in the Gospels. I distinguish this from anti-Semi-
tism. There are innumerable places in the New Testament that argue against
parties of Jews, all the Jews, or Judaism at large. One might maintain, as an
historian, that this is understandable, given Christianitys theological needs to
separate from Judaism its polemical stance and its missionizing imperative.
Theologically it has a problem which Judaism does not when it looks at Chris-
tianity. After all, the Christian mission had a difcult job. It had rst to attempt
to convince Jews to convert and later to convince gentiles to convert to Christi-
anity but not to want to convert to Judaism. It also had to deal with the doubts
and sceptics among the Jews. Let us not forget that the Jews were the only
ancient people who knew what a messiah was; though some Jews did convert to
early Christianity, the vast majority did not. This took a special explanation. So
the invective is perhaps not surprising, because it both helps the mission and
externalizes doubt (which even Christians may have) into a demonic conspiracy.
But the Gospels build this invective right into the events of the passion and trial,
turning the Jews from sceptics of the Christian claims of resurrection into oppo-
nents of Jesus continuing existence. Even to make a naive historical claim about
the Gospels in their current redaction is to accept a great deal of anti-Judaism.
My experience as a teacher has been that when Jews encounter the New Tes-
tament for the rst time they are shocked. Most Jews do not read the New Testa-
ment until they are forced by circumstances to do so. This is true of students
who must read it for the rst time in humanities courses or of adults who see
The Passion or the lm adaptation of The Gospel of John. It is also fair to say
that few Christians have actually read their Bible a whole book at a time. Most
everyone, Jew or Christian, gets his or her Bible in very short doses during ser-
mons and homilies. The argument of the Gospels is best discoverable when the
entire work is read at one sitting.
Since I took part in the Visual Bible International (VBI) production of The
Gospel of John, I have some real experience with how one might choose to
depict the anti-Jewish portions of the New Testament. We had to reproduce
every line of the Gospel so we had more difcult constraints than Mel Gibson
took upon himself. One might have argued that the prejudice within the text
should be depicted as brutally as possible, thus showing up its faults to the
modern eye. I doubt that anyone would have perceived a tone so ironic and have
understood it. We picked a more modern lineto stay true to the text exactly
but to translate it as much as possible into a more modern sensibility.
At rst I was only concerned with Jn 8.44, which had been on my personal list
of difcult passages for some years. The entire advisory committee counseled
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great care to the director, the producer and the actors. The way they chose to
shoot it was indeed very clever and shows the artistry which creative people in
the lm industry can bring to such problems of interpretation. The acting and
the direction made the scene work. First, Jesus allows himself to get very angry
in the Jn 8.44 discourse, which gives a correct emotional context to the debate.
Jesus is not offering cold, otherworldly prophecy and curse against the Jewish
people, which would be catastrophic to understanding the meaning correctly.
Rather he gets angry at a specic group of Jewish detractors, speaks the difcult
lines in anger, and then calms down as he continues his discourse. Even the
disciples react with surprise and fear at the ferocity of Jesus angry words, as
well as react to the crowds hostile response. Then, as Jesus gradually recovers
his equanimity and continues the discourse, so do the crowd. The direction and
the acting are so believable that Jesus humanity comes through in a way that is
not prominent in the text, although not a word of the text was changed.
In fact, no one complained about this passage, though the lm was pre-
viewed quite openly by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). This process is
opposed to Mel Gibsons marketing strategy. He previewed the lm only with
audiences likely to be very friendly to it, and mostly organized by religiously
sponsored organizations. Where there is a will to defuse difcult passages, the
director and the actors can do a great deal to the text without changing a word of
it. Where there is defensiveness and hostility that is also communicated to the
lm-going public. Ostensibly, Gibson had more freedom to leave out objection-
able ancient material by taking the freedom to tell the story in the way he wanted.
But, in spite of that freedom, he added objectionable material. In the end he left
out the subtitle to Mt. 27.25, which appears in Aramaic in the lm. He also
left out a scene, previously scripted and shot, in which Caiaphas and Pilate make
the cross in the Temple courtyard, an impossible scene historically which comes
from the explicitly anti-Semitic visions of Anne Catherine Emmerich, a German
nun whose life spanned the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
Because of my participation on this VBI advisory committee, I had another
remarkable experience. I had a chance to answer questions from two test groups
of viewers: a group of committed Christians, including many evangelical and fun-
damentalists, and a group from the ADL of the Bnai Brith of Canada, who also
brought with them a group of friendly committed Christians. There could not
have been a greater contrast between the two readings of the lm. The committed
Christians, including those who attended with the ADL, were deeply moved by
the three-hour lm which narrated the Gospel of John, word by word. They said
that it was a unique attempt to see quite a different portrait of Jesus, though
some said that they missed some of the familiar stories of Jesus birth and the
conversion of Mary Magdalene. To show an unfamiliar but equally New Testa-
ment portrait of Jesus was exactly why the Advisory Committee wanted to do
the Gospel of John rst and the Gospel of Mark next. Both are authentic rst-
Segal A Review of Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ 201
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
century portraits of Jesus but very different from the standard Hollywood
portrait of Jesus on lm.
The second evening with the ADL was quite different. The Canadian ADL
was quite concerned about the lm and its anti-Judaism. Many called it anti-
Semitism. But the Christians who were invited by the ADL disagreed with their
hosts and openly and sensitively discussed their interests in the lm and their
perceptions of the Jewish participation in the passion. No one had taken Mel
Gibsons lm into account at that early date. I asked one person whether he had
read the Gospel of John and his answer was No. I already know how few Jews
actually ever read the New Testament and so how few could actually distinguish
between a lm depiction of the Gospel and the Gospel itself. I would submit that
he (and many of those who agreed with him) had not ever read the New Testa-
ment before and were reacting to the anti-Judaism in it, not necessarily to the
lm at all. What they called anti-Semitism I would call anti-Judaism, argu-
ments against the Jewish religion and Jews, which are present in the New Testa-
ment and were not eliminated by the lm. In effect, they were reecting a rst
contact with the New Testament by saying: Who are these New Testament nar-
rators and why are they saying such bad things about Jews? We would never say
such things in a religious document. And, indeed, while there is some invective
against Christians in rabbinic literature, one would have to be an advanced student
of the literature to nd it.
12
Because anti-Judaism is so commonplace in the New
Testament, I doubt that any Jew who saw the lm for the rst time would have
identied Jn 8.44 as closer to anti-Semitism in its depiction of Jews. Actually, I
think that the trial scenes in John, with Pilates constant denial of Jesus guilt,
were more worrisome to the audience than my theological red-ag at Jn 8.44.
The interesting thing about the discussion, since there were some committed
Christians in the showing before the ADL, was the way in which the two per-
spectives, representing two communities who had just watched the same lm,
explained themselves to the other. Though the readings of the lm were quite
different, the two communities did not speak past each other. They encountered
the other position with a great deal of sensitivity and mutual concern. This sug-
gests that instead of battling press accusations, the lm is better treated as an
occasion for inter-religious dialogue.
The ADL also mentioned the portrait of the Pharisees (whom they are used
to thinking of as wise men), as well as some of the dark costuming of the Jews
and their use of prayer shawls.
13
We were asked about the implements of Jewish
12. See, for example, Alan F. Segal, Two Powers in Heaven: Rabbinic Reports about
Christianity and Gnosticism (Leiden: Brill, 1975 [paperback, 2002]); James Parkes, The
Conict of the Church and the Synagogue (London: Soncino Press, 1934); R. Travers Herford,
Christianity in Talmud and Midrash (London: Williams & Norgate, 1903).
13. The costumes were actually brighter blue than they appear on-screen in that scene.
But I do not think it is unhistorical to dress Jews in black or blue. In point of fact, the Gospel
202 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
worship. We had, in fact, carefully researched the tallit, deeming that it was still
a regular outer garment in the rst century. Therefore, not only did the Jews
wear them all the time when an outer garment was appropriate, but Jesus and all
his disciples wore them as well. We also chose not to put everyone in caps, al-
though some people might need caps against the sun or wear them for other
reasons. We felt the evidence was that Jews still could dress bare-headed in the
rst century but that they might raise the tallit over their heads when concen-
trating in prayer. Thus, that is what all the Jews do in various scenes and that is
what Jesus does when he blesses the food at the feeding miracle in John. I was
absolutely in awe of Debra Hanson, the costume designer, who not only took our
recommendations to heart but also researched how to use vegetable dyes and
natural materials to get the most authentic effects and, with all that, designed
realistic-looking and wearable clothes for thousands of actors. Using believable
and authentic costumes from the period (as much as we can know) makes a very
big difference in the way the lm is perceived.
The point of describing this incident is to underline that ordinary Jews and
Christians will naturally read a Gospel story in different ways. The opportunity
of the new interest in Gospel lms is to use the differing reactions to increase
each communitys understanding of each other. It is crucially important for Jews
to know that American Christians do not normally read the story as a story about
the sinfulness of Jews, just as it is important for Christians to know that there
are aspects of the Gospel stories especially that Christians may pass over with
hardly a notice, which are deeply upsetting to Jews. It is a clear opportunity for
an inter-faith teaching moment. I believe that Bnai Brith especially missed an
important opportunity to exploit The Passion for this purpose. It is my impres-
sion that the American Jewish Committee (AJC) took a more positive stance in
this regard. Instead of condemning the lm, they put together a community
resource for inter-faith discussions focused on the lm.
14
They also counseled
communities to plan meetings together about it.
of John regularly vilies the Jews in Greek, while the translation we used often translated
Jews as Jewish leaders. As a result, the ADL concentrated on the depiction of the Pharisees,
whom they understood more positively than the lm depicted. On the other hand, Nicodemus is
depicted rather positively in the Gospel and the lm. And I do not believe that the ordinary
movie-going public would so readily connect the Pharisees with contemporary rabbinic Judaism.
14. The Department of Interreligious Affairs of the American Jewish Committee, chaired
by Rabbi A. James Ruden, Rabbi David Rosen and Dr David M. Elcott, published a resource
manual called The Passion, which included the Criteria for the Evaluation of Dramatizations
of the Passion and Nostra Aetate of Vatican 2. It also included articles by Mary Boys, Philip
Cunningham, Lawrence Frizzel and John T. Pawlikowski, all highly esteemed professors who
have concentrated on Jewish-Christian relations. It also includes a statement by Jewish Pro-
fessors Tikvah Frymer-Kensky, David Novak, Peter Ochs and Michael Signer.
Segal A Review of Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ 203
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
But let us look at the history of the production and marketing of The Pas-
sion. Mel Gibson picked a conservative Catholic script-writer and hired only a
single theological advisor, William Fulco, who is a very well-educated scholar
and Jesuit. But he sought out no Protestant or Jewish scholarly opinion for his
project. He did give the screenplay to an organization of American Bishops but
then back-tracked when the scholars to whom the document was given coun-
seled (privately) that some changes be made in the script. He was, by all reports,
enormously upset by the initial scholarly and Jewish reaction to the lm and so
sought to keep either of these groups from previewing the lm. He expressed this
upset in a particularly non-Christian way, by saying he wanted to roast Frank
Richs entrails on a slow re and kill his dog. This is not in the nest tradition of
Christian ethics and it was circumspect that he acknowledged his mistake and
apologized for the statement in his Diane Sawyer interview. It is probably fair to
say that Mel Gibson has exhibited difculties in anger management with regard
to the early reactions to his lm.
To be fair, he later also removed the scandalous scene of the High Priest and
Pilate making the cross in the Temple. And he removed the subtitles to Mt. 27.25,
where Caiaphas takes collective responsibility for the death of Jesus for all Jews.
I think that this showed good sense. Those scenes should not be reinserted into
the DVD, either in the lm itself or in the out-takes. However, as we have seen,
he certainly left in the nal cut of The Passion an enormous amount of anti-Jew-
ish invective that goes far beyond anything depicted in the New Testament. When
someone actually goes beyond the already polemical New Testament text, one
wonders what the motivation could be. The spirituality of the message that
Gibson wanted to express, that spirituality which I described at the beginning of
the essay, would have been helped not hurt by removing gratuitous anti-Jewish
scenes from the lm, as all contemporary Catholic leadership has agreed.
Even a brief look at the very number of additions that Gibson made to the
story shows how many of them give non-New Testament portraits of the exag-
gerated evil intentions of the Jews. They are virtually meditations on Mt. 27.25
and Jn 8.44, the two most questionable passages in the New Testament with
respect to the rise of anti-Semitism. One would think that a person with the free-
dom that Gibson took in designing his lm (it is not accurate to the Gospels at
all) would choose to move in the other direction; one would think that he would
attempt to defuse the passages; instead he chose to emphasize the two conceptions
again and again. One could humanely ask why he didnt simply leave these pas-
sages out, instead of meditating on them for so long on-screen. Whatever one
thinks of the text of the New Testament itself, I would think that in this day and
age such additions cannot be seen as anything other than anti-Semitism. That is
certainly what the American Bishops have been saying for some time.
204 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
I believe Gibson when he says that he has no personal animus towards
Jews.
15
I do not know whether Gibson is aware of the implications of the scenes
he has shot. It is hard to believe that the director would not question and inter-
rogate every line of the screenplay just in the process of bringing it to the screen.
It is even harder to believe that the screenwriter did not know what he was doing,
since he must have been consulting the New Testament text throughout.
At the very least, Gibson should have had better writers and better advice.
He would have been far better advised to seek broad scholarly help. By salary
standards in effect in Hollywood (and this is very much a Hollywood lm), New
Testament scholars work for buttons. It certainly would not have been expensive
for him to bring in scholarly advisors for the lm, without giving up any artistic
freedom as producer and director. So, in the end, as director and producer of the
lm, the moral responsibility must be his own. The problems with this lm
cannot be explained away merely as artistic freedom.
On the other hand, I am delighted that most audiences have not picked up on
the extremity of the anti-Semitic statements in the lm. It may be an effect
which is limited to people who know the New Testament pretty well, especially
in a critical and historical way. But I fear for the ways in which the images in
the lm enter peoples imagination. I think this lm will go down as a very
badly made, albeit popular lm, a curiosity and a further chapter in Americas
love affair with Jesus, fortied by a time of crisis of condence in American
Christianity. But I would want the anti-Semitic aspect of the lm to be duly
understood as a note of caution in future attempts to bring the inspirational story
of Jesus death and resurrection to the screen.
It is instructive to contrast the popular reaction to this lm with the earlier
lm, The Last Temptation of Christ, which was vilied by the press and many
religious organizations. That was a lm with many faults and many strong points.
First, it honestly pretended to be nothing more than the lm adaptation of the
novel of Nikos Kazantzakis. Second, it was clear from the beginning that the
gure on the cross was Jesus and that he would have to become the God whom
the New Testament worshiped. What it purported to be was a non-scriptural in-
quiry, an imagined temptation of Jesus to live an absolutely normal life and die
15. He said this in his interview with Diane Sawyer. In his article in Vanity Fair, March
2004, p. 204, Christopher Hitchens discounts Gibsons claim. In Hitchenss interview on
MSNBCs Scarborough Country, on 15 March 2004, he says that Gibson has gone most of the
way to anti-Semitism and accuses the lm of pandering to anti-feminism (Mary Magdalene is
depicted as the woman taken in adultery), and fascist brown-shirt homoeroticism as well. Even
more moderate critics are worried. Ed Koch, who was recently appointed by the Bush admini-
stration to represent the United States at the conference on anti-Semitism of the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe, has accused the lm of anti-Semitism because it
indicts all Jews for the actions of a few. See www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/3/24/
220251.shtml.
Segal A Review of Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ 205
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
like a normal man. So in some ways it was the exact converse of The Passion of
the Christ, a lm that depicted the life of Jesus in consciously ctional ways.
The outrage over Jesus marriage to Mary Magdalene was enormous, forgetting
that the lm was never propounded as a scriptural truth, merely a part of the
delirium of suffering on the cross and an example of what pleasures Jesus might
attain as a normal human being that he was giving up by seeking his divine
destiny. Caiaphas was, incidentally, depicted in a most realistic and unstereo-
typical way so it went further than almost any other New Testament lm adapta-
tion in destroying the stereotypes of Jewish haters of Jesus.
Ironically, the lm had a far higher Christology than the novel itself because
it left no doubt that this was the Christ of faith, where the novel is constantly
playing with the readers and the characters doubts about who this gure is. So
it was a kind of ironic inquiry of the temptation of a God to be merely a man,
quite an interesting subversion of a literary convention.
The lm also had a number of impressive faults. The culture it depicted as
rst-century Judea was, in fact, North African, quite exotic and interesting but
not the culture of Judea in the rst century. Possibly the lms artistic staff had
been lured into their own love affair with Berber culture by one of those im-
pressive vacations to Agadir. The acting was impressive; but in spite of the great
acting, the casting was so inappropriate that the actors could never fully realize
the roles they were given. Ironically, the lm was deeply misunderstood. It was
not only condemned as bad art, which would have been at least partly justied,
but also called un-Christian and picketed repeatedly by committed Christians
who did everything they could to prevent the lm from showing in theaters. It
did not seem to me to be anti-Christian because it is a deliberate fantasy, a
situation contrary to fact, and in the end, Jesus decides against the temptation to
live as an ordinary man and willingly takes his place upon the cross. In some
ways, by a converse argument, it was arguing the same case as The Passion. But
it investigated themes that were too provocative for the despisers of the lm.
In the end they were able not only to ensure that the lm failed nancially, but
also they effectively kept Scorsese from making any other biblical lms. In
effect, they themselves created the rule that the story of Jesus is sacrosanct and
should not be gured in lm by censoring anyone who did show any imaginative
artistic interest in the story.
The evangelical community has almost completely embraced The Passion,
partly because Mel Gibson himself appealed to them with the plea that the Gospel
(not his lm) was in danger. This brought forth a call for a new evangelical
crusade with the lm as a centerpiece of the campaign.
16
Partly this is a mock
battle because the evangelical community knew it could win it merely by going
16. See, for example, www.seekgod.ca/gibsoncomments.htm for some of the enthusiastic
response.
206 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
to the movies and maintaining that it is accurate to the scripture. The cost was
the credibility of the evangelists who until this point had at least been respected
as experts in scripture.
But whom are they battling? Ironically, critics of the Gibson lm have been
accused of trying to censor the lm, though I know of no cases of picketing and
no calls for censorship. Even the ADL has never even mentioned censorship; it
is against their core American values. They suggested some adjustments in the
script as a way to defuse the issues before the lm was shot. All that has
happened is that a small group of scholars and Jewish watchdog groups have
accused it of bias, a charge which seems to me richly deserved. Then the New
York and Los Angeles press panned it. But, as I noted earlier, if Gibson has the
right make it, everyone has the right to see it, and whoever sees it has the equal
right to evaluate it. Indeed, Gibson has benetted from the controversy and is
taking an unprecedented sum to the bank. Unfortunately, this may help nance
other violent lms on biblical topics. Gibson has been reported to be considering
lming the Maccabean Wars.
17
Anyone who has read 2 Maccabees 7 knows that
the torture discussed there in explicit detail goes far beyond anything which the
New Testament chooses to tell us. It is easy to see why this story would appeal
to Gibson but it will certainly not resolve the artistic problems with Gibsons
religious perspective.
Conclusion: The Historical Jesus as Antidote to the Hollywood Jesus
Mel Gibson has given us a passionate, yet pathetic, portrait of Jesus, though it
should be clear by now that he is not depicting any historical Jesus. He is
depicting the Christ of medieval church piety, not the historical Jesus, nor does
he much touch the Jesus that is portrayed in the Gospels. It must seem strange to
ordinary churchgoers that historians are now in the middle of the Third Quest
for the historical Jesus, as if the previous two quests have ended unsuccess-
fully, when Jesus seems so available on the screen and in the Gospels. But the
path chosen by this lm shows the need for real scholarly effort to nd the
historical Jesus. Many New Testament scholars have refrained from publishing
in the eld because it is so easily tainted by personal religious commitments. On
the other hand, practically everyone addresses the historical Jesus in the teach-
ing of undergraduate courses.
As historians of the rst century, we know that the portraits of Jesus in the
Gospels are products of later times while the earliest Christian writer, Paul,
hardly mentions Jesus because he did not know him in the esh. The rst two
17. Mel Gibson told this to Sean Hannity on his TV show on 17 March 2004.
Segal A Review of Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ 207
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
quests have not been failures; they have given us a Jesus who survives the
onslaught of the cultured despisers of Christianity and survives the charge that
Jesus never lived at all. But the indubitable facts of Jesus life, those that survive
the tests of the criterion of dissimilarity and the other hard tests for authenticity,
are few indeed. They are such things as the crucixion itself and quintessen-
tially, the inscription on the cross that Jesus was accused of being the King of
the Jews even though this is not what the church wanted to proclaim about him.
Crucixion itself was meant to be a death so insulting and demeaning as to end
all hope and respect for a political career for the gure or anyone who hoped to
follow him. So it would not have been invented by any theoretical group trying
to design a new religion. Paul himself tells us how difcult it is to preach about
a crucied messiah to either Jew or gentile. We preach a crucied messiah who
is a stumbling block to Jews and folly to gentiles (1 Cor. 1.23). The stumbling
block for Jews is that no one expected the messiah to be crucied; the folly for
gentiles is to give devotion to anyone who had been crucied. There is a his-
torical truth inherent in this complaint of Paul that does not survive to the depic-
tion of Jesus in the Gospels, which are all promulgated later.
We know that the New Testament lacks witnesses to the resurrection and
that paradoxically this tells us that they are not inventing the story, because
every self-respecting god of the rst century had a much more glorious end that
was witnessed by all the most important people. These things prove that there
was a Jesus, even from a literature we admit was written entirely by people
devoted to him and convinced that he was the most important person ever to
have lived and the basis of their salvation.
But it is hardly enough to construct a portrait of Jesus. From the hard cri-
teria, we know that Jesus was executed by the Romans as King of the Jews, by
which they intended to insult the Jewish nation. We may infer from this that
some Jews helped the Romans capture or execute Jesus. But that is by no means
certain. The whole trial tradition is enormously contradictory in the four Gospels,
full of inherently unlikely details, and impossible on the eve of a great Jewish
festival. The trial scene is also unlikely when read against Pilates reputation as
a cruel and merciless tyrant. Josephus reports that Pilate was removed from
ofce when the Romans realized how inammatory his policies had been.
On the other hand, one thing which has to be true is that Jesus must have
been believed by some Jews to be the long-awaited messiah, even before the
resurrection, otherwise the charge of being a pretender to the Jewish throne
would never have been brought. Which of his actions convinced people of this
fact is hard to sayhis teaching, his personal charisma, his overturning of the
money-changers in the Temple, his healings, his raising of the dead? All these
important aspects of Jesus life, the very things that give credibility to the pro-
clamation of his resurrection, are missing from Mel Gibsons The Passion. The
only thing that remains is the supposed opposition of Jews, which rightfully
208 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
surfaces only later, when the Christian community begins to preach that Judaism
is fullled by Christianity.
The most important thing about Jesus does not survive the criterion of
dissimilarity because it is too much like his environment. It is a simple fact and
must be true, though many Christians and Jews do not fully comprehend what it
means: Jesus must have been Jewish. I do not think that scholarship has com-
pletely assimilated this important fact or we would not have so much recent talk
about Jesus as a cynic philosopher. Whatever is meant, this Hellenistic vocabu-
lary used about Jesus is simply inappropriate. In effect, Jesus Jewishness sets
the bar for the criterion of dissimilarity. His Jewishness and his respect for his
people must be the criterion scholars use from the start to sort out the various
claims about the historical Jesus.
18
Jesus must have been, instead, an eschato-
logical prophet. I would suggest even more that he must have been an apocalyp-
ticist or we could not have so many statements about the impending end and
such a strong and important expectation in his resurrection. And he must have
been a person with enormous personal charisma and a teaching worthy of the
Jewish community he preached to and the world that awaited him. There is, of
course, room for argument.
Mel Gibson has given us a traditional portrait of the passion. He has
designed a modern passion play, where the words scarcely do more than title
each tableau scene. In it Jesus remains a cipher because we see none of his
teaching nor his actions. We see only his divine endurance of torture. This may
move Gibson and others but it is not what the New Testament tells us about
Jesus. Mel Gibson has given us his own personal Christ of faith, which can be
deepening to other people. The problem is that he keeps on telling us he is giving
us the Jesus of history. His personal Christ is decidedly later than the New
Testament and it is full of defensive and deleterious degradation of Jews and
Judaism. I think it is time for academics to help Hollywood to nd out who the
historical Jesus actually was and to argue that defensive anti-Judaism is beneath
the dignity of Christianity. The quest for the Historical Jesus will be a powerful
tool in that campaign.
18. See Charles W. Hedrick, When History and Faith Collide: Studying Jesus (Peabody,
MA: Hendricksen, 1999).
[JSHJ 2.2 (2004) 209-218]
ISSN 1476-8690
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004, The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX and 315 East
26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010, USA.
MIRROR, MIRROR, ON THE WALL:
A REVIEW OF MEL GIBSONS THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST
Rikk Watts
Regent College
Vancouver, BC, Canada
ABSTRACT
With its combination of icon and image, faith and history, this lm does not t the
usual genres. But when judged in terms of its own unique lmic canons, The
Passion of the Christ is a profound piece of cinematography, celebrating for the
unbeliever the triumph of humanity over an all-too-common brutality and for the
believer a powerful reminder that forgiveness and love of enemies lies at the very
centre of Christian faith.
Key Words: historical Jesus, Mel Gibson, The Passion of the Christ, violence,
anti-Semitism
In my thirty-three years of avid lm watching I cannot recall a production that
has so polarized critics, the viewing public, and academics while at the same time
smashing box-ofce records. One month into the release my search engine found
237 reviews with grades ranging from C to A+ and 1.5 to 5 stars. Apparently this
is one of those lms that exegetes its viewersincluding this revieweras much
as they it.
I have tried to keep two things in mind. In lm as in academia, the fair
approach is to judge a work on what the director sets out to do and not what the
reviewer would have done if he or she had made the lm. Second, I have tried to
watch The Passion in terms of its own canons and lmic grammar. Again as in
academia, genre is everything. Miss the genre, miss the movie.
Finally, I am writing from the perspective of a Christian who is a historian of
early Christianity and a long-time amateur art historian and lm critic who
frequently employs both art and lm in various teaching settings.
210 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
Artistry
At the outset the title is clear: The Passion of the Christ. This is not a life of
Christ, but as Mel Gibson has publicly stated, it is his interpretation, through the
lens of his Catholic tradition, of the sufferings of Christ in his last hours.
1
This
lm is not about why Jesus was crucied nor is it about his message. We get
ashbacks but only to underline the meaning of the Passion itself, not to ll in
the gaps. Neither is the lm about a materialist scholarly reconstruction of some
wandering Irish (pardon me), Cynic Jesus or a mild reforming rabbi. It is in-
stead, unashamedly, the last hours of the rejected Christ of Gibsons Catholic
reading of the Gospels. Likewise, viewers who look for a traditional unfolding
plot-line and character development will be disappointed. Critics who complain
on any of these points seem to me to be barking up the wrong tree.
The grammar of this lm is faith and icon, image and poetry (albeit heart-
breaking lament). Granted, this is not everyones cup of tea. But, at the risk of
being trivial, by the same token such folk should not expect their opinion to
count for much when it comes to tea-matters. Nor is it everyone elses experi-
ence of faith, but in a pluralistic society Gibson seems within his rights to expect
at least some tolerance. Consequently, I took some time to revisit the old Masters
such as Jan Gossaert, Georges de la Tour, Ridolfo Ghirlandaio, the Unknown
Umbrian, Mathis Grnwald, Morrazone and Giovanne DEnrico, Andrea
Mantegna, Juan Martinez Montanes, Fra Angelico, Michelangelo, Reubens,
Hans Holbein, Rogier van de Weyden, Lucas Cranack the Younger, the un-
known master of Htel Dieu, and so on.
2
The echoes of their work, whether
deliberate or not, were everywhere. This lm, technically brilliant and beautifully
shot, is a stunning piece of intertextual iconography deeply imbued with the
religious art of another age when a different grammar of the cosmos and of the
meaning of human existence prevailed. That viewers need to be prepared to
weave back and forth between reality and myth and symbol is made immedi-
ately obvious when, in an allusion to Genesis 3, a troubled but yet quietly
determined Jesus crushes the Satanic serpent underfoot in Gethsemane. This is
clearly not going to be your straightforward docudrama. I was reminded of the
rst time I saw Magnolia.
For example, Rosalinda Celentanos Satan is the most convincing and distur-
bingly alien ever committed to screen. Androgynous and devoid of emotion, it
glides effortlessly and surreally among the players, unnoticed by those around it
1. ABC Primetime Interview, 19 February 2004.
2. Examples of these works can found by a Google search or by visiting such sites as
www.artcyclopedia.com.
Watts A Review of Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ 211
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
even as they incarnate its evil. If emotion is a characteristic of humanityand
as I happen to think, based on the Jewish Scriptures emphasis on Gods com-
passion, also of Godthen here is the essence of evil: a vacuum of passionless,
languid and mocking malevolence. During the agellation, Satan faces Mary
across her shattered son, silently parodying her in the form of an anti-Madonna
nursing its own mutant but disturbingly mature spawn; no innocent here (cf. the
black-caped Madonna of the Unknown Umbrian).
3
Gibson confronts us with our
choice of incarnation and human destiny: the suffering forgiving Christ or the
unrelenting brutality embodied in a diseased humanity of a stupefyingly cruel
Roman execution squad. Later, when Mary, struggling with her emotions, rushes
to assist her fallen son, and in one of the numerous ashbacks Gibson employs
to relieve the tension, she recalls comforting him when he stumbled as a child,
gently rocking him in a poetic adumbration of a Michelangelo pieta.
Not all such moments work as well. The visit of the crow on the unrepentant
thief, while truly reecting the horrors of crucixion and perhaps intended to
recall Bruegels Triumph of Death, could be seen as needlessly vindictive. The
demonic children jar, but then perhaps that too is intended. Imaginative
offspring of Judas collapsing psyche, behind whom when they nally evaporate
after driving him into the wilderness is Satan, they stand in sharp contrast to the
innocents who surrounded Jesus: the children see where many adults do not.
Although originally regarded with considerable skepticism, the use of ancient
languages seems natural and appropriate; within a surprisingly short time one
hardly notices. Even so the lm conveys much of its power through the emotional
narrative written on the faces of Jesus, the two Marys (especially his mother),
and other characters. The key moments are when eyes lock in the silence. In this
respect, Jim Caviezels Christ is the best ever committed to lm. The internal
struggle, the unnerving restraint, the quiet dignity as he slowly pulls himself to
his feethow dare the victim refuse to lie down!provoking an outraged beat-
ing, and the refusal to answer blow with blow is both potent and never more
relevant. But this is no cheap machismo of the strong silent type. This is some-
thing Hollywood has not seen before. To steal someone elses thunder: a strength
made perfect in weakness. The tenderness and numbing pain captured by Maia
Morgensterns Mary powerfully expresses herand Gods?love for the son.
No Jesus lm has come close to capturing the mother-son bond so convincingly.
At the same time, it is an understatement to say the aptly-named Passion is
violent. And given the criticisms leveled at the lack of historical accuracy, it is
surprising how many of the same critics preferred to have their crucixion in a
more agreeable formwhat did they expect of a agellation? Still, the contrast
between iconography and overwhelming violence could hardly have been greater.
It was a risk but one that paid off. Obviously viewers will react differently, some
3. The Virgin and Child, c. 1260 (see www.nationalgallery.org.uk).
212 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
perhaps regarding it as anti-Christian, but again it is worth considering Gibsons
intention.
First of all, it appears that the Western churchs interest in the sufferings of
Christ largely emerged during the repeated horrors of the Black Death in the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Reecting on Christs sufferings helped them
through their own. Gibson himself conded that it was reecting on The Passion
that rescued him from his own downward spiral, and this lm is a statement of
that faith.
4
Admittedly, this is not my experience, but it seems uncharitable not
to allow the validity of his. Some have complained that the Gospels themselves
do not focus on the graphic violence. But they did not need to. Everyone in the
rst century knew what was involved. (I wondered if the sadism of the Roman
execution team was overplayed. But then it is hard to imagine how one could be
part of such a squad and not lose ones humanitywitness the recent events in
Iraqs prisons.)
Gibson also states that he intended to push his viewers over the edge. Ini-
tially disconcerting, on reection I think he is on to something. Violence, gratui-
tous or not, has become a staple of modern Western entertainment (e.g. Pulp
Fiction, Saving Private Ryan, Fight Club, Tears of the Sun, Kill Bill)and as
such denes the generation to whom The Passion is addressed. Gibson takes
that very violence and turns it into a weapon against our complacencyas with
our goodness we only like our evil in handy-sized lotsand amazingly uses it to
redeem us, or at least those it seems with eyes to see and ears to hear. This is the
only lm I know of where the wronged hero does not ride back into town to
wreak bloody Die Hard vengeance.
But is the vindictive brutality really necessary? As a UN peacekeeper, Cana-
dian Lieutenant-General Romeo Dallaire met with the individual widely
believed to have played a major role in the Rwanda genocide. Apparently not a
religious man at the time, he described the palpable sense of evil as shaking
hands with the devil. On Canadian television as I write this review I see a jour-
nalist confront a man, living in Canada apparently with our governments knowl-
edge, who had machine-gunned fourteen women and children in Kosovo. His
friend treated the whole thing as a joke.
Gibson, I think, understands the ugly realities of our world better than many
of his critics (his publicist is a child of Holocaust survivors).
5
Here is a Christ
whose story can be told uninchingly in Rwanda and in Kosovo. We might not
nd it palatable. But then need it be stated that crucixions were not either?
Whether one is religious or not, The Passion is a story about the titanic and
brutally no-holds-barred struggle between humanity and inhumanity. Here un-
varnished and raw evil is met, and our hope of humanity underlined, by one
4. ABC Primetime Interview, 19 February 2004.
5. ABC Primetime Interview, 19 February 2004.
Watts A Review of Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ 213
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
mans refusal to retaliate. In the end Rome, having spent its passion, is met only
by unrelenting forgiveness. It is hard to imagine a more Christian message.
Historical Accuracy
But what about questions of historicity which have so exercised some as to
produce long lists of sins? There are indeed numbers of historical inaccuracies,
large and small, and several scenes not found in the gospels. To note such things
is appropriate scholarly activity. But before reviewers get too over-wrought it
should be remembered that this is Gibsons interpretation through the lens of his
Catholic tradition. Furthermore, Gibson is a lm-maker and neither an historian
nor a scholar setting out on a documentary. It ought not take a great deal of wit
to realize that his claim to historical accuracy must be understood within his l-
mic horizons, not those of the academic guild. One gets the impression from some
scholars reviews, however, that even as they reject what they see as his overkill
they have themselves indulged, not a little self-righteously, in exactly that.
So of course at numerous points Gibsons vision of Christ fails to do obei-
sance to various versions of the historical Jesus. But given that scholars them-
selves do not agree on the historical Jesus it seems a little unfair to blame Gibson
because his vision offends this or that school of interpretation. And lm is about
nothing if not interpretationframing of shots, angles, light, color, sequence
and tracking, are all hermeneutical lters and all make lm far less real than
most people appreciate, especially in a well-crafted work. As one self-professed
unbelieving lm critic reputedly quipped: For Gods sake, shut up and watch
the movie. I might not have put it that way but for Gods sake indeed.
Consequently, I was not particularly worried about hair length, that the nails
went through Jesus hands (cf. Grnwalds searing altarpiece),
6
that Jesus cross
is carried in its entirety, that the earthquake splits the Temple, that it should
have been Greek not Latin, that the several trials are compressed into one and
mislocated, or that various scenes are added (a useful technique when you are
trying to maintain interest in a story which substantial numbers of the viewers
know forwards and backwards). Most of these items are either trivial or help
sustain larger themes. Even something as realistic as Michelangelos breath-
taking Pieta has a Mary who in reality would dwarf the Jesus she cradles (at
least one noted Jesus scholar ought to be thrilled that Jesus cross is as big as it
is). Bare historical fact, absent the emotion of active human participation,
would not only look ridiculously unreal it would be misleading. People make
icons for this reason. And lms in general, and this one in particular, are nothing
if not iconic.
6. Grnwald can be found at www.artrenewal.org/asp/database/art.asp?aid=265.
214 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
Genuine history is about much more than brute facts. It is about bringing to
life what those facts mean. The really interesting questions concern meaning,
passion and human response. And while plodding prose can appeal to our rea-
son, lm with its combination of narrative, (iconic) image, and music excels at
engaging the emotions, and thus our ethical reection and formation.
7
But at the
same time I cannot think of a single historical movie that does not at various
points engage in fairly free lmic creativityit is simply unavoidable. And given
Hollywoods track record with historical dramas, The Passion for all its histori-
cal lapses could still be the most historically accurate lm of its kind, which, ad-
mittedly, may or may not be saying all that much depending on ones point of
view.
As to Gibsons liberties with the gospel accountsodd complaints coming
from folk whose own scholarship often makes very free with sameif the Lord
of the Rings, with its far more serious departures, can win an Oscar for best adap-
tation, then The Passion must be almost a certainty.
Anti-Semitism
Charges of anti-Semitism are another matter. Is the lm anti-Semitic? As a
Jewish commentator I overheard a few weeks ago noted, anti-Semitism is a very
big word which must be used carefully.
8
And like all such big words it can be
devalued when inappropriately applied. If presuppositionless exegesis is im-
possible, it is surely not surprising that many Jewish audiences recoil in horror,
while many evangelicals and Catholics see only their own culpability. But Jew-
ish commentators are themselves divided with even Abraham Foxman, director
of the ADL, performing an abrupt about-face when he stated emphatically on
public television that neither this lm nor Mel Gibson were anti-Semitic (adding
that he nevertheless felt the lm was potentially so).
9
A Jewish group in Aus-
tralia agreed, as did a French judge, describing charges of anti-Semitism as a
narrow viewing of the lm.
10
So what then is actually on the screen? There are lots of Jews and Romans,
but, not surprisingly, no Christians. Yes, we have a handful of venal leaders
7. E.g. Martha C. Nussbaum, Upheavals of Thought: The Intelligence of Emotions
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001).
8. Cf. the remarks of David Elcott, American Jewish Committee, Calling someone an
anti-Semite is a serious indictment, evoking the Holocaust and genocide. Before I use that term
I have to be quite sure it applies. In Passion Fears Seen Unwarranted, Jewish Week, 23
January 2004.
9. ABC Primetime Interview, 19 February 2004.
10. Herald-Sun, PM Defends Passion, 9 February 2004, web edition; and BBC news,
World Edition, 29 March 2004, web edition.
Watts A Review of Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ 215
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
though a few voice their outrage at the shamdressed in odd clothing in almost
iconic characterization and who wish to hang on to their privileges. But even
they are nally appalled at the Roman brutality. The crowd that calls for Jesus
death is surprisingly small as far as Hollywood epics are concerned. In terms of
what the lm actually shows, we have then a small group of leaders, supported
by a smallish crowd and opposed by other Jewish leaders and various indivi-
duals, in one part of Jerusalem at one particular moment in Israels long history.
And it must be noted that the genuinely just and compassionate people in the
movie are also Jewish as is the victim: Jews are both heroes and villains. The
point is, the lm itself simply does not accuse all Jews for all time of Jesus
deaththat identication is brought in from outside (and those who do have the
ability to hear the untranslated Aramaic shouts of the crowd hopefully have
enough sense to realize that a small frenzied crowd, regardless of their heat of
the moment remarks, do not in fact speak for anyone but themselves).
In terms of history, is anyone seriously suggesting that the then leadership of
Israel were merely innocent pawns wanting only the best for this homespun
rabbi but who were cruelly outwitted and manipulated by the nasty Romans?
Does anyone really think that the powerful Jewish aristocrats of the day were
deeply committed to the welfare of their people, and hence their manifold
kindnesses in distributing their wealth among the masses and protesting Roman
injustices? It would do well to remember E. Mary Smallwoods pertinent obser-
vations that these people came to power under the auspices of the Herods and
Romans in a world where power and brutality were only a disturbances breath
apart.
11
Nor did they recoil from collaboration or illegality when it suited, for
example Ananus execution of James (Josephus, Ant. 20.200).
12
Furthermore, the only Jewish materials of which I am aware that deal with
issues of responsibility are unanimous and unashamedly open in ascribing the
leading role to the then Jewish leadership in Jesus death (Josephus, Ant.
18.64,
13
an early baraita in b. Sanh. 43a, in spite of revisionist attempts to prove
otherwise, and much later Maimonides in his Mishneh Torah, Hil. Mel. 11.4
uncensored, and Epistle to Yemen).
14
Given that among the diversity of details
11. E. Mary Smallwood, The Jews under Roman Rule: From Pompey to Diocletian
(Leiden: Brill, 2001).
12. Cf. Emil Schrer, The History of the Jewish People in the Age of Jesus Christ (175
BCAD 135) (rev. ed. Geza Vermes et al.; Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 197387), I, pp. 468-69, and
his comments on the collaboration of Ananus.
13. This text, minus Christian interpolations, is authentic according to the majority view.
But see now the important, if not quite conclusive, questions raised by K. Olson, Eusebius and
the Testimonium Flavianum, CBQ 61 (1995), pp. 302-322.
14. D. Catchpole, The Trial of Jesus: A Study in the Gospels and Jewish Historiography
from 1770 to the Present Day (Leiden: Brill, 1971) traces the rst denial of such to 1866, cited
in R.E. Brown, The Death of the Messiah (New York: Doubleday, 1994), I, p. 377.
216 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
about Jesus in the various Jewish traditions that have come down to us is the
near-unanimous consensus that he was a magician who deceived the people, one
can understand why they condemned him. But again this is hardly to blame all
Jews everywhere. The tragedy is that by continuing to identify all Jews with the
worst Jewish elements on screen and denouncing the lm for indicting the entire
Jewish people, certain critics ironically run the risk of perpetuating the very
stereotype they reject.
Others complain that Pilate was a harsh and brutal man and that Gibson (and
the Gospels?) whitewash him. While Pilate was no doubt brutal, Josephus,
hardly his friend, nevertheless tells of an occasion when, confronted by a crowd
willing to risk their lives, Pilate was deeply moved (qauma/ sij) and sufciently
so to relent (Ant. 18.59; cf. u(perqauma/sij, War 2.174). He is obviously more
than the one-dimensional ogre that some critics, doing exactly what they
criticize in Gibson, propose. Furthermore, we have no evidence that his brutality
played any particular role in Jesus execution. But is it so unlikely that this cyni-
cal and jaded man knew through his spies that Jesus was not really a preacher of
sedition, and might have been mildly intrigued in meeting him? Or, that he
engaged in his trademark brinkmanship, offering to release Jesus and intention-
ally provoking the Jewish embassy simply because he did not like these people
and here was a chance to shame them?
But then they called his bluff by upping the ante and rather than face an
embarrassing back-down by reversing his decision, he callously washes his
hands to save face. It is not unlikely, based on the various indications from
Josephus and Philo,
15
that he enjoyed the irony in that this probably upset Jesus
accusers as well: at least he got something back at them. I propose that this is not
improbable, and perhaps it is even likely based on what we know about Pilate
from elsewhere. Christians, understandably, would seize on Pilates actions. But
can we blame them?
My point here is simply to suggest that Gibsons (and the Gospels) version
of events is not quite the hopelessly contradictory picture some condently
declare. People are complex and can behave foolishly and maliciously when
under pressure.
Nevertheless, it would be obtuse to deny that there is a larger historical con-
text in which passion plays were used to stir up anti-Semitism (though according
to Rodney Stark this is not as straightforward as is often supposed, in that, for
example, bishops frequently put their own lives at risk to protect Jewish people).
16
I genuinely understand why some people react the way they do. But reaction
must be tempered with reason. And on this issue the facts are that the three-
century history of philo-Semitic American Christianity could not be in greater
15. Cf. Josephus, Ant. 18.55, 64, 87-89; War 2.169-75; Philo, Leg. Gai. 38.299-305.
16. Rodney Stark, One True God (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001), pp. 124-72.
Watts A Review of Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ 217
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
contrast to the anti-Semitism of Europeand all the while reading the Gospels
passion narratives. To saddle this lm with the sins of European passion plays
centuries past is, as Rabbi Daniel Lappin pointed out, not only ungrateful but
unjust, committing the very sin of which Gibson is accused.
17
Perhaps though the most embarrassing thing in all of this has been the rheto-
ric, some of it frankly ugly and brutal, to which some including Jesus scholars
have unbecomingly descended. Criticism is fair enough. But I wonder if those
who have mercilessly ogged and mocked Gibson realize the glaringly obvious
irony? Or how much their reviews tell us about themselves as people? One
really does wonder what motivates a professor of liberal studies to link the lm
with sadomasochistic male narcissism in a culture of blackshirt and brown-
shirt pseudomasculinity including massively repressed homoerotic fantasies, a
camp interest in military uniforms, an obsession with ogging and a hatred of
silky and effeminate Jews.
18
Whatever happened to scholarly objectivity and a
willingness to hear the other point of view, to give the other the benet of the
doubt? Not much evidence of charity here. Are we taking ourselves too seri-
ously? Hell hath no fury as a scholar scorned. I suspect though, as Robert Manne,
Professor of Politics at LaTrobe University Melbourne suggests, that Gibsons
primary fault is that he betrayed the guild by daring to bring his traditional
Catholic version of Jesus out of the Life of Brian ghetto where more enlightened
minds had thought to banish it.
19
Conclusion
This is a lm that does not t standard genre expectations and as such requires
that its viewers be prepared to let the director direct. In seeking to do so I found
this a truly extraordinary lm, unlike anything I have seen in over three decades.
I know of no other that reects back at the viewer what he or she brings to it. I
say this without being judgmental. Bring Braveheart and Mad Max and it is not
hard to imagine what one will take away. Or, like a friend of mine, bring a
notepad and spend half the time squinting in the half-light in order to jot down
historical discrepancies and Well, you get the picture (even if my friend did
not). I suppose, appropriately enough, it is not unlike Jesus parable of the soils.
Second, one of the not unexpected side-effects of applying scientic method
to history is that it tends to atten everything out. Science by its very nature is
17. Daniel Lappin, Protesting Gibsons Passion Lacks Moral Legitimacy, WorldNetDaily,
22 September 2003, web edition.
18. Christopher Hitchens, Schlock, Yes; Awe, No; Fascism, Probably: The Flogging Mel
Gibson Demands, MSN, 27 February 2004.
19. Robert Manne, An Ancient Wound, The Melbourne Age, 7 March 2004, web edition.
218 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
concerned with the run of the mill, the mundane, and the expected. That is why
it is very good at articulating general laws of nature. But that is also its great
weakness since matter does not have a will or a sense of its own personhood
and intentionality. It is not surprising then that secular scientic scholarship
ends up with a slightly above average Jesus who is not very remarkable at all.
Hence, tellingly, the truly creative and discontinuous genius behind Christianity
is per force to be found elsewherenot least in the imaginations of unnamed
and ghostly artistes among earlyChristians? This lm, focusing as it does on
the personal and the human in all our rich and devastating complexity, does not
make that mistake.
Taken on its own terms, this is unquestionably the most powerful piece of
cinematography I have seen in a long time, if ever. It is not watched. It is experi-
enced. Not unlike its subject, the more I read the reviews, the more I think it
reveals the secrets of the heart.
[JSHJ 2.2 (2004) 219-223]
ISSN 1476-8690
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004, The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX and 315 East
26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010, USA.
BEING DISPASSIONATE ABOUT THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST:
A RESPONSE TO RIKK WATTSS REVIEW
Alan F. Segal
Barnard College, Columbia University
New York, NY, USA
ABSTRACT
Rikk Watts can catalogue his enjoyment of the film, The Passion, which has had
mass appeal. But Mel Gibsons unhistorical additions reveal a disturbing willing-
ness to use repugnant anti-Semitic subtexts as well as violence to elicit movie-
goers emotions. While Gibson may claim that it expresses his faith, the film
seems less about art and personal faith than about what Hollywood does best
making money by sacrificing artistic integrity.
Key Words: historical Jesus, Mel Gibson, The Passion of the Christ, violence,
anti-Semitism
I want to thank Rikk Watts for his review and, in advance, for his comments on
mine. He states his assumptions for reviewing The Passion as: to evaluate it
only on what the lm-maker sets out to do. While this sounds fair at rst blush,
it actually privileges a lot of information in a variant of the genetic fallacy. It
ignores obvious contexts and pretends that we can know more than we do. It
assumes that the lm-makers (there are always many voices present in the lm)
know and have truthfully and fully articulated what they want to do and that
their lm actually does only that. It also assumes that there is no movie-goer
with an independent mind, nor any social context. And lastly, it assumes that the
critic is both privy to all this information and is free from any unstated biases
himself. It is rather like saying that everyone else sees himself or herself in the
mirror but the reviewer casts no reection. In this case, it is particularly difcult
to say what the lm-makers want to do since they say quite contradictory things
about it without any knowledge that the aims are in conict. Mel Gibson, for
example, has stated that he wants to do his own lm and his own take on the
story, but that he is accurate to the Gospels, he has used Sr. Emmerich to help
220 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
him, and that the lm is accurate not only to the Gospels but to the events
themselves.
1
In my review, I acknowledge what no one has deniednamely, that it has
certainly been popular at the box ofce, obviously because a lot of people like
it. To note that bus loads of lm-goers have been organized by many churches is
only to say that it is being treated not just as a lm but as a religious depiction of
New Testament faith. To say so is to say that the piety in the lm has touched
many North Americans. It has certainly affected this years Easter celebration
where a great many more demonstrative Good Friday processions have been
spotted parading on the streets. A panel of journalists and scholars on Charlie
Roses interview show on Good Friday 9 April 2004, including Elaine Pagels as
the New Testament and early Church scholar, pointed out the new importance of
atonement theology in this years Easter celebrations. All the interviewers felt
that atonement theology is, historically, a medieval Christian innovation and all
felt that contemporary interest is due to the success of the lm.
Thats the good news. The bad news is that what these movie-going pilgrims
see is neither historical nor true to the Gospels. Polls show that the perception
that the Jews are responsible for the death of Jesus is up from 19 to 24 percent.
2
The lm has now opened worldwide. In Arab countries and in Muslim commu-
nities around the world, the reviews are running hotly anti-Semitic. Aljazeerah,
for example, has used the lm to maintain that the organized Zionists have at-
tempted to label true Christianity as terrorism. John Anast, the editorials author,
further indicts all Jews (whom they call by the cipher Yahdah, the Arabic word
for Judah) for the crime of deicide, stating that modern Jews are descended from
Gomer, not Abraham.
3
A lot of this is just posturing but the intent is clear enough
and the occasion for the remarks is clearly the anti-Semitic subtext to the lm.
Watts shows his enthusiasm for the lm by comparing it with a variety of
medieval European painters and sculptors. The lm-makers only cite Caravaggio.
The connection with the other Old Masters is in Wattss mind, not the lm-
makers, so this small case shows that his positive evaluation goes way beyond
anything intended by the lm-makers. I think there is nothing wrong with appre-
ciating them but one should remember even in some of the old masters, many
anti-Semitic images went uncriticized. It is one thing to appreciate Grnwald in
his own time, and another to forget the social context that produced him is very
different from our own.
1. See The Making of the Passionand the Diane Sawyer interview.
2. This from CNN on Easter Sunday, 11 April 2004. It is conrmed by Beliefnet.com.
What the numbers suggest is not entirely clear. Among those who see the lm, the highest
change on this scale may be those who already reported that the crucixion was the Jews
fault. But the perception is up among all groups measured.
3. See Mel Gibson and Anti-Christism, by John Anast for Aljazeerah in English, 1
March 2004. The Arabic editorials will, if this follows suit, be even more ferocious.
Segal A Response to Rikk Wattss Review of Passion of the Christ 221
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
I am a bit more distressed by Wattss caricature of historical Jesus research:
Neither is the lm about a materialist scholarly reconstruction of some wander-
ing Irish (pardon me), Cynic Jesus or a mild reforming rabbi.
4
I also note the
term materialist, which seems to imply that secular humanism cannot
appreciate either the lm or the truth about Jesus. With Watts, I do not think
Jesus is a Cynic philosopher or a mild, reforming rabbi. But there is something
to be learned from taking these scholarly portraits of Jesus seriously as paradigms.
My point would be that the screenwriter, the director and the producer of The
Passion never bothered to do their homework. The lm-makers were trying for
historical accuracy, accuracy to the Gospels and artistic freedom. That is not pos-
sible; scholars know that. Mel Gibson would have produced a better lm had he
consulted more scholars.
Watts likes the violence; he thinks it speaks to contemporary Western culture.
I do not. Its partly a matter of taste, I guess. But I do not think that violence is
identical to reality. If the violence is more than would kill a person several
times over, then violence is being used like realism, a kind of artistic style, not
a depiction of historical reality. It is not there to summon the ancient world.
Who is to say that our world is not just as violent? Gibson uses violence for just
about every purpose in all his lms. He seems just to like it in whatever form it
comes. Furthermore, we should not live in the ancient world or justify violence
or anti-Semitism as appropriate to the historical past, therefore acceptable.
Violence is like sentimentality. Sentimentality is always an attempt to kidnap
the emotions of the movie-goer and it seems to me that this supererogatory vio-
lence warrants the same verdict. I think it is egregious in a Christian context and
particularly egregious when the normal self-appointed watchdogs against vio-
lence wholeheartedly endorse this lm and think the violence is ne. If you asked
me which recent lms really portray Christian commitment on lm, I would say
Jesus of Montreal, The Gospel of John, Priest, even The Barbarian Invasions. I
think all of them do a better job than The Passion, which seems to me to be a
pretty stock offering, not very Christian in its use of caricature and violence and
more like the other, conventional lms Mel Gibson himself likes to make. It has
much more in common with Braveheart, The Patriot and Conspiracy Theory
than it does with the Gospels.
Perhaps the point is easier to make with regard to the anti-Judaism of the
Gospels. Because the Gospels say some unfair things about Jews when Christians
were a small, oppressed minority does not justify depicting the polemic graphi-
cally when Jews are a small oppressed minority living among Christians. Nor is
4. Without a better footnote (17) it is hard to tell: Is Watts suggesting that Christopher
Hitchens, the outspoken and very militantly atheist columnist for Vanity Fair, is a professor of
liberal studies? Or, is this another example of sarcasm used against a controversial journalist
by calling him a liberal professor? Or vice versa? Actually I think its too great a compliment.
222 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
North American so free of anti-Semitism or Europe so intolerant that this con-
text can be ignored. Gibson is very defensive on this point. Though he starts by
taking the freedom to cut most of the Gospel, he defends inclusion of questionable
scenes by saying: Thats what the Bible says, as if all of a sudden he is unfor-
tunately constrained from his already claimed freedom to cut and add. He said
this several times on the media, including in his interview with Diane Sawyer.
Other people may give Gibson a pass on this misrepresentation. I would submit
that scholars, who are the only ones who easily can note the difculties in mak-
ing the Gospels into history and in bringing the Gospels to the screen, have a
special responsibility to point out what the historical issues are.
The anti-Judaism of the lm is exactly analogous. Of course, ones denition
of the term makes a difference and I claried what I mean by it. The point about
anti-Semitism is best seen by what Gibson adds to the New Testament story.
The majority of Gibsons additions to the Gospel are explicitly anti-Jewish.
Little Jewish boys change into demons and change back. That is an image which
will stick with millions of lm-goers. His dualistic and anti-Semitic costuming
and visual caricatures make the distinction between Jews and Christians even
more obvious. He is not lming the death of a Jewish revolutionary at the hands
of the Romans; he is lming the death of a Christian at the hands of the Jews.
Watts observes that even though Gibson is not interested in historicity, it is
present in the lm. I doubt that a disinterested study of the passages he brings up
would actually demonstrate this point. When Watts justies The Passion as
good history by reference to the testimoniumavianum, Maimonides, and San-
hedrin 43, he does not represent a scholarly consensus. Great as Maimondes
may be, he is not an authority on modern use of historical sources. (Why would
one even bring him up, except as a kind of polemical ourish?) It would be
unwise to make Josephus testimonium avianum, likely a complete Christian
gloss, carry the kind of weight which Watts needs.
Similarly, Sanhedrin 43 is no independent witness to the events in the life of
Jesus; no one has seriously thought so for a very long time. One would be hard
pressed to come up with a positive picture of Pilate from Josephus, no matter
what he may say about any particular incident in Pilates sorry career. Philo also
adds to the clear description of Pilates villainy. The source for the positive
description of Pilate is from Catholic piety, not Josephus, not Philo. The positive
description of Pilate is a message about the power of the Gospel. In fact, medie-
val Christianity exonerated not just Pilate but Rome in toto. Only Jews and Mus-
lims were beyond redemption. Muslims were real enemies of Christendom. But
Jews became the eternal, supernatural, demonic enemy principally for one reason
alonethey doubted that Jesus was divine. While that is the depiction which
Jews receive, principally in the Gospel of John, none of it is historical to the
time of Jesus and it is inconsistent with a modern multicultural plural nation
state.
Segal A Response to Rikk Wattss Review of Passion of the Christ 223
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
There are times in his review when Watts seems not to be defending the lm
but defending his faith. But no one has impugned his faith. I, for one, am im-
pugning the lm and Gibsons direction and production of it; I admit that my
judgment has something to do with the moral seriousness I have been led to
expect has been characteristic of the Christian faith in my experience. Watts
says that critics are ogging Mel Gibson in the way the Romans ogged Jesus.
This is a bit too rhetorical for my taste. Gibson is the one doing the ogging. He
as director chose to have Jesus ogged for what seemed like an eternity. And he
as producer chose to og his lm by capitalizing on other peoples discomfort
with his efforts. The only real innovation in the lm is that Gibson has discov-
ered that peoples religious emotions are just as exploitable as their desire for
violence, sex and sentimentality. There is nothing wrong with making money.
The problem is that Hollywood is renowned for sacricing quality to do it. I
submit this lm is no exception.
I think we should also eschew articially forced and essentialized choices:
secular or religious, humanism or faith, Christian or Jew. A lm can exploit
both a legitimate religious spirituality and still remain anti-Semitic. These are all
subtle issues which demand to be treated with scholarly disinterest and serious-
ness. The world of scholarship is lled with people who understand that scholars
can have different religions, that they can be humanists and faithful at the same
time; that they can be Catholic and add to Protestant scholarship, that they can
be Christian and study Judaism, that they can be Jewish and study Christianity.
We all have subtle and complicated lessons to learn from each other. The rhetoric
of sermons and forced choices where the middle ground is removed is certainly
misplaced in a scholarly journal. Very few things in scholarship are questions of
either/or. To make them seem that way is to turn scholarship into a test of faith.
But perhaps that is where the mirror reects back most on Watts himself.
[JSHJ 2.2 (2004) 224-229]
ISSN 1476-8690
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004, The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX and 315 East
26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010, USA.
A MATTER OF HORIZONS, THE PASSION THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS:
A RESPONSE TO ALAN F. SEGALS REVIEW
Rikk Watts
Regent College
Vancouver, BC, Canada
ABSTRACT
While historical accuracy, the levels of violence and potential anti-Semitism are
valid concerns of Alan Segal, The Passion needs also to seen as a testimony to one
mans Christian faith that is explicitly designed to engender a visceral response,
and which unashamedly and openly engages in iconic artistry, symbol and inter-
pretation.
Key Words: historical Jesus, Mel Gibson, The Passion of the Christ, violence,
anti-Semitism
I would like to thank Alan Segal for his review and the opportunity to interact
with him in this way. It has been a challenge and a learning experience. Not
unexpectedly given the polarization among professional reviewers, Alan and I
obviously have different perceptions of the lm, most of which appear to me to
result from our very different understandings of the nature of lm in general and
The Passion in particular, and of the relationship between art, theology and
history.
To begin, Alans treatment of artistic merit consists largely of a discussion of
violence. This is a pity since the music, pacing, framing, staging, composition of
shots and, more importantly, imagery, the intertextual iconography and the merg-
ing of reality and symbolism reect Gibsons skill. Alan is right: there is con-
siderable emotional depth to this lm, but unlike him I think it is earned rather
than the result of manipulation. Unfortunately, Alan seems either to miss or mis-
understand many signicant aspects of The Passion as art, which Jack Valenti,
president of the Motion Picture Association of America, praises so highly.
I share Alans concerns over violence in lm in general and I can understand
why he found The Passion distasteful. Nevertheless, I submit that the issue is
more complex and the level of sophistication and the variation of responses
Watts A Matter of Horizons 225
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
among viewing audiences more diverse than is suggested by a simple com-
parison with action/adventure movies and an easy association with American,
single male 17-30 year olds. Gibsons own experience taught him that pain is a
precursor to change, hence his effort to portray Christs sufferings. My conver-
sations with various viewers revealed some profound reactions, but which were
quite different to those noted by Alan. A number of young men, including some
from Asia, found here a powerful alternative to Die Hard vengeancesomething
from which various parties in the Middle East could learn. An older Australian
woman, who rarely views lm and nds almost all violence distasteful, was so
moved that she and a friend went a second time because she was convinced that
the lms richness would repay another viewing. A young European woman
saw Jesus example as ennobling. Entitled to his view, Alan feels the violence is
supererogatory. But there are tens of thousands who do not, including many
who do not t the summarily dismissed American lm-going public, and I am
not convinced it is because they are hormonally, morally or artistically decient.
To characterize The Passion as an action/adventure passion play [about] a
tough guy Jesus who can take it and macho-man meets medieval passion
play is to get carried away by wondrously malapropic rhetoric. To reiterate, a
comparison with Magnolia would be closer to the mark. But then we have very
different understandings of lm. Alan seems pleased that The Gospel of John
retained every word of that gospel. While I appreciate the sentiment (we make
lms of Shakespeare, though at least he was writing for the stage), I think it
betrays a misunderstanding of the signicant differences between text and lm
(hence the premise of the movie Adaptation), and is one reason why The Gospel
of John has received generally poor reviews.
In terms of historicity, Alan views The Passion primarily through scholarly
lenses. As important as scholarship is (and let me emphasize it lest Alan also
misunderstand what I mean), I think this misconstrues the lm. Gibson and his
publicists might be partly to blame for the mixed messagesis it historically
authentic or a personal interpretation viewed through the Stations of the Cross?
But, as the lm demonstrates, it is a creative and unique synthesis of both. From
the outset, the camerawork, slow-motion action sequence, and evidently unhis-
torical yet theologically insightful crushing of the serpent fairly telegraph that
this is not straight history, Aramaic and Latin notwithstanding. It seems odd
that Alan criticizes Gibson for using Aramaic since it might mislead the public
into thinking that his lm is historical, but then celebrates the efforts at authen-
ticity put into The Gospel of John, which adheres unswervingly to a document
that he also regards as theological art and largely unhistorical. (In respect of the
agellation, which Alan felt extreme, Australian convicts survived 100, 200 and
even 300 lashes with a cat o nine tails and as far as I know none because he
was the Son of God.)
226 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
Of the lm people I know, no one had any trouble appreciating the creative
interplay of these elements that Gibson, a lm professional, assumes. As Alan
early recognizes, Catholic spirituality plays a signicant role. But since the
Stations of the Cross are about profound personal participation and emotional,
even visceral, engagement (hence the art to which I earlier referred), I should
have thought it apparent that in order for Gibson to bring this emotional impact
to the screen he would need to employ impressionist (in the best sense) artistic
license and imagination. Aristotle knew the limits of logic and the visionary
reasons for rhetoric. Likewise faith, especially one that has changed ones life, is
not about historical neutrality.
Consequently, anyone even slightly familiar with the Gospels and, when it
comes to the morphing of the children and the anti-Madonna and child scene,
even those who are not, must nd it evident that all kinds of extra non-histori-
cal and non-naturalistic scenes have been added. In other words, what Gibson
means by following the Gospels is quite obviouslyis anyone in the slightest
doubt?different from what many scholars mean. Clearly, the question is no
longer authenticity but instead what the director intends by these numerous
insertions and alterations. And as Alan himself admits, these variations are not
really the issue. The reason he concentrates on them is because he thinks they
are largely anti-Jewish (see below).
Could Gibson have done things better? Probably. But unfortunately some of
Alans perhaps more pertinent observations are obscured by not distinguishing
between serious and minor discrepancies. This is not helped when, although
emphasizing Gibsons remarks concerning authenticity (as well as in a less than
attering moment invoking a one-off obviously frustrated remark in order to
justify an ad hominem charge that Gibson has little appreciation for the Bible),
Alan inexplicably fails to mention that Gibson has also clearly stated that The
Passion is his interpretation even when contained in the sources he references.
This seems to me to be a classic case of people talking past one another.
Alan might think I am whitewashing Gibson. I am instead trying to understand
him. I appreciate the lengths to which The Gospel of John team went, and per-
haps Gibson could learn from this kind of attention to historical detail. But these
lms represent two quite different genres, and failing to recognize this is to com-
pare apples and oranges. To make The Passion more like The Gospel of John so
completely misses the point that one nds it difcult to respond.
But if Alan is not a lm-maker, neither is Gibson a scholar. He is a man who
struggles with his own limitations and short-comings as he readily admits. It
was important for me to hear not just what Gibson said but, given that he is not
trained in scholarly precision, to understand what he meant (what Bernard
Lonergan calls a reconstructive rather than polemicizing hermeneutic). But then
it is Alans decision as to how much slack he is willing to cut. Even so to claim
Watts A Matter of Horizons 227
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
that The Passion is not accurate to the Gospels at all is the kind of overstate-
ment one expects of a film-maker, not a scholar, and certainly not one of Alans
stature.
Anti-semitism is Alans biggest concern, but he rightly recognizes that well-
informed Jewish commentators differ on this point. In other words, this issue,
like that of violence, is not straightforward. Even with all the hard work invested
in the John project, responses were polarized. But when the issue is whether
Jesus was truly Israels Messiah, it is hardly surprising that feelings run high. If
he was not, then I understand perfectly why Israels then-leadership would want
to be rid of him (I am also well aware of the debate surrounding the ancient
materials I cited, but I included them to make the point that as far as I know
Jewish sources are united, without exception, in having the Jewish authorities of
the day take primary responsibility for Jesus deathand given their understand-
ing, why not?). Alternatively, if Jesus really was Israels Messiah, then from a
purely Jewish perspective, to reject him would be far more serious than a long
history of rejecting the prophets. A neutral discussion, therefore, seems possible
only among those who have no particular commitment either to Israels messi-
anic hope or to Jesus. To expect it of those who have built their lives around
such commitments is tantamount to asking them to deny their faiths. Both Alan
and I hope that this does not boil over into prejudice and hatred. And as far as I
can see, Gibson has never behaved in such ways. On a personal note, I trust
Alan might be encouraged in that when I saw the agellation I found myself
declaring that never again would there be another Holocaustof Jews, or any
others. My point is that this is a complex lm evoking complex responses. We
must be sensitive to both realities.
So to return to Gibsons additions: is Alans blanket characterization fair? I
think not. For example, the demonization of the children is not a comment on
Jewish offspring but on Judas psychological disintegration. He has rejected
Jesus who was accepted by children, and now theyno longer innocent children
but demonsbecome Judas accusers. Hence when they at last disappearthey
are indeed gments of Judas devolving imaginationhe nds himself alone in
the desert confronted by Satanan obvious reversal of Jesus who began by
defeating Satan in the desert and whom children later afrmed. To see this as
anti-Semitic suggests a serious deciency in lm exegesis. Nor is the opening
Why is this night unlike other nights? anti-Jewish. It is foundational to the
Gospels theology: Jesus passion inaugurates Israels long-awaited new exodus.
The question is an entirely appropriate thematic introduction. Likewise, the
charge that Gibson is anti-feministmost reviewers are agreed that his Satan is
androgynousis to mistake a partial metaphor of the seductiveness of evil for
an attack on women (and this in spite of the very positive presentations of the
two Marys, Pilates wife and Veronica).
228 Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
Alan is right to note that the soldiers who arrest Jesus are Jewish, as are his
accusers and the children who mock Judas. But who else should they be? Never-
theless, The Passion is not about Jews versus Christians. It is an iconic lm
about fallen humanity, good versus evil. As they tend to be in all iconic lms,
the bad guys are painted in high relief. Alan sees this as an attack on Jews and
Jewishness, and he is not alone. But as even he recognizes, the vast majority of
Christians, and many others including atheists, who have seen this lm agree:
The Passion is about the injustice of humanity in general, and for Christians,
their sin in particular. This concurs with Gibsons repeated personal confession
of the complicity of us all. When a directors explicit aims and the perception of
the vast majority of his audience converge, I submit that this constitutes strong
evidence of successful communication. And as yet I am unaware of any out-
breaks of anti-Semitism, though at least two perpetrators of other criminal
actsmurder and arsonhave come forward to confess.
1
It is telling then that Alan expresses his delight that most audiences have not
picked up on the extremity of the anti-Semitic statements in the lm. Precisely.
But might it not be because the extreme statements he perceives are simply not
there as far as either the director or most audiences are concerned? In my view,
Alan has misread the overall genre, mistaking symbolism for reality and the
general for the particular. The chief priests are so portrayed because they are
venal and self-interested, not because of their ethnicity. I agree then with the
long-time and respected movie critic and Jewish commentator Michael Medved
and others assessment of the charges of anti-Semitism in that I think Alans
response is a considerable and in the long run unfortunate over-reaction.
In this respect, there seems to be an underlying assumption throughout
Alans piece that I found troubling. Namely, that Gibsons faith could only be
acceptable provided it passed muster with representatives of the Jewish commu-
nity. This I realize is an explosive issue. Let me be very clear that I in no way
tolerate anti-Semitism (it is a pity one has to say so). But there is something in-
quisitorial about this attitude. And here again Alans review seems one-sided.
He details what he sees as Gibsons failures to dialogue and engage, but fails to
mention the denunciations, malice, use of an unauthorized script, broken pledges,
and so on that emerged from Jewish quarters, which respected Jewish commen-
tators such as Michael Medved and Rabbi Daniel Lappin have vigorously pro-
tested. In a similarly one-sided vein, Alan cites Gibsons angry response to Frank
Rich but fails to detail either the extremely provocative circumstances (Rich had
just denounced Gibsons publicist, who is a child of Holocaust survivors, as a
holocaust denier defender) or Gibsons own admission on that issue. What I
nd confusing is that, while Alan seems to expect that Gibson show sensitivity
1. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/lm/3570555.stm and http://news.bbc.co.uk/
2/hi/europe/3579835.stm.
Watts A Matter of Horizons 229
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
to Jewish concerns, he seems unwilling to extend the same considerations to
Gibson.
Alan concludes with an appeal based on his vision of the historical Jesus.
But here too scholarly opinions differ. It seems to me that a sea-change is occur-
ring in New Testament studies. People such as N.T. Wright make a very able
case for a signicantly alternate vision based on different assumptions. In my
view Alan is still operating with an older and problematic philosophy of history,
an inadequate model of human ontology, and criteria whose shortcomings are
well documented. But this response is not about approaches to historical Jesus
studies.
Overall, Alans opinions differ considerably from my own. I think he has
seriously misunderstood this lm and I think I can understand why. He is rightly
concerned about historical accuracy, critical of violence in lm, and sensitive to
potential anti-Semitism. The Passion, on the other hand, is a testimony to one
mans faith, is explicitly designed to engender a visceral response, and un-
ashamedly and openly puts iconic artistry, symbol and interpretation ahead of
historical precision though nowhere near the extent Alan suggests. Unless one
puts oneself in the directors shoes, a collision is unavoidable. As Alan himself
explains, he went to see the film thinking primarily about extreme violence and
anti-Semitism and that, if his review is an accurate indicator, is what he saw.
[JSHJ 2.2 (2004) 230-231]
ISSN 1476-8690
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004, The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX and 315 East
26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010, USA.
BOOK LIST
Books on the Historical Jesus
AUVINEN, Ville, Jesus Teaching on Prayer (bo: bo Akademi University Press, 2003),
pb, viii + 311 pp. ISBN 951-765-148-1.
This dissertation from the bo Akademi University under the guidance of Karl-Gustav Sandelin
is an examination of Jesus teaching on prayer. After a methodological introduction, the work
sets the context of prayer in the Hebrew Bible, in Early Judaism and in Early Rabbinic Judaism.
Jesus sayings concerning prayer are analyzed according to four sources: Q, Mark, Matthews
special material and Lukes special material. Auvinen concludes that Jesus teaching on prayer,
while rooted in his Jewish heritage does reveal some distinctive emphases, including his lack of
concern for the outer conditions of prayer and his emphasis on the prayer address of Father
which was one of the most marginal Jewish prayer addresses. The social signicance of Jesus
teaching on prayer is that it was a means of coping with the everyday anguish for the poor,
Galilean people (p. 250). This helpful discussion could have been strengthened by an analysis
of the texts describing Jesus own practice of prayer.
RLW
Hoover, Roy W. (ed.), Proles of Jesus (Santa Rosa, CA: Polebridge Press, 2002), pb, viii +
256 pp. ISBN 0-944344-94-1. $20.00.
Upon concluding the second phase (the acts of Jesus), the Jesus Seminar turned to exploring
the results of their work. Having now established what they considered to be probably historical
artifacts, various Seminar members reconstructed proles of Jesus based upon their readings
of the evidence. Some of the essays explore the implications of the results of the Jesus Seminar
for reconstructing the historical Jesus, while other essays describe various Seminar-produced
proles. The essays include: Robert W. Funk, Jesus: A Voice Print; James M. Robinson,
What Jesus Had to Say; Bernard Brandon Scott, The Reappearance of Parables; Roy W.
Hoover, The Jesus of History: A Vision of the Good Life; Charles W. Hedrick, Jesus of
Nazareth: A Prole under Construction; Arthur J. Dewey, Jesus as a Peasant Artisan; Mahlon
H. Smith, Israels Prodigal Son: Reections in Reimaging Jesus; Lane C. McGaughy, The
Search for the Historical Jesus: Why Start with the Sayings?; Marcus J. Borg, Jesus: A
Sketch; Kathleen E. Corley, Gender and Class in the Teaching of Jesus: A Prole; John
Dominic Crossan, Jesus as a Mediterranean Jewish Peasant; Hal Taussig, Jesus in the Com-
pany of Sages; Stephen J. Patterson, Dirt, Shame, and Sin in the Expendable Company of
Jesus; and Robert T. Fortna, The Gospel of John and the Historical Jesus. This is a helpful
Book List 231
The Continuum Publishing Group Ltd 2004.
collection of essays for those who wish to understand rst-hand the implications of the work of
the Jesus Seminar.
RLW
Wright, N.T., The Resurrection of the Son of God. III. Christian Origins and the Question of
God (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2003), pb, xxii + 817 pp. ISBN 0-8006-2681-8. $39.00.
This third contribution to Wrights multi-volume project is actually the completion of volume
two, Jesus and the Victory of God, where due to space limitations the subject of Jesus
resurrection could not be considered. This additional volume is now the longest of the three
thus far. Wright begins (ch. 1) by laying the methodological groundwork for a discussion of
resurrection and history, which to many would be mutually exclusive categories, but not for
Wright. The discussion of the issue itself then proceeds like a spiral, starting at the outer limits
of the subject and spiraling ever closer to the actual discussion of Jesus resurrection. Wright
begins by life beyond death in ancient paganism, the Old Testament, and post-biblical Judaism
(chs. 2-4). Spiraling closer, Wright turns to discussing resurrection in the writings of Paul,
outside of the Corinthian correspondence and then focuses in on these letters (ch. 57). He
includes a chapter on Pauls own experience of seeing Jesus (ch. 8). The non-Pauline literature
is then explored by Wright, including the rest of the New Testament as well as a signicant
number of non-canonical, early Christian texts (chs. 911). The treatment thus far is then
summarized in terms of the early Christian views concerning Jesus resurrection. With almost
600 pages of material setting the stage, Wright now turns to the story of Easter itself, rst the
general issues and then taking each canonical story in turn, from Mark through John (chs. 13
17). Wrights conclusion is twofold: the bodily resurrection of Jesus is a necessary condition
(p. 717) to explain the subsequent events (ch. 18), and the implication for this in terms of
understanding the risen Jesus as the Son of God (ch. 19). This exhaustive treatment of the
subject will become a standard for decades to come, but its Achilles heel for many readers will
be the methodological underpinnings that blend history and theology.
RLW
Books on Subjects Related to the Historical Jesus
McCane, Byreon R., Roll Back the Stone: Death and Burial in the World of Jesus (Harrisburg,
PA: Trinity Press International, 2003), pb, viii + 163 pp. ISBN 1-56338-402-7. $20.00.
This study examines the rituals surrounding death and burial rituals practiced by Jews and
Christians in ancient Palestine. The discussion incorporates not only ancient textual evidence; it
also includes archaeological evidence combined with anthropological and sociological insights.
Discussions include burial in shame as a context for exploring the burial of Jesus. There is also
a chapter discussing the James ossuary. This otherwise helpful book is marred by the unfortunate
practice of placing notes at the end of each chapter rather than at the foot of the page.
RLW
RLW = Robert L. Webb
Guidelines for Contributors to JSHJ
Editorial correspondence should be sent to Robert L. Webb, executive editor of JSHJ, at the
address posted on the journals website: www.continuumjournals.com/JSHJ (correspondence
concerning subscriptions or other matters should be sent to the appropriate person identified on
the same website).
The editors of JSHJ will consider essays on a variety of themes. For a description of the
Journal and its themes, consult the introductory essay, Robert L. Webb, On Finding a Home
for Historical Jesus Discussion: An Invitation to the Journal for the Study of the Historical
Jesus, JSHJ 1.1 (2003), pp. 3-5. This article is available to be downloaded from the journals
website.
The following guidelines must be followed before the essay can be accepted for evaluation:
Prepare the document in Microsoft Word format. If using another word processor,
convert the final file into Rich Text Format (RTF).
Identify yourself under the title by your name, academic affiliation, city,
state/province, and country. Follow this with an abstract (100-150 words) and key
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Use the correct form and style for abbreviations, punctuation, headings, tables, etc.
The Style Guide may be downloaded from: www.continuumjournals.com/JSHJ, select
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Use the traditional referencing style for footnotes (not the social-sciences form), and
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Ensure the English is grammatical, idiomatic and gender-inclusive.
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(usually in parentheses).
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Ancient language fonts must be the Scholars Press fonts available free at: www.sbl-
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Provide copyright permissions for illustrations and other materials supplied.
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Send one printed copy and one electronic copy (either on disk or CD-Rom, or by e-
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Please note:
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