Chris to Log and History 1

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  • 8/7/2019 Chris to Log and History 1

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    Christology

    By Hans Schwarz

    Grand Tapids, Eerdmans, 1998. 325 pp. $25.00

    Jesus as a Figure in History: How Modern Historians View the Man from Galilee

    By Mark Allan Powell Louisville, Westminster John Knox, 1998. 238 pp. $24.95.

    New Testament Christology By Frank J. Matera

    Louisville, Westminster John Knox, 1999. 307 pp. $26.95.

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    Christology: Key Readings in Christian Thought Matthew's Narrative Christology: Three Stories Anointed Son: A Trinitarian Spirit Christology, The The humanity of Christ; christology in Karl Barth's Church dogmatics Jesus of Galilee and the crucified people: the contextual Christology of Jon...

    Wherever Jesus matters, there too is christology, be it explicit or hidden, for its task is to say whyhe matters. This generic understanding of christology applies also to those portrayals of Jesusthat are determined to rescue him from christology, for they assume that because he matters heought to be emancipated from Christian doctrine. Christology, in other words, accounts for theassumed or avowed significance of this particular Jew. Because "Jesus" is not the name of aChrist figure but of a historical person, christology is forever intertwined with history;conversely, asserting the significance of his history and accounting for it implicates some formof christology, whether conceded grudgingly or confessed gratefully.

    Until the modern era, it was taken for granted generally that Jesus' own history and christologywere of a piece, like two sides of the same sheet of paper. For the past two centuries, however,this symbiotic relation between the Jesus of history and the Christ of faith has been put on thedefensive. As a result, it has become widely accepted that "the real Jesus," the Jesus of history,differed-sometimes drastically-from the confessed Jesus Christ. Today it is no longer debatedwhether the Jesus of history differed from the Christ of Christian christology, including the JesusChrist of the Gospels; the debates are about the extent and nature of the differences, and theirimpact on christology.

    Of the three books under review here, it is Schwarz's Christology-a concise yet comprehensiverestatement of classical christology from preexistence to parousia-that addresses the role ofhistory in christology. Accordingly, Schwarz first surveys the "Search of the Historical Jesus,"then summarizes "The History of Jesus" himself before briefly discussing the New Testamentand four eras in the history of christology (the ancient, the medieval, the Reformation, and themodern). Schwarz insists that today the starting point of christology must be both "the words and

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    deeds of the historic person of Jesus of Nazareth," whose place in Judaism must be takenseriously even if "the Jewish Jesus stays on the human level and does not mediate God" but"only gives a different interpretation of the law."

    Schwarz is quite aware of what starting with the Jesus of history entails. It entails first of all

    accepting unreservedly the efforts to reconstruct the Jesus of history on the basis of historicalcriticism: "We should not be afraid to delve into the `quagmire' of historical critical research orfear that in doing so we become dependent on the ever-shifting results of New Testamentexegesis." It also entails understanding what historical criticism can and cannot do: "By its verypresuppositions historical research can never show us that Jesus was the Christ or , . . the historicmanifestation of the divine Logos." What it can show is "the human person of Jesus insofar asthis person is still traceable." But what finally matters is whether, as a result, the identification ofthe Logos with Jesus "is even permissible" (emphasis added). Thereby, Schwarz implies thatwhile this research cannot demonstrate the truth of christology, it can disallow christology'sclaims if the disparity between it and the reconstructed Jesus is too great.

    Schwarz, however, is not as free of dependence on the results of critical research as he implies,for he goes on to say that the minimal permissibility cannot rely on "supposedly unique eventssuch as the virgin birth, miracles or Christ's resurrection" because historians can point to parallelbeliefs about other persons. Nor does christology's validity depend on demonstrating Jesus' useof messianic titles for himself, though Schwarz thinks it "very probable" that Jesus understoodhimself as the Son of Man and the Isaianic Suffering Servant. Nonetheless, he contends thatbeginning with the Jesus of history requires continuity between "Jesus' own selfunderstandingand intentionality . . . and the church's christology;" otherwise even a dogmatically correctchristology will be docetic. Yet this requisite continuity does depend on what is only "veryprobable."

    Not surprisingly, he faults structuralist, narrative, and reader-response ways of reading theGospels for not establishing "the connection between the Jesus of history and the resultantkerygma," but welcomes the once "new quest" inaugurated by Kasemann four decades agobecause it addressed the continuity issue. Schwarz's survey of Jesus' life and teaching identifieselements of the needed continuity, for example, the apocalyptic Son of Man sayings, Jesus'altering "the relationship of the people to the Law itself," and especially his "I am" in response tothe high priest's question, "Are you the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed One?" (Mark 14:61-62;altered by Matthew and Luke!). According to Schwarz, here Jesus "actually did act in God'splace" by using the revelational formula ego eimi, and so verbalized the self understanding thathad shaped his whole mission. But in conceding that the passage may well have been "carefullyedited," Schwarz again grants that the requisite historical continuity between Jesus andchristology depends on the results of historical criticism that are by no means secure.