Back on
June 3, 2016 I got involved in a thread published by Paul Williams under the
title, Catholic
Truth Society fails to answer its own question. My participation began with this
post.
The
next day, Paul Williams asked: "Where does Jesus say he is equal to
God?" (link).
I
responded with:
The Gospel of John is perhaps the
most complex and deepest work in the NT. An important aspect of that complexity
is the contrast between a number of passages which clearly speak of the
subordination of the Son to the Father, with those which imply equality.
I then provided passages from the
Gospel of John which illustrate the contrast mentioned above—i.e. subordination
and equality—(link).
This led to Paul's subsequent
denigration of the Gospel of John, invoking two liberal New Testament scholars
(Raymond Brown and James Dunn)—and a couple days later, his own book, Jesus as Western Scholars
See Him—for support.
The rest of this post will focus
on the reliability of the Gospel of John. As I mentioned earlier, Paul brought
into the discussion two liberal New Testament scholars: Dr./Fr. Raymond Brown
and Dr. James Dunn. I published the following concerning Raymond Brown back on
June 6 (correcting some typos):
Being a former Jehovah's
Witness (4th generation) who utilized liberal scholarship to attack Christian
orthodoxy, I am quite familiar with the works of such scholars as Brown,
Collins, Dunn, Kung, Wiles, et al. The shelves of my library contain dozens of
their books, which I began purchasing and reading back in the late-70s. For
instance, I have Raymond E. Brown's The Birth of the Messiah,
The Death of the Messiah (2 vols.), An
Introduction to the New Testament, Gospel According
to John (2 vols.), The Epistles of John,
The Churches the Apostles Left Behind, Antioch
& Rome, Peter in the New
Testament, The Virginal Conception & Bodily
Resurrection of Jesus, Biblical Exegesis & Church
Doctrine, Responses to 101 Questions on the Bible and Priest and Bishop.
Unfortunately, I do not have his The Community of the Beloved
Disciple, so I cannot comment its content. But, I suspect that
there is little in this more popular work of his which does not appear in his
larger works; as such, I am fairly confident that what I am about to share will
not conflict with its content.
Dr. Brown was somewhat of an
enigma; on the one hand, he fully embraced liberal Biblical scholarship (i.e.
the historical-critical method), while on the other, he retained personal
belief in many of the doctrines that most higher critical scholars reject (e.g.
Trinity, bodily resurrection of Jesus, virgin birth of Jesus; as well as the
Immaculate Conception, Perpetual Virginity and Assumption of Mary). As such, I
rarely used Brown when I was a JW.
As for his higher-critical works
on the New Testament, they are, to be brutally honest, in the end, based on
highly subjective theories. What I find particularly interesting is that much
of his higher-critical work has received formidable criticism/s from both
conservative and liberal scholars. The breadth, depth and complexity of the
higher-critical method/s is so massive, it would be folly to attempt delve into
the topic in any detail within the confines of a combox. ( link)
Brown's acceptance of higher-criticism
concerning the Bible did not affect his view of the Gospel of John as
authoritative Scripture, his belief in the divinity of Jesus and the doctrine
of the Trinity. Since Paul denies that the Gospel of John is Scripture, as well
as the divinity of Jesus, and the doctrine of the Trinity, I shall let him deal
with the why Dr. Brown continued to embrace these important doctrines.
Moving on to James Dunn, I shall
start with what Paul published:
‘On the question of the
historical value of John’s Gospel there is probably one of the biggest gulfs
between New Testament scholarship and the ‘man in the pew’. In preaching and
devotional Bible study the assumption is regularly made that all four Gospels
are straightforward historical sources for information about what Jesus did or
said. Whereas scholars have almost always found themselves pushed to the
conclusion that John’s Gospel reflects much more of the early churches’
understanding of Jesus than of Jesus’ own self-understanding. There is
Christian interpretation in the other three Gospels, as we have seen, but in
John’s gospel there is much more of it. Again, evangelical or apologetic
assertions regarding the claims of Christ will often quote the claims made by
Jesus himself (in the Gospel of John) with the alternatives posed, ‘Mad, bad or
God’, without allowing that there may be a further alternative (viz. Christian
claims about Jesus rather than Jesus’ claims about himself). Or again,
ecumenical pronouncements will frequently cite Jesus’ prayer, ‘that they may
all be one’ (John 17:21), without ever raising the question as to whether the
prayer was formulated by Jesus himself or at a later date.’
‘How then are we to understand
John’s Gospel? The issue here is obviously a peculiarly sensitive one. And the
answer to it will have wide repercussions on our use of John’s Gospel at all
these different levels (preaching, evangelism, etc). It is important therefore
that the Christian community at large should recognize how scholars see John’s
Gospel and why they see it that way. That is our task here.’
As with Raymond Brown, James Dunn
is an enigma to me, for like Brown he has retained the views that Scripture is
authorative, as well as the full divinity of Christ, and the doctrine of the
Trinity. (See THIS
INTERVIEW for his perspectives on these issues.)
Though
Dunn himself claims that he has retained some important elements of
'orthodoxy', his numerous works have certainly given ample ammunition to those
who have not done the same. For instance, I myself retained my 'Arian'
(Homoian) theology for a good 4-5 years longer than I would have if I had not
come under the influence of liberal theologians like James Dunn and Maurice
Wiles. But I digress—time to get back to what Dunn wrote. I will be using his
book—referenced by Paul—The
Evidence for Jesus. After presenting, "three possible
explanations for the rather striking contrasts between the Synoptic Gospels and
John's Gospel (p. 35), he summarizes that:
...the Jesus of John is not to be
identified in a complete way with the Jesus who meets us in the Synoptics. The
Jesus of John is also Jesus as he was increasingly seen to be, as the
understanding of who Jesus was deepened through the decades of the first
century. John's Gospel, we may say, is intended to present the truth
about Jesus, but not by means of a strictly historical portrayal. The Synoptic
Gospels, if you like, are more like a portrait of Jesus; John's Gospel is more
like an impressionist painting of Jesus. Both present the real Jesus, but in
different ways. (Page 43 - italics in the original; bold emphasis mine.)
He goes on to write:
Such utterances as "I am the
light of the world' (John 8.12) and 'I and the Father are one' (John 10.30)
bear testimony to John's experience of Jesus (during his life and since),
Jesus' witness to himself through the Spirit, as John would no doubt want to
claim (John 15.26; 16.12-15), rather than Jesus' witness to himself while on
earth – the truth of Jesus in retrospect rather than as expressed by
Jesus at the time.
But that is not the complete
answer. For the same evidence shows that this teaching was not invented
by John. It is rather an enlargement of an element which was already present
in Jesus' teaching from the beginning. It was important for John that
the Spirit was revealing to them 'many things' Jesus had not said to them while
on earth, many things which glorified Jesus (John 16.12, 14). But it was also
what Jesus had said while he was still with them (John 14.25-26). It is likely
then that the expanded teaching of Jesus about his divine sonship is just that,
expanded teaching of Jesus. Or to put it more precisely, it is likely that this
element of Jesus' discourses too has firm roots in the earliest memory of what
Jesus had said while with his first disciples. As in other cases the discourses
seem to have grown round particular sayings of Jesus which we know of also from
the Synoptics (p.38), so here Jesus' teaching on his divine sonship in John has
probably grown round the memory of things Jesus actually did say on the subject.
(Pages 44, 45.)
And a bit later, he states:
Although John's Gospel is a well
developed portrayal of Jesus' claims to divine sonship, that claim is in fact
rooted in Jesus' own ministry, and particularly in his prayer address to God as
'Abba', Jesus, we may say with confidence, thought of himself as God's son and
encourages his disciples to share his own intimate relationship with God as his
son. (Page 49.)
In the next chapter of the book,
"Beliefs about the Resurrection", he includes a section titled: The
very high estimate of Jesus which soon became established in Christian faith. From
this section we read:
Here the data focuses on the
striking fact that within a few years the first Christians were speaking about Jesus in divine terms.
The most outspoken testimony comes from John's Gospel. It begins by speaking of
'the Word' which/who was in the beginning with God and was God, through
which/who 'all things were made' , and which/who became flesh in Jesus Christ
(John 1.1-3, 14). The prologue to the Gospel ends by calling Jesus 'the only
son', or 'the only-begotten God' (John 1.18); there are different readings in
the Greek manuscripts, but the latter is more likely. In the same vein the Gospel reaches its climax in the adoring confession of Thomas, 'My
Lord and my God!' (John 20.28). In addition we may simply recall the very high
view of Jesus presented by John the Evangelist (above chapter 2). The
probability that this is a developed view (chapter 2) is of no consequence
here. It is the fact of such development within seventy years of Jesus'
ministry which is so striking. (Page 61.)
So, despite the use of unproven
higher-critical methods/theories, James Dunn still arrives at some very
important conclusions shared by conservative New Testament scholars: first, the
Gospels (including John) are authoritative; second, Jesus claimed to be the
divine Son of God; third, Jesus' claims about himself and his relationship to
God, led his disciples to conclude that he was in a very real sense God.
With the above in mind, I would
like to suggest to Paul that he rethink his use of James Dunn.
Grace and peace,
Very good David!
ReplyDeleteI also have found both James Dunn and Raymond Brown difficult to understand, because they seem to tear down the truth of the Scriptures, yet at the same time hold on to some basic semblance of the doctrines of the Creeds. Seems like typical liberals of applying the Hegelian dialectic of history to the development of doctrine, and hold on the later dogmas of early creeds, but destroy the basis of them in the Scriptures by their higher critical methods.
Here is an article I wrote on some material that I found about James Dunn and the quotes from him seem to me to show he does not really believe in the virgin birth of Jesus. If he doesn't, how can he still hold to the Deity of Christ or the Trinity? (without the virgin birth, there is not Deity of Christ, and without the Deity of Christ, there is no doctrine of the Trinity.)
Any thoughts on that?
https://apologeticsandagape.wordpress.com/2012/04/07/liberal-pastors-and-liberal-scholars-and-muslims-using-them-3-2/
Hi Ken,
ReplyDeleteSo good hear you liked my post.
The following, is from your comment/post:
==Here is an article I wrote on some material that I found about James Dunn and the quotes from him seem to me to show he does not really believe in the virgin birth of Jesus.==
Thanks for the link to your article. I went to page 193 of Memories of Jesus, which was quoted in your article, and must say, that Charles Quarles has misread Dunn. I own Dunn's Jesus Remembered, and was quite surprised to find that page 66 is a blank page! I was able to locate the footnote quoted by Quarles, it is on page 347, not 66. Immediately after quoting the footnote, Quarles writes:
>>Dunn does not clearly indicate whether he concur's with Peacocke's statement.>>
That is technically correct, but it is somewhat misleading given what Dunn wrote on the same page of the note quoted:
>>What the core tradition affirms (Matthew and Luke) is that Jesus' birth was special — 'from the Holy Spirit' (Matt. 1.20), by the power of the Holy Spirit (Luke 1.35). That of itself need not imply a virginal conception, but a virginal conception could well have been an elaboration of the basic affirmation, especially when Isa. 7.14 was brought into play. More to the point, the association of conception and birth from the Spirit with divine sonship (explicit in Luke, implicit in Matthew) strikes a cord which resonates with the beginning of Jesus' mission (see below § 11.5) and fundamental motif in earliest Christianity.>> (Pages 347-348.)
Contra Quarles, it sure seems to me that Dunn does not deny the virgin birth.
Will try to do some more research into this issue tomorrow, the Lord willing. If I find anything in Dunn's writings which clearly indicate that he denies the virgin birth, I will let you know.
Grace and peace,
David
I own Dunn's Jesus Remembered, and was quite surprised to find that page 66 is a blank page! I was able to locate the footnote quoted by Quarles, it is on page 347, not 66.
ReplyDeleteYou are right! I got Jesus Remembered electronically, later than when I wrote this article and have now found what you say to be true.
Immediately after quoting the footnote, Quarles writes:
>>Dunn does not clearly indicate whether he concur's with Peacocke's statement.>>
But I did find the way that Dunn reports on Peacocke's statement in footnote 48 on page 347 seems like he agrees with it;
“For Jesus to be fully human he had, for both biological and theological reasons, to have a human father as well as a human mother and the weight of the historical evidence strongly indicates that this was so – and that it was probably Joseph. Any theology for a scientific age which is concerned with the significance of Jesus of Nazareth now has to start at this point.”
that, combined with this:
That of itself need not imply a virginal conception, but a virginal conception could well have been an elaboration of the basic affirmation, especially when Isa. 7.14 was brought into play. More to the point, the association of conception and birth from the Spirit with divine sonship (explicit in Luke, implicit in Matthew) strikes a cord which resonates with the beginning of Jesus' mission (see below § 11.5) and fundamental motif in earliest Christianity.>> (Pages 347-348.)
makes it seem like he is trying to hard to "have his cake and eat it" (what Geza Vermes accused Raymond Brown also of doing).
It seems like hiding behind careful and extremely nuanced language, in order to hide his liberalism from those that hold to orthodoxy.
What does he mean "the beginning of Jesus' mission" (Baptism? Gospel of Mark ? Mark 1:1 "the beginning of the gospel . . . " ?)and what does "strikes a cord which resonates with" mean?
this kind of ambiguity and extreme nuance is frustrating to me; because in sermons in the liberal United Methodist Church I attended, I could "smell" the liberalism, but could not nail it down until I went to the pastor's office privately and asked point blank questions, and even then, what I got was things like this:
Do you believe in the literal resurrection of Jesus from the dead in time and space?
the liberal pastor said, "well, that is the existential longing of the human experience"
and
Do you believe in the virgin birth?
"well, that is the symbol of the development of Christological theology", etc.
Dunn and Brown are so unclear and fuzzy that it is difficult to figure them out. I wish they would just be honest and admit they really don't believe in the virgin birth.
I did not find a clear affirmation of the virgin birth of Christ by Dunn. It seemed to be mental gymnastics to trying to not be embarrassed.
David,
ReplyDeleteDo you have any response to the above?
Hi Ken,
ReplyDeleteIMO, it is difficult to discern precisely what Dunn believes concerning the virgin birth. As for myself, I don't believe that he actually denies it; but then, neither does he explicitly affirm it. As such, I would not give much credence to anyone who would reference Dunn to either affirm or deny the virgin birth. So, I am pretty much in agreement with the following you wrote:
==Dunn and Brown are so unclear and fuzzy that it is difficult to figure them out. I wish they would just be honest and admit they really don't believe in the virgin birth.
I did not find a clear affirmation of the virgin birth of Christ by Dunn. It seemed to be mental gymnastics to trying to not be embarrassed.==
The only point I would correct is that despite Brown's problematic methodology, in the end he does affirm the virgin birth.
The following essay offers some excellent insights into Dunn's overall methodology:
James D. G. Dunn and the Nature of Jesus - A Critical Realist Approach
Hope I have been helpful. Please feel free to give me a call if you would like to discuss these issues in greater depth.
Grace and peace,
David
David,
ReplyDeletethank you very much for your response !!
I have been looking for some analysis of Dunn, and so I thank you for that link. I hope it helps me understand.
Ken