WHAT DID JESUS M E A N ?
This page intentionally left blank
WHAT D I D J E S U S M E A N ? Explaining the Sermon on the Mount and the Parables in Simple and Universal Human Concepts
Anna Wierzbicka
OXPORD U N I V E R S I T Y PRESS
2001
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Oxford
New York
Athens Auckland Bangkok Bogota Buenos Aires Calcutta Cape Town Chennai Dar es Salaam Delhi Florence Hong Kong Istanbul Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Mumbai Nairobi Paris Sao Paulo Shanghai Singapore Taipei Tokyo Toronto Warsaw and associated companies in Berlin Ibadan
Copyright © 2001 by Anna Wierzbicka Published by Oxford University Press, Inc. 198 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press All rights reserved. No parr of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press. All scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the New King James Version. Copyright £''• 1982 by Thomas Kelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Librany of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Wierzbicka, Anna. What did Jesus mean? : explaining the Sermon on the mount and the parables in simple and universal h u m a n concepts / by A n n a Wierzbicka. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 0-19-513732-9 (cloth); ISBN 0-19-5137)3-7 (phk.) I. Sermon on the mount—Criticism, interpretation, etc. 3. Bihle. N.T. Gospels—Lan^ua^e, style. 4. Semantics. BT380.2 .W54 2000 226.8'06-dc21 00-021159
9 8 7 6 5 4 ^ 2 1 Printed in the United State of America (on acid-free paper
2. Jesus Christ—Parables. 1. Title.
For John, Mary, and Clare
This page intentionally left blank
When you read Holy Scripture, perceive its hidden meanings. St Mark the Ascetic, early fifth century
This page intentionally left blank
Acknowledgments
This book owes a great deal to many people, to some indirectly and to some directly. I am particularly grateful to those who have read and commented on parts of the manuscript: Prof. Andrzej Boguslawski of Warsaw University, Prof. Rene Dirven of Duisburg University, Rev. Dr. James Francis of the University of Sunderland, Prof. Cliff Goddard and Dr. Jean Harkins of the University of New England (Australia), Prof. Elzbieta Janus of the Polish Academy of Science and Vilnius University, Prof. Francis Moloney SDB of the Catholic University of America, and Prof. Douglas Porpora of Drexel University. I also want to thank the students and colleagues who have participated over the years in my seminars on the semantics of the Gospels at the Australian National University and who provided invaluable feedback throughout the work on this project. I am grateful to my editor at Oxford University Press, Peter Ohlin, whose enthusiasm for this project, support, and wise advice have meant a great deal to me; I also appreciate the care and expertise with which Nancy Hoagland at OUP saw the manuscript through the process of production. I also want to thank my research assistants at the ANU: Lea Brown, Helen O'Loghlin, and Ellalene Seymour, whose expert and dedicated help at every stage of the preparation of this book was indispensable. In the final stages I received the same expert and dedicated assistance from Jennie Elliott and Brigid Maher. Last but not least I want to thank my husband John and my daughters Mary and Clare who all read the entire manuscript and discussed it with me, critically and searchingly, page by page and paragraph by paragraph, and whose interest and involvement was a gift of great price.
This page intentionally left blank
Contents
1. Introduction 3 1. "What did Jesus mean"—Is it worth asking? 3 2. Different questions about Jesus 4 3. Conceptual primes and universal human concepts—new tools for the study of Jesus' sayings 6 4. An illustration 7 5. Is it possible to separate the universal aspect of Jesus' teaching from its cultural context? 9 6. Paradoxes of inculturation 11 7. Universal words: Unfamiliar but not unintelligible 13 8. The importance of Jesus' Jewish context for the understanding of his teaching 14 9. Jesus, the teacher of timeless truths? 15 10. An illustration: The "kingdom of God" explained in universal human concepts 17 11. The meaning of the word God 20 12. The search for a coherent picture 22
PART I: THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT
2. The Beatitudes 27 1. Introduction: The importance of the Beatitudes
28
xii
Contents 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Basic facts about the Beatitudes 30 Who are the "weeping" ones? 32 Who are the "hungry"? 34 Who are the "poor"? 36 Who are the "meek" (Matthew's praeis)? 40 Exploring the image of the lamb and some related New Testament images 42 8. Who are the "persecuted"? 46 9. What does it mean to be "blessed"? 47 10. Conclusion 55 3. You Have Heard . . . But I Say to You . . . 57 1. Jesus fulfils the Law 57 2. Whoever is angry with his brother . . . 61 3. Whoever divorces his wife . . . 71 4. Whoever looks at a woman to lust for her . . . 81 5. If your right eye causes you to sin, pluck it out 88 6. Let your 'Yes' be 'Yes' and your 'No', 'No' 93 7. Turn die other cheek 102 8. Love your enemies 111 9. "The righteousness of the scribes and the Pharisees" 4.
5.
122
Other Key Sayings 126 1. You are the salt of the earth 126 2. When you do a charitable deed do not sound a trumpet 3. Do not let your left hand know . . . 140 4- When you pray, go into your room 144 5. When you fast, anoint your head 149 6. Lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven 155 7. The eye is the lamp of the body 161 8. You cannot serve God and mammon 169 9. Consider the lilies of the field 174 10. Do not judge 179 11. Ask, and it will be given to you 186 12. The golden rule 191 13. Enter by the narrow gate 203 14. Do people gather grapes from thornbushes or figs from thistles? 206 15. The will of my Father 215 16. Building on the rock 219 The Lord's Prayer 1. Introduction 2. The meaning 3. "Father" as a
226 226 and significance of the word abba metaphor 232
228
131
xiii
Contents
4. God as someone 234 5 What does God's fatherhood mean (in Jesus' teaching)? 236 6. Hallowed be thy name 237 7. Thy kingdom come 241 8. Give us this day our daily bread 244 9. And forgive us our sins 247 10. For we also forgive everyone who is indebted to us 250 11. And do not lead us into temptation 251 12. Conclusion 254
PART II: THE PARABLES
6. The Sower
257
7. The Hidden Treasure and the Pearl of Great Price 8. The Leaven and The Mustard Seed
274
9. The Lost Sheep and The Lost Coin
292
10. The Prodigal Son
300
11. The Unforgiving Servant
310
12. The Laborers in the Vineyard 13. The Servant's Reward 14. The Great Feast
332
341
15. The Last Judgment
356
16. The Good Samaritan
373
17. The Rich Man and Lazarus 18. The Rich Fool
388
19. The Doorkeeper 20. The Talents
320
397
404
21. The Dishonest Steward
414
380
266
xiv
Contents
22. The Unjust Judge and the Friend at Midnight 23. The Pharisee and the Tax Collector
422
429
PART III: CONCLUSIONS AND FURTHER PERSPECTIVES
24. An Overall Picture of Jesus' Teaching
441
25. Implications for Theology; Christianity in a Nutshell
444
26. Language: A Key Issue in Understanding Jesus and Christianity Notes
465
References Index
497
481
455
WHAT DID JESUS MEAN?
This page intentionally left blank
ONE
Introduction
1. "What did Jesus mean"—Is it worth asking? One current fashion in scholarly circles suggests that it is pointless to ask what Jesus meant since we can't possibly know and we will never find out. Another maintains that it doesn't really matter what he meant: what matters is what his sayings mean to the readers, or "to me." In any case, in the view of some it is no longer acceptable to ask about the authorial intention of any text: a text is a text. To ask what the author meant is naive and irrelevant. Millions of ordinary readers have not caught up with these fashions, however, and for them the biblical text is of interest, above all, as a means of reaching "the real Jesus"—in the words of distinguished biblical scholar Raymond Brown (1997:828), "a Jesus who really means something to people, one on whom they can base their lives." And for the majority, who do not want to base their lives on Jesus but who do have an interest in Christianity, it is rather more interesting to hear what Jesus may have meant than to hear that it is no longer acceptable to enquire. In fact, "ordinary people's" interest in the authorial intention is shared by numerous biblical scholars who are well aware of the fashions in question but do not feel obliged to bow to them. The authors of the chapter "Hermeneutics" in The New Jerome Biblical Commentary, Raymond Brown and Sandra Schneiders (1990:1148), state that "those who produced the biblical books had in their times a message to convey to their readers and . . . it is important for us to have this message in mind when we read the texts and ask what they now mean for us." Not surprisingly, the au3
4
Introduction
thors "reject the systematic scepticism of literary critics about ever knowing the intention of a nonpresent author" and refer with approval to E. D. Hirsch (1967), "who argues that a charge of 'intentional fallacy' is itself a fallacy." I do not mean to suggest that the meaning of a text (and, in particular, biblical text) can be reduced in any straightforward way to the hypothetical authorial intention. As Schneiders (1991:145) points out, the meaning of the biblical text "could exceed . . . what was consciously intended by the author." Schneiders talks in this connection about a possible "surplus of meaning," which can be established "within the text as text," that is, a meaning that may go "beyond authorial intent." But to say this is very different from saying that any concern with what the author meant is naive or irrelevant. The question "What did Jesus mean?" sounds rather more venturesome than the more cautious one, "What did the biblical authors mean?" Logically, however, it is not a radically different kind of question. If there is some scholarly consensus for at least some of the sayings attributed to Jesus, the question of what was meant is no less appropriate or valid for him than it is for the evangelists. In his recent synthesis, An Introduction to the Neu< Testament, Raymond Brown (1997:viii) remarks, "Many readers of the NT (New Testament] want to know what Jesus was like, what he thought of himself, and what he said precisely." I think it goes without saying that they also want to know what he meant. Although this book does not presume to conclusively resolve the question posed in the title, it will at least be seriously addressed and not dismissed as naive and outdated; and for a large number of key parables and sayings, explicit and definite interpretations will in fact be proposed.
2. Different questions about Jesus Many books about Jesus focus on the question "What did Jesus really do?" (see, e.g., the recent volume, The Acts of Jesus: The Search for the Authentic Deeds of Jesus, by Robert Funk and the Jesus Seminar 1998.) Others ask, "Who was Jesus?" (see, e.g., the book under this title by N. T. Wright, 1992). Still others concentrate on the question "What did Jesus really say?" (see, e.g., Funk, Hoover, and the Jesus Seminar 1993, The Five Gospels: What Did Jesus Really Say!). There is also a substantial literature that is trying to decide which among these questions about Jesus is the most important. All these questions are legitimate, important, and interesting. But they are not the subject of this book. My question is this: "What did Jesus really mean?"; I do not raise this question about all sayings attributed to Jesus but rather about his "wisdom sayings," that is, parables and ethical aphorisms. The book does assume that some answers are available to those questions, however. Thus, I assume, that there was indeed a historical Jesus; that this Jesus did say some things of general interest; and that to some extent at least, we know—or have good reasons to think we know—what it was that he said. The question "What did Jesus really mean?" cannot be studied independently of the question "Which of the sayings attributed to Jesus are most likely to be
Introduction
5
authentic?" But, clearly, it makes sense to start from a core of sayings widely held to be, indeed, authentic.1 Although I strongly disagree with the scholars of the Jesus Seminar on many points, one must agree with them that some of the sayings attributed to Jesus do evoke the response "That's Jesus!"—with a strong and immediate conviction that a particular saying conforms to the overall Jesus persona (cf. Funk et al., 1993:37). It is these sayings primarily that I want to explore. Many criteria for determining which sayings are most likely to be authentic (along with other questions about the historical Jesus) have been proposed in recent literature. They include the criteria of multiple attestation, dissimilarity (which asks whether a saying or story seem distinct from both the Jewish background and the developing Christian tradition), embarrassment (to the early church), shock value, memorability (giving a saying or a story a good chance of surviving in oral transmission), and so on. (For discussion see, e.g., Johnson 1996, Meier 1991-1994, N. T. Wright 1992.) From my viewpoint, however, the most important criterion is coherence, and this is a criterion whose application presupposes semantic analysis. I believe that the bulk of the sayings widely regarded by reputable scholars as preserving Jesus' ipsissima vox and ipsissima verba do in fact yield a coherent overall picture; and this coherent picture increases, in its turn, the likelihood of the authenticity of many of the disputed sayings, as well as helping us to peel off layers of editorial interventions by the evangelists. But a coherent overall picture cannot be just a matter of "what Jesus really said"; it can only be one of "what Jesus really meant in what he (presumably) said." (I will return to this question in the last section of this chapter.) Of course this overall picture will have to be, ultimately, a matter of conjecture: the reconstruction of the intended meaning can no more be a matter of empirical proof than the determination of the ipsissima verba themselves. As Witherington (1995:12) says about Jesus' words and deeds, "New Testament scholars can no more prove [that] Jesus did or did not do or say something than Roman historians can prove that Nero did or did not have some responsibility for the great fire of Rome in the 60s of the first century. They can only show good probability one way or another." However, this book proposes new criteria against which the probability of certain interpretations can be tested—criteria arising from the methodological experience of contemporary linguistic semantics. If the book focuses on the meaning of Jesus sayings, this is not because I believe that his sayings are more important than his deeds (or than the story of his life and death). That is, this is not yet another attempted portrait, or interpretation, of Jesus; it is only a study of the meaning of (some of) Jesus' utterances and stories. More broadly, it is also a study in the semantics of religious language and in the interpretation of religious metaphors. In attempting to define the meaning of Jesus' parables and related sayings, I will take into account, as far as possible, the results of contemporary New Testament criticism, including the works of widely respected, "centrist" scholars such as Raymond Brown, Joseph Fitzmyer, L. T. Johnson, John P. Meier, Ben Witherington III, N. T. Wright, and many others. I will also take into
6
Introduction
account the writings of more controversial authors such as John Dominic Crossan and Marcus Borg, as well as the long tradition of writings on the parables, including, for example, such classic authors as Dodd (1965), Donahue (1990), Jeremias (1972), Lambrecht (1991), Linnemann (1966), Perrin (1976), Via (1974), and many others. Naturally, I will also take account of the very substantial and constantly growing literature on the methodological aspects of the interpretation of the New Testament, including, for example, works such as Blount (1995), R. E. Brown (1985), Fee (1993), Fitzmyer (1994), J. B. Green (1995), McKenzie and Haynes (1993), Moloney (1993), Pregeant (1995), Ricoeur (1975), Schneiders (1991), Schussler-Fiorenza (1994), Stenger (1993), and Thiselton (1992). I will not attempt, however, a systematic survey of the huge literature on the subject and in fact will call on that literature explicitly only when the discussion of a particular question justifies it. My primary focus in this book is to launch a new type of exegesis, which can be called semantic exegesis. In doing so, I will be drawing on the results and methodology of linguistic semantics and, in particular, on two key analytical tools: conceptual primes and universal human concepts. The use of these tools can open an entirely new perspective on the study of the Gospels, especially on the meaning of Jesus' sayings.
3. Conceptual primes and universal human concepts— new tools for the study of Jesus' sayings The idea of conceptual primes goes back to Leibniz and to his observation that all explanations of meaning require a core of concepts that are self-explanatory: to be truly explanatory, an explanation must lead from what is complex and obscure to what is at least relatively simple and clear. Ultimately, only explanations based on concepts that are intuitively comprehensible have true explanatory power. Without such a bedrock of self-explanatory concepts, so-called explanations may be no more than exercises in translating unknowns into unknowns. By "explaining" an obscure and incomprehensible saying in terms of an obscure and incomprehensible explanation, an impression of progress may be created with little or no gain in real understanding. As Leibniz (1903) liked to say, all explanations must come to an end. An increase in understanding requires this end to be more intelligible than the beginning. Semantic research over the last three decades suggests that concepts like GOOD and BAD, SOMEONE and SOMETHING, YOU and I, DO and HAPPEN, KNOW and THINK, or THIS and OTHER (= ELSE) are among those that cannot be made any clearer by further explanations, although volumes can, of course, be written—and have been written—about so-called values, norms, actions, events, objects, self, mind, cognition, intentionality, and so on. When all is said and done, however, the meaning of sentences like I did something bad. Someone wants to do something good for someone else.
Introduction
7
cannot be further explained (although they can, of course, be commented on in various ways). There are no words intuitively simpler and clearer than those in the sentences above that could be used to explain their meaning.2 (For extended discussion of these points, see Goddard 1998; Goddard and Wierzbicka 1994; Wierzbicka 1992, 1996, 1997, 1999a.)
4. An illustration In accordance with the principle of conceptual primes, we can propose, for example, the following initial explanation or explication of the saying "love your enemies" (for fuller discussion, see Chapter 3, section 8): love your enemies = if someone wants to do bad things to you it will be good if you don't want to do bad things to this person because of this it will be good if you want to do good things for this person All the words used in this explication are taken from a set of independently established conceptual primes (i.e., intuitively understandable, "simple" concepts). This applies not only to the elements GOOD and BAD, SOMEONE (= PERSON) and SOMETHING (= THING), THIS and WANT, and YOU and I, which were listed earlier, but also to the logical concepts IF, BECAUSE, and NOT. 3 This explication is based not just on the bare text of the utterance but also on its broader context. The sayings attributed to Jesus throw light on one another and jointly contribute to a coherent overall understanding of his teaching (cf. Sevin 1997; N. T. Wright 1996). In fact, by reading the injunction "love your enemies" in the light of the Gospels as a whole, we will see good reasons to add another dimension to the explication and introduce the notion of God and of God's will (thus acknowledging the God-centered character of Jesus' ethics): if someone wants to do bad things to you it will be good if you don't want to do bad things to this person because of this it will be good if you want to do good things for this person God wants this (The concept of God itself is not simple and can be explicated; but it underlies the Gospels as a whole and will be explicated in section 11 of this chapter, not within the explications of the individual sayings and parables.) Turning now to the notion of universal human concepts, I should point out that most words in any one language are language-specific and do not have exact semantic equivalents in other languages. For example, a sentence like "Love your enemies" cannot be readily translated into many languages of the world because they may lack words that correspond in meaning to either "love" or "enemies"
8
Introduction
(cf. Wierzbicka 1992, 1997, 1999a). On the other hand, cross-linguistic semantic investigations suggest that conceptual primes such as those mentioned earlier (e.g., GOOD and BAD or IF and NOT) do have lexical exponents (i.e., correspond ing words) in all human languages. These words may be polysemous (i.e., have more than one meaning), but on one meaning at least they match. For example, in all languages one can say the exact equivalent of if someone wants to do bad things to you . . . even if the word for BAD in a particular language may also have a second and even a third meaning, such as "crooked," "angry," or whatever, or if the word for WANT may have a second and even a third meaning, such as "lack," "seek," or "love." It is in this sense that we can speak of universal human concepts (e.g., BAD and WANT but not "love," "enemy," or "revenge"). The correspondence between conceptual primes and universal words may seem surprising at first: why should the two sets coincide, as empirical investigations suggest? But when one thinks about it, this correspondence makes a great deal of sense. If all human understanding rests on the basic set of concepts that are intuitively self-explanatory and thus require no further explanation, this set cannot be acquired by any explanations or even be contingent on the vagaries of individual experience. As Pascal ([1667] 1954) eloquently argued, it must be innate and must in fact underlie our interpretation of all our experience. If it is innate, however, it does not depend on the language and culture of the community into which an individual is born but is the same for all human beings. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that we find the same set of basic concepts, on which all human understanding rests, present in all languages in the form of universal words: universal words stand for universal human concepts, that is, the universal building blocks of human thoughts. In fact, it is not only certain words—such as words for GOOD and BAD or SOMEONE and SOMETHING or KNOW and WANT—that are universally present but also certain grammatical (syntactic) patterns. Although the syntax of each language is to a considerable extent language-specific, cross-linguistic investigations suggest that some syntactic patterns are universal. For example, it emerges that in all languages there are IF-clauses, so that in any language one can say the equivalent of "if someone wants to do bad things to you. . . ." Similarly, all languages have malefactive and benefactive constructions, and in all languages one can speak about "wanting to do bad things to someone" or about "wanting to do good things for other people"; in all languages one can combine words for GOOD, BAD, and OTHER with the words for THING and PEOPLE and speak of "good things," "bad things," or "other people." In other words, what is universally present is not only individual building blocks like GOOD and BAD or DO and WANT but also ways for putting these building block together into larger configurations, capable of conveying such meanings as "if someone wants to do bad things to you ...";"! did something bad"; "other people are like me"; "if you want to do good things for other people. . . ." It does not seem to be the case, however, that all languages have semantically matching imperative constructions, and so the meaning of an imperative in a
Introduction
9
particular language cannot be taken for granted but rather needs to be explicated. For this reason (among others), Jesus' words "love your enemies" cannot be translated into the language of universal human concepts as "do good things for those who want to do bad things to you"; the imperative do, whose meaning may seem to be crystal clear to us, will not necessarily be crystal clear to the speakers of languages that do not have a semantically matching imperative construction. In other words, despite the simplicity and universality of its vocabulary, a formula like "do good things for those who want to do bad things to you" is still to some extent language-specific and—unlike the explanatory formula proposed earlier— cannot be seen as a truly universal representation of meaning. In "translating" many of the sayings attributed to Jesus in the Gospels into the language of universal human concepts, I am not suggesting that the proposed translations articulate what was consciously intended by the author in that very form. This is not how semantic analysis works. Rather, it seeks to establish—on the basis of publicly stateable criteria—what Schneiders (1991:146) calls "the ideal meaning of a given text." But one can doubt whether a reconstructed ideal meaning would have much interest or relevance if it had no relation to "what the author meant."
5. Is it possible to separate the universal aspect of Jesus' teaching from its cultural context? As the explication of the injunction "love your enemies" illustrates, this book seeks to demonstrate that some aspects of the meaning of Jesus' sayings can be explicated in sentences that rely exclusively on universal words and universal grammar. "So what?" the skeptic might say: whatever the historical Jesus said and meant, he didn't speak and think in universal human words and did not use universal grammar. He spoke in Aramaic, using Aramaic words and Aramaic grammatical constructions, and his thinking was heavily embedded in the Jewish culture of first-century Palestine, its norms, its traditions, and its expectations. Whatever Jesus' intended meaning was, it cannot be separated from its cultural context. The skeptic's position is partially right. Certainly, when Jesus spoke he didn't restrict himself to universal human words (nobody does). He used a particular natural language with all its culture-specific richness, and certainly his thinking was heavily embedded in the culture of the time and place to which he belonged. This does not mean, however, that no aspect of Jesus' teaching can be separated from its Jewish context. The very idea that the Gospel was to be taken beyond the boundaries of the Jewish world and taught to the Gentiles—in Greece, in Rome, and elsewherepresupposed a view that the core of the intended Gospel message was universal rather than culture-specific. If the early Christians thought that, in Mark's (16:15) words, Jesus had enjoined them to "Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature," they must have believed that this Gospel included some universal message.
10
Introduction
What is clearer to us today than it could have been to the early Christians is that the content of a message is colored by its medium: if the Gospel does include a universal message, it cannot be fully and accurately articulated and explained—in normal idiomatic prose—in a particular natural language: because of its culture-specific richness, each language creates its own universe of meaning. Thus, although it is undoubtedly true that "even the most competent English translation cannot render all the nuances of the original Greek" (R. E. Brown 1997:36), it is also true that even the most competent English translation cannot help introducing nuances of its own. For example, by saying that in the Matthean Sermon on the Mount Jesus' warnings "are not against pious practices but against ostentation" (R. E. Brown 1997:179), one adds an element of obvious display to what seems to be really essential here. If when I do good things I want other people to know about it and to think good things about me, I may or may not do those things ostentatiously, but Jesus' warning "not to do your charitable deeds before people to be seen by them" (Matt. 6:1) would still apply to me. Clearly, then, the word ostentation (which does not have an exact equivalent in many other languages) is not of the essence here. What is of the essence can be accurately expressed in universal concepts such as DO, WANT, PEOPLE, and KNOW.
The example of ostentation may seem harmless enough, but many others could be adduced that introduce into Jesus' teaching tones and shades that, I argue, are alien to it. This applies in particular to the words "obedience" and "obey" (in German, Gehorsam and gehorchen), which have come to occupy a prominent place in modern exegetical tradition and indeed have found their way into some modern translations of the Gospels, without any basis in the original. For example, Die Bibel in heutigem Deutsch (1982) translates Jesus' words in John 4:34, rendered in English (by the New King James Version) as "My food is to do the will of him who sent me" as follows: Meine Nahrung ist, dafi ich dem gehorche, der mich gesandt hat. "My food is to obey him who sent me." The word "obey" (gehorchen) implies subordination to authority, but this implication is absent from the Greek original, which says "to do the will" (poieso to thelema), not "to obey." The tradition of replacing biblical notions of "hearing (hearkening, heeding) God's voice" and "doing God's will" with "obedience" and "obey" appears to go back to Luther. For example, in Psalm 81, in the Vulgate, God wants his people to "hear his voice" and "hear him," whereas in Luther's translation God wants his people to "obey" (gehorchen) and to be "obedient" (gehorsam): 12. et non audivit populus meus vocem meam (Vulgate) aber mein Volk gehorchtet nicht meiner Stimme (Luther) 13. si populus meus audisset me . . . (Vulgate) wollte mein Volk mit gehorsam sein . . . (Luther)
Introduction
11
Die Bibel in heutigem Deutsch (1982) follows suit: 14. Wenn Israel doch meinen Geboten gehorchte. . . "If only Israel had obeyed my commandments ..." Examples could be multiplied. An emphasis on obedience is certainly consistent with Luther's theology (see in particular his Bondage of the Will 1931). For further discussion of obedience see chapter 4, sections 15 and 16. Thus, the application of linguistic semantics to the study of the Gospels opens new possibilities for biblical hermeneutics: by translating the key Gospel passages into a semiartificial and yet intuitively intelligible language of universal human concepts, we can separate the two otherwise inseparable strata of the Gospel teaching, the local and the universal. (One could say that in this method of analysis a certain surplus of meaning is removed rather than added—that which is linked to the use of a particular natural language.) In fact, it could be said that in the Gospels (read in translation) there are not two but three different strata: the Jewish, the universal, and the European. During the first two millennia, the development of Christianity and the dissemination of the Gospels has been dominated first by Greek, then by Latin, and then by the major languages of modern Europe. Concepts such as love, mercy, forgiveness, or humility translate easily across European languages, which have been shaped largely by a common cultural heritage. The way in which the Gospels are usually read at the end of the second millennium is heavily influenced by this common heritage; and not everyone is aware of the fact that such Christian concepts may not readily translate into the native languages of, say, Australia, Africa, or Oceania. This, then, is the challenge to the student of the Gospels at the threshold of the third millennium: "extracting" the universal message of the Gospels from its cultural and historical crust, that is, from the original Jewish context, and from the legacy of European cultural tradition that is reflected in European languages. This does not mean that—as the second-century gnostic Marcion affirmed—the New Testament can be separated from the Old. The Old Testament is part of the Christian Holy Scripture, and Jesus' story can only be fully understood in the context of a larger story, including Abraham, Moses, the prophets, and the history of Israel as a whole. But Jesus' teaching—"Do not judge," "Love your enemies," "Do good to those who hate you," "Do not worry about your life," or "Enter by the narrow gate"—can be explained to any human group, anywhere in the world, in any language; and this can be done apart from the teaching's original historical and cultural context. In fact, the biblical metaphor of "a light to the nations" (Is. 42:1-13; cf. John 8:12; Rev. 21:23) implies as much: if a Jewish Messiah is to bring a light to the nations, this Messiah's message must be intelligible to all those nations, and to be intelligible, it must be—to some extent—"outculturated."
6. Paradoxes of inculturation The project of extracting—and, so to speak, liberating—the universal core of Jesus' teaching from its cultural embedding will no doubt strike many as impossible,
12
Introduction
if not absurd or offensive. At the end of the second Christian millennium, "inculturation," not "outculturation," is the order of the day (e.g., drawing on African traditions in presenting Christ's teaching in Africa). Increasingly, commentators stress the need for cultural diversity within Christianity, arguing that faith must "take flesh" in particular cultures (see, e.g., Shorter 1997). In fact, much of the contemporary literature on Jesus' teaching confronts us with a curious paradox: on the one hand, many authors emphasize that his teaching cannot be cut loose from its Jewish moorings, and on the other, many (sometimes the same) authors stress the need for inculturation (in Africa, in Latin America, etc.), regarding it as indispensable in conveying the message effectively. But whereas it is understandable that "incarnating" the faith in particular cultures is now increasingly seen as very important, it should be remembered that there can be no inculturation without outculturation. Because the Gospel message is so heavily embedded in the culture of first-century Palestine and so heavily influenced by the centuries of predominantly European reading, it cannot be adequately transferred to other cultures without first being extracted from its own cultural context. For this message to be clothed in new garments, it has first to be stripped of its old ones. This stripping of old garments has to be applied, inter alia, to familiar metaphors. Their heuristic and aesthetic value notwithstanding, metaphors can be dangerous. Nothing illustrates this better than the metaphor of fatherhood, which many contemporary writers find deeply problematic. For example, Hans Kilng (1980:673) writes, "God . . . is not masculine and must not be seen through the screen of the masculine-paternal, as an all-too-masculine theology did. The feminine-maternal element must also be recognized in him." But the less conventional image of the feminine-maternal, although useful as a corrective to the one-sidedness of the masculine-paternal, is a metaphor, too. In fact Kung recognizes this himself when he writes, "The designation of 'father' for God is misunderstood if it is taken as the opposite of 'mother' instead of symbolically (analogically). 'Father' is a patriarchal trait—for a transhuman, transsexual, absolutely last/absolutely first reality" (p. 673). These explanations, however, also pose problems. For whereas "father" is indeed a symbol (a metaphor), which needs to be explained in nonmetaphorical language, expressions like "absolutely last/absolutely first reality" are also metaphorical (what Kung really means has nothing to do with any temporal sequence). Thus, regardless of whether one prefers to replace the father symbol with other human symbols like mother and maternal—or with transhuman and transsexual symbols like first/last reality—none of these images or symbols are really integral to the message of the Gospels. Behind and underneath all such images and symbols there is a timeless and universal message that can be articulated in universal human concepts (such as GOOD and BAD, DO and HAPPEN, and KNOW, WANT, or THINK), without recourse to culture-specific metaphors. The metaphor of fatherhood, so pervasive in the Gospels, reflects, of course, the fact that Jesus' teaching was deeply embedded in the patriarchal culture of first-century Palestine. But the fact that this metaphor can be translated into the nonmetaphorical language of universal human concepts shows that the view that the essence of Jesus' teaching cannot be separated from its cultural context is fallacious.
Introduction
13
There is no conflict between the idea of inculturation and the idea of a universal core of Jesus' teaching. In the apostolic exhortation Evangelii Nuntiandi (1989), Pope Paul VI wrote of "the task of assimilating the essence of the Gospel message and of transporting it, without the slightest betrayal of the essential truth, into the language that these particular people understand" (p. 67). The same document emphasizes that "the Gospels, and therefore evangelization, are independent of all cultures" (p. 25). Although "the presentation [of the Gospel message] depends greatly on changing circumstances . . . there is the essential content, the living substance, which cannot be modified or ignored without seriously diluting the nature of evangelization itself" (p. 31). As mentioned earlier, however, the universality of the message requires (on some level) the universality of the medium. Whereas the same universal message can— and for the purposes of evangelization must—be inculturated into different languages and cultures, by the same token for the purposes of exegesis it must be outculturated from its original medium and elucidated in universal human concepts.
7. Universal words: Unfamiliar but not unintelligible Explanations of Gospel passages couched in universal human concepts will necessarily sound unfamiliar and strange to scholars accustomed to more conventional commentaries on the New Testament. They will also sound strange to the layperson, used to the richness of a natural language and unaccustomed to communicating in a rudimentary minilanguage based on a few dozen universal words. Nonetheless, explications formulated in this rudimentary minilanguage are, in principle, intelligible to the general reader—more so, probably, than some more conventional theological treatises and commentaries. For example, consider again the proposed paraphrase of the injunction "Love your enemies": if someone does something bad to you it will be good if you don't want to do bad things to this person because of this it will be good if you want to do good things for this person This formula will no doubt strike readers as somewhat stilted because of its lexical austerity and schematic structure, but it is comprehensible to a nonspecialist (unlike many passages in hermeneutic theological literature). Most important, explicatory formulas of this kind can also be directly intelligible and illuminating to total cultural outsiders in areas of the world relatively little influenced by Christianity and Western culture. For example, such formulas can be readily translated, without any modification of meaning, into the Papuan language Arapesh; and although it will sound unfamiliar and perhaps odd in Arapesh (as it does in English), it will be intelligible and meaningful to the native speaker. Otto Nekitel, of the University of Papua New Guinea, a linguist and a native speaker of Arapesh, has provided (personal communication) the following Arapesh translation—literal and yet readily intelligible:
14
Introduction
uba
enen
ni'i
IF
SOMEONE
WANTS TO.DO
bala suis uba (IT) WILL.BE GOOD IF numehelisi-ma enen BAD.THINGS.TO THIS bala
suis
nida
ina'
ina' kwe'isi ni'i nida YOU DON'T WANT TO.DO alifen uma esai' PERSON BECAUSE.OF THIS
uba' ina'
(IT) WILLBE GOOD IF
numehelesi-ma
BAD.THINGS.TO YOU
ni'i
nida'
YOU WANT TO.DO
sueisi-ma
enei'
GOOD.THINGS.FOR
THIS PERSON
alifen
Any attempt to explicate the meaning of Jesus' utterances in simple, clear and universally accessible words may be resented (consciously or subconsciously) as an attempt to rob these things of their eloquence and mystery: People reject intelligible content since the aura of mystery, so typical of religious experience, seems to be lost. In fact, one Guatemalan Indian translator of the New Testament objected to detailed explanations of the meaning of the biblical text, because, as he insisted, if the meaning becomes too clear, it will no longer be religious. (Nida 1994:195) But, as Nida also points out "The mystery of faith should not be equated with the unintelligibility of words"; nor, one might add, should it be equated with the unintelligibility of images. Both Old Testament phrases, such as "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth," and New Testament ones, such as "turn the other cheek," do require explanation; and to be truly intelligible to cultural outsiders, these explanations must be phrased (sometimes at least) in simple, clear, and universally available words.
8. The importance of Jesus' Jewish context for the understanding of his teaching N. T. Wright (1996:5) states that twentieth-century scholarship "has at least one advantage over its predecessors: it has been realized that Jesus must be understood in his Jewish context." Other leading biblical scholars also emphasize that a non-Jewish Jesus is a nonsequitur (see, e.g., Casey 1991; Charlesworth 1991; Chilton and Neusner 1995; Frymer-Kensky et al. 2000; Greeley and Neusner 1991; Klausner 1949; Lapide and Luz 1985; Neusner 1993; E. P. Sanders 1993; Vermes 1973, 1993; for detailed discussion, see, e.g., Witherington 1995). This is true and important. It does not mean, however, that we cannot or should not try to distinguish between the universal and the "Jewish" aspects in Jesus' teaching. Understanding Jesus in his Jewish context is a necessary prerequisite, or at
Introduction
15
least a necessary corollary, of understanding the universal aspects of his teaching. We must understand the Jewish aspect to be able to distinguish it, in our overall interpretation, from the universal one. This view may seem to be dangerously close to the target of N. T. Wright's (1996:6) sardonic criticisms of the nineteenth-century "Questers" (for the "real Jesus" in the "Jesus jigsaw puzzle"): "the game was to cut off all those bits of the 'Jesus' piece that appeared too Jewish, too ethnically restricted, leaving the hero as the founder of a great, universal, 'spiritual' religion, so nobly recaptured now by Protestantism, at least since Kant and Hegel." But my question is not "Who was Jesus?" but "What did Jesus mean (in his parables and other 'wisdom sayings')?" I do not dispute N. T. Wright's (1996) claim that for the question "Who was Jesus?" history cannot and must not be separated from theology. But in a sense, the two can be separated, up to a point, for the question "What did Jesus mean?" This book is, in fact, an attempt to separate history (and geography) from theology (and ethics) in Jesus' parables and related sayings and to find out how far one can go in this direction. To achieve this, however, we cannot ignore Jesus' Jewishness. On the contrary, only by learning to understand the Jewish background of Jesus' ways of speaking—his rhetoric, his hyperbole, his imagery and his speech genres—can we hope to unlock the universal aspect of his teaching and to present it in a form in which it could be directly intelligible to cultural outsiders. (See chapter 26). My approach may also seem dangerously close to N. T. Wright's (1996:5) ironic representation of Rudolf Bultmann's ([1926] 1958) "demythologisation" program: "the historical crust of the 'real' message must be identified and then thrown away" (author's emphasis). I believe that Wright is using the word "message" here in a figurative sense, referring to Jesus' overall purpose, embodied in his life (and death), as well as in his teaching. But what I am interested in is the meaning of Jesus' sayings (or the sayings attributed to Jesus in contemporary scholarship)—a meaning that I see as universally relevant and which I want to articulate by means of (independently established) universal human concepts. The other aspects of Jesus' sayings—the images, hyperboles, references to culturespecific artefacts, symbols, assumptions, and values—are for me not a "historical crust of the 'real' message" that "must be identified and then thrown away" but a precious historical embodiment of the universal message—an embodiment that must be studied and cherished for its unique and irreplaceable value but which can be conceptually distinguished from the universal message inherent in it.
9. Jesus, the teacher of timeless truths? Thus, in the study of Jesus' wisdom sayings (if not in the study of his life and death) theology (and ethics) can, up to a point, be separated from history and geography. To bring this discussion from an abstract to a concrete level, let us remind ourselves again of at least one example—the explanatory formula cited earlier:
16
Introduction
if someone wants to do something bad to you it will be good if you don't want to do something bad to this person because of this it will be good if you want to do something good for this person I believe this message, stated here in universal human concepts, can in principle be understood through any human language, regardless of time and place, and in this sense it is independent of history and geography. In the Gospels as we know them, this message was of course expressed differently: in English as "love your enemies," in the Greek version as agapate tous ekhthrous human, and as whatever it was in Aramaic. As the proposed explication illustrates, however, it is possible to extract a universal grain from the historical linguistic husk of such sayings and to express it in timeless universal concepts. N. T. Wright (1996) writes with irony about attempts to present Jesus as "the timeless teacher" (p. 657), to seek in his teaching "an eternally valid core of meaning" (p. 658), or to "de-Judaize" him in one way or another. The irony is justified from the point of view of his own project of seeking an answer to the question "Who was Jesus?" From a semantic point of view, however, such an irony would be misplaced. For example, Jesus' saying "If your right eye causes you to sin, pluck it out" can be seen as a counsel applicable to any human being, anywhere, and at any time. But to be made intelligible to anyone anywhere, its core meaning needs to be extracted from its very Jewish hyperbolical form; otherwise, the saying is indeed likely to be misunderstood and lead to the practice of self-mutilation—if not literally, by plucking out one's eyes, then at least by selfcastration (as happened by the Russian sect of skopcy 'the castrates'). I agree with the criticisms aimed at the view (e.g., Crossan 1991; Mack 1988) of Jesus as a wandering Cynic teacher of timeless wisdom (see, e.g., Witherington 1995; N. T. Wright 1992), and with the protests that "despite numerous attempts in this century to turn Christianity into a philosophy of life it is and has always been a historical religion" (Witherington 1995:10). Nonetheless, for lay people (in contrast to scholars qua scholars) there is also the question of the relevance of Jesus' teaching to their own lives; from this point of view, what, for example, Bockmuehl (1994:5-6) calls Jesus' (and Christianity's) "inalienable religious and historical moorings in Galilee and Judaea" may be less relevant than the "timeless" aspect of his teaching, which may apply to them, too. As argued by L. T. Johnson (1996:66), "The majority of Christians still expect a proclamation of the word of God that somehow is grounded in the gospel and pertains to the ultimate realities of their own lives." N. T. Wright (1 992:97) remarks, ironically, that "first-century Jews knew that they ought to be nice to each other" and so didn't need "to hear someone tell them [that]"; but quite apart from the fact that "being nice to each other" is hardly the same as loving one's enemies, not everyone everywhere is as aware of such ethical principles as first-century Jews may have been. What applies to the Jewish background of Jesus' teaching applies also to other aspects of its historical context. For example, we may agree with Norman Perrin
Introduction
17
(1976:100) that it is possible to read the parable of the lost sheep as a story "of a sudden crisis that changes all values and of a new situation of joy and gladness" (in the context of Jesus' proclamation of the Good News, in first-century Palestine). At the same time, however, it would be hard not to agree with Joseph Fitzmyer (1985b:1075) that to reduce the meaning of the story to one particular time and place "is to miss the point of the parable, which is not a description of the change in situation of a first-century Palestine, but rather of the joy (of God) at the finding of a 'lost' sinner." According to a random telephone poll taken in 1992 and reported in Time magazine, 65 percent of Americans between the ages of 27 and 45 affirm that "religion is very important to me," and 43 percent "read the Bible in the past week" (Price 1997:76). This suggests that millions of Americans probably read the Gospels frequently. Presumably, the majority of these readers are less interested in Jesus' message to Israel than in his message to themselves; they feel included in the random crowds that Jesus taught, and they want to know what he meant—not for academic reasons but hoping to find in his words "the bread of life." For all such people, the insistence of some modern scholars that Jesus' message was addressed specifically to Israel, and only to Israel, is likely to be baffling and frustrating. The biblical claim that "salvation comes from the Jews" (John 4:22) is fully compatible with the hope, and sense, of modern readers that they are included among those addressed. The content of many of Jesus' sayings can be read on different levels: one intended, presumably, for his disciples; another for "Israel" as a whole; and yet another that is applicable to anybody, anywhere, at any time. Jesus was not just "a teacher of timeless truths." Surely, though, whatever else he was he was that as well. From the perspective of the more general interest in Jesus—a Jesus who, as Raymond Brown (1997:828) put it, "really means something to people, one on whom they can base their lives"—the timeless aspect of Jesus' teaching is surely valid, too. By explaining his sayings in universal human concepts, we can articulate the universal, timeless aspect of his teaching more clearly and accurately than could be done in "normal" prose, whether in English or in any other language, with its own baggage of history, culture, and tradition.
10. An illustration: The "kingdom of Qod" explained in universal human concepts The concept of the kingdom of God plays a central role in Jesus' teaching. Debates about the meaning of his teaching are often couched in terms of different interpretations of this key phrase. The range of proposed interpretations is very wide, but they fall into two broad categories: eschatological and noneschatological or eschatological and ethical. The term eschatological is understood differently by different scholars, but it is generally agreed that the key distinction is that between this world and the world to come, between a this-worldly and an otherworldly perspective. There is also an ongoing debate about how Jesus saw his
18
Introduction
own role in the kingdom of God, and whether and in what sense this kingdom was made present in this world through Jesus' own life, ministry, and death. In the approach taken here, the core idea behind the metaphor of the kingdom of God is that of people living with God. But in this world or in the world to come? In my view, Jesus' answer is clear: in both. As Jesus' parables and sayings clearly suggest, one can live with God before one dies and after one dies; death is not a crucial divide in this respect, although after one's deadi, it will become apparent to a person how one lived before one died and to what extent one did or did not live with God. (Hence the images of the "Last Judgment.") Since the kingdom of God embraces all people who live with God—the living and the dead—this kingdom is indeed an eschatological reality, otherworldly and not only this worldly. At the same time, for the living, ethics and eschatology are inseparable because they both involve living with God. The kingdom of God is a dynamic concept because it refers to people's living with God, in accordance with God's will (rather than being in some kind of "state"). According to Jesus (as interpreted here), all people can live with God, and God wants this; accordingly, when people live with God (in love), God's will is being fulfilled: God (who loves all people) wants all people to live with God. In this sense, the kingdom of God is indeed a God-centred, as well as an eschatological reality; at the same time, however, it is an existential and ethical reality of people on earth (in their earthly lives) living with God (in love). The notion of people living with God allows us to interpret the kingdom of God as having both an individual and a collective social dimension. On the one hand, every person can live with God; every person can find the "hidden treasure," the "pearl of great price." On the other hand, all people together can live with God, and images such as that of the leaven fermenting "the whole dough" suggest a global view of the whole of humanity as having a final destiny in living with God. (In more traditional language, this is the vision of universal salvation, implicit in the collective prayer addressed to Our Father: "Thy Kingdom come.") The image of all people living with God in one kingdom suggests a horizontal, social dimension, as well as a vertical, individual one: in the kingdom of God people can live with all other people (just as a person can live with another person). One could say that the second-century Apostles' Creed conveys this idea in the phrase communio sanctorum ("the communion of saints"). In universal human concepts, this means, I suggest, that when people live with God they can live with all other people (living with God). As for Jesus' own role in bringing about the kingdom of God, I would propose the following interpretation. According to Jesus, "all people can live with God" and "God wants this." But the reason why "all people can live with God" is crucially linked with what is happening "here now," that is, in first-century Galilee and Judea. When Jesus says that the kingdom of God has "come near" or "is in your midst," he is clearly alluding to his own mission. In this sense, one can say that history and geography are indeed inseparable from Jesus' proclamation of the kingdom: whereas all people can live with God, this is possible because something is happening here now.
Introduction
19
Thus, the kingdom can be seen as already present in the sense that in Jesus' times it has already become possible for all people (i.e., for the whole of humankind) to live with God forever. It can also be seen as yet to come because it is not yet the case that all people live with God according to God's great plan for the whole of humanity. (For further discussion, see in particular chapter 5, section 7; chapter 8, section 3; chapter 25.) The minilanguage of 60 or so simple and universal concepts has proved to be an adequate tool for dealing with complex and controversial aspects of New Testament theology. In fact, since the explanations formulated in this simple minilanguage are nontechnical and are free from the accumulated deposits of centuries of religious and academic debates, they offer the reader a fresh perspective on Jesus' teaching, bypassing many problems that may have been partly the product of the specialist and technical language used in the past. The simple and universally accessible phrase "people living with God" is in fact well grounded in biblical language. For example, Revelation 21:3 describes the eschatological destiny of humankind as follows: "And I heard a loud voice from heaven saying, 'Behold the tabernacle of God is with people, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God.'" The image of a (portable) tabernacle of God always having its place among the people's dwellings, so that they can always live with God, has its origin in God's instructions to Moses in the book of Exodus: "And let them make me a sanctuary, that I may dwell among them" (25:8); "And I will meet with the children of Israel, and die tabernacle shall be sanctified by my glory" (29:43). The use of the expression "to live with God" (in French, vivre avec Dieu; in German, mil Gott lebenf allows us to account for the apparent gradability of "life" that we find in the language of the New Testament. In this language, in which "life" often stands for God, it is implied that people can not only live with God but also live more with God. Thus, in John 10:10, Jesus says, "I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it abundantly." The universal concept MORE does not mean comparison but increase (as in "I want more"; "I want to see more"; "I want to know more"; "I want to say more"), and so it seems particularly suitable for explicating this aspect of Jesus' teaching: Jesus does not compare people with one another, and in fact he refuses to promise anyone exalted positions in the kingdom of God (see Mark 10:35-45); rather, he invites everyone to a "more abundant life." (For further discussion, see chapter 1, section 10, and chapter 4, sections 5 and 6.) Finally, some readers will probably insist that for them, the expression "to live with God" is also metaphorical. Whether it is or is not depends, of course, on our definition of the word metaphorical. But if someone insist on using this word in a sense that would make the expression "to live with God" metaphorical, then it should be noted that this is a universal metaphor, intelligible in all languages and cultures, and that it is radically different, therefore, from culturespecific metaphors such as "kingdom," "father," or "bread." The use of expressions such as "to live with God" does not aim at eliminating the mysteries of faith but at stating them in a way that can be as intelligible as possible—to all people in all societies.
20
Introduction
11. The meaning of the word God Throughout this book, I will try to explain the meaning of Jesus' parables and sayings in simple words that, evidence suggests, have equivalents in all languages. The reader, however, will quickly notice one exception to this central methodological principle: most, if not all, explications proposed here include the word God, which neither stands for a simple, indefinable concept nor has semantic equivalents in all languages. This exception is deliberate and, I believe, justifiable. God is a key concept in Jesus' teaching, and it recurs constantly in different contexts and in different configurations. If we tried to explicate this concept every time it were mentioned, our explications would be overblown and hard to read. It makes far more sense to explicate it once, at the outset, and then treat it as a unitary semantic molecule. In explaining what the word God meant in Jesus' speech, we must try to separate what Jesus was saying about God from what he meant by the word God as such. It seems reasonable to assume that he used the word God in a sense that could be understood by his first listeners, that is, in a sense derived from and consistent with the Hebrew Bible. First, the God of the Hebrew Bible—like the God of the New Testament—is a personal God, that is, "someone" rather than "something"; someone who "knows," "wants," "speaks," that is, "says things," even "hears," and arguably "feels" (see, e.g., Heschel 1962).5 Thus: (a) God is someone Second, the biblical God is "someone good." Theissen and Merz (1998:274) say that "the God of Jesus is the God of Israel: a blazing fire of ethical energy which seeks to change people in order to kindle the love of neighbour in them," and also that "it is characteristic of Jesus' understanding of God that God will soon . . . come to power as the unconditional will for the good." Leaving aside metaphors like "blazing fire" or "ethical energy" and trying to separate Jesus' teaching about God from his understanding of the very concept of God, we could say that the references to both ethics ("changing people") and eschatology ("coming to power") belong to what Jesus teaches about God. But the reference to God's "unconditional will for the good" touches on this God's very identity: if Jesus were not teaching about someone (someone who has a will) and someone inherently good, we would not know whom he was talking about. (b) this someone is someone good Crucially, this "someone good" who is the subject of Jesus' teaching and preaching is not someone human; it is someone radically different from people, and in fact someone unique: there is no one else like this someone (this someone is not "a god"; this someone is the one and only God). (c) this someone is not someone like people (b) there isn't anyone else like this someone
Introduction
21
Theologians often say that the biblical God is "the ultimate reality," "the first and last reality," and so on (see, e.g., Kung 1980). Phrases of this kind are metaphorical and, of course, are not couched in simple and universal concepts, but what they hint at can be expressed in a nonmetaphorical way by drawing, in particular, on the simple and universal concept EXIST (THERE is). Thus, to begin with, Jesus' God is eternal, that is, exists always (has always existed and will always exist): (d) this someone exists always Furthermore, in contrast to everyone and everything else, this someone exists as a creator, not as a creature. In simple concepts, this contrast can be formulated as follows: (e) everything exists because this someone wants it to exist (f) people exist because this someone wants them to exist (g) this someone exists because this someone exists, not because of anything else Although (g) is paradoxical and does not sound exactly like simple everyday language, its phrasing is nonetheless simpler and clearer than that of philosophical phrases like "the ultimate reality." In support of component (g) I would also note that it is anchored in the biblical language itself, notably in God's self-revelation to Moses (Ex. 3:14): "l AM WHO I AM"—a statement that also sounds paradoxical and mysterious. Finally, I suggest that the biblical God is "the living God"—and that the phrase (e.g., John 6:69) is as at home in the language of the Bible as "the eternal God" (e.g., Deut. 33:27; Matt. 16:16). This brings us to the following overall explication of the biblical concept of God, in which Jesus' teaching about God is anchored: God
(a) (b) (c) (d)
God is someone (not something) this someone is someone good this someone is not someone like people there isn't anyone else like this someone
(e) (f) (g) (h)
this someone exists always everything exists because this someone wants it to exist people exist because this someone wants them to exist this someone exists because this someone exists, not because of anything else (i) this someone lives
Whether or not some further components should be added to this "definition minimum" (see Wierzbicka 1985:214-218) is debatable. Arguably, however, those listed above are necessary to explicate the biblical concept of God.
22
Introduction
12. The search for a coherent picture As mentioned earlier, to discuss the question "What did Jesus mean?" we have to decide, at least initially, on some set of Jesus' sayings. I do not want to pick and choose from the body of sayings attributed to Jesus to suit my personal convictions or hunches; I would want to remain within the domain of public discourse, that is, "to make the nature of my inquiry public" (see N. T. Wright 1996:55). To this end, let me make the following points about the choice of the material, the methodology, and the principles of interpretation. 1. To minimize areas of unnecessary controversy, I will not include in this book any of the sayings found in the Fourth Gospel, which in any case requires a separate study; and neither will I include any from sources outside the traditional canon. This leaves me with the synoptic Gospels. Here, my focus will be on the Sermon on the Mount (including the Beatitudes and the Lord's Prayer) and on the parables; special attention will be paid to the sayings and parables widely regarded as most likely to be authentic. 2. I will argue that the meanings emerging from a semantic analysis of the hard core of relatively undisputed Jesus' sayings are interrelated and that once formulated, they allow us to build a reasonably coherent overall picture. I will also try to show that many sayings whose authenticity has been disputed in fact fit this overall picture as well. I will argue that some of the sayings that have been disputed as allegedly inconsistent with the unquestionably authentic ones are in fact fully consistent with them—provided that they are properly explicated. 3. Although I have no "objective" arguments on my side comparable, for example, to the number of votes cast in the Jesus Seminar, I can claim a methodological advantage that is entirely public and intersubjective. The methodology of semantic interpretation used in this book is severely constrained by public rules, including the exclusive use of (independently established) universal human concepts, the exclusive use of independently established universal syntactic patterns, and the avoidance of metaphors in explanatory formulas. 4. Although the restrictions on the language of the explications stated in point 3 do not force a unique interpretation on any given saying, they do nonetheless severely restrict the range of possible interpretations and help to localize any disagreements in quite specific parts of the explications. As a result, two or three alternative interpretations, divergent but easy to compare, can often be proposed. If one of these interpretations, but not the others, is consistent with the account that is emerging from the analysis of the other sayings, I see this interpretation as more justified and to be preferred over the others. 5. The dependence between judgments of authenticity and judgments of interpretation goes both ways: whereas we cannot establish what Jesus meant without having some knowledge of what he said, we cannot always establish what he did or did not say without having some insight into what the disputed sayings might have meant. For example, Funk et al. (1993:4, 5) regard "the liberation of the noneschatological Jesus of the aphorisms and parables from [Albert] Schweitzer's eschatological Jesus" as a "pillar of contemporary scholarship." Since the Fellows
Introduction
23
of the Jesus Seminar have rejected "the tyranny of ... an eschatological Jesus," they have also decided that, in Powell's (1998:79) words, Jesus "did not speak in apocalyptic language about the end of the world or a final judgment." Accordingly, some of the key words attributed to Jesus in the New Testament were rejected by the Jesus Seminar as inauthentic. This includes, for example, Jesus' words in Matthew 25:31-46, which are embedded in an apocalyptic judgment scene: "for I was hungry and you gave me food; I was thirsty and you gave me drink; I was a stranger and you took me in," and his reply to the uncomprehending (v. 40): "Assuredly, I say to you, inasmuch as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me." What is at issue here, however, is above all the meaning of Jesus' words. As I will argue in detail in chapter 15, one can perfectly well accept the authenticity of the core of Matthew 25:31 -46 without accepting at the same time that Jesus saw people as divided, for all eternity, into sheep and goats or that he was an advocate of an impending cataclysm in the sense of an imminent end of the world. Generally speaking, the issue of authenticity cannot be separated from the issue of meaning. As any historical figure whose words have been transmitted to us through intermediaries, Jesus deserves the benefit of the doubt. Granted, there can be many ways of reading and interpreting the sayings attributed to him by the firstcentury Christian writers, and some of these ways would present his message as being full of contradictions. There is also, however, a way of reading most of these sayings that presents an intelligible and coherent overall picture—one that can be teased out by paraphrasing them in terms of simple, intuitively intelligible, and universal human concepts. This book attempts to show just such a way of reading Jesus' sayings. While presenting a radically new approach to the interpretation of the Bible, in its content it is consistent with mainstream Christian belief. Finally, should the reader be interested in where I personally stand, I am a believing and "practicing" Roman Catholic. At the same time, my perspective on the Gospels has been strongly influenced by the writings of Jewish, as well as Christian, scholars, and it is broadly ecumenical, which for me includes not only the Catholic and Protestant approaches but also the Eastern Christian tradition. In fact, in my attempts to understand what Jesus meant, 1 feel I learned most from a saint of the Eastern Church, the seventh-century scholar and mystic Isaac of Niniveh, known also as Isaac the Syrian (see, e.g., 1981, 1995). Isaac's distinction between "interior" meanings of the Scriptures' "discourse about God"— as opposed to the "outer meanings" and the "bodily exterior of the narratives"— and his insight into the symbolic meaning of apocalyptic images, warnings, and threats are, I find, more illuminating than many hermeneutical theories of the late twentieth century. I believe they point the way to a better understanding of Jesus' words and images in the third millennium.
This page intentionally left blank
Parti THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT
This page intentionally left blank
TWO
The Beatitudes
Matthew's version (5:3-12) 3. Blessed are the poor in spirit, For theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 4. Blessed are those who mourn, For they shall be comforted. 5. Blessed are the meek, For they shall inherit the earth. 6. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, For they shall be filled. 7. Blessed are the merciful, For they shall obtain mercy. 8. Blessed are the pure in heart, For they shall see God. 9. Blessed are the peacemakers, For they shall be called sons of God. 10. Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, For theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 11. Blessed are you when they revile and persecute you, and say all kinds of evil against you falsely for my sake. 12. Rejoice and be exceedingly glad, for great is your reward in heaven, for they persecuted the prophets who were before you. 27
28
The Sermon on the Mount
Luke's version (6:20-26) 20. Blessed are you poor, For yours is the kingdom of God. 21. Blessed are you who hunger now, For you shall be filled. Blessed are you who weep now, For you shall laugh. 22. Blessed are you when people hate you, And when they exclude you, And revile you, and cast out your name as evil, For the Son of Man's sake. 23. Rejoice in that day and leap for joy! For indeed your reward is great in heaven, For in the like manner their fathers did to the prophets. 24. But woe to you who are rich For you have received your consolation. 25. Woe to you who are full, For you shall hunger. Woe to you who laugh now, For you shall mourn and weep. 26. Woe to you when all people speak well of you, For so did their fathers to the false prophets.
1. The importance of the Beatitudes According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church (1994:426), "The Beatitudes are at the heart of Jesus' preaching"; numerous works on Jesus' teaching—scholarly and popular, Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant—express a similar view. Perhaps the Beatitudes are widely felt to be so crucially important because they address what many people see as the key problem of human existence: suffering. Some, like Jiirgen Moltmann, refuse even to call suffering a problem, preferring to use different language altogether, not abstract but existential and experiential: God and suffering belong together, just as in this life the cry for God and the suffering experienced in pain belong together. The question about God and the question about suffering are a joint, common question. . . . No one can answer the theodicy question [i.e., the question about the relation between suffering and God] in this world, and no one can get rid of it. Life in this world means living with this open question; it is a critical one. It is an all-embracing eschatological question. It is not purely theoretical, for it cannot be answered with any new theory about the existing world. It is a practical question which will only be answered through experience of the new world in which "God will wipe away every tear from their eyes."
The Beatitudes
29
It is not really a question at all. . . . It is the open wound of life in this world. It is the real task of faith and theology to make it possible for us to survive, to go on living, with this open wound. (1981:49) The questions most frequently raised in connection with human suffering are indeed the theodicy questions: why do people suffer? and how can a good God permit human suffering? But the Beatitudes address a different question, much closer to Moltmann's eschatological question: what is God going to do about it?1 Moltmann's answer, quoted from Revelation ("God will wipe away every tear from their eyes") is, in effect, the answer of the Beatitudes. The key promise of the Beatitudes is that those who weep will laugh, and those who mourn will be comforted. Everything else can be seen as an amplification of this theme. There are other themes: poverty, hunger, persecution, dependence on God, nonaggression, and nonretaliation. But poverty, hunger, and persecution can be seen as different modes and different examples of suffering, whereas dependence on God, nonaggression, and nonretaliation can be seen as responses to suffering. Although these themes are present elsewhere in Jesus' teaching as well (e.g., in the Lord's Prayer, in the injunction to love one's enemies, and in such parables as the rich man and Lazarus), nowhere else are they addressed so directly and emphatically. Above all, this applies to the central theme of suffering. Many modern commentators see poverty rather than suffering as the main concern of the Beatitudes, and undoubtedly poverty is a key theme: it is not treated as just one example of suffering among many but as a particularly salient one. Ultimately, however, suffering is broader than poverty; and on reflection, most readers of the Gospels will agree, I think, that for Jesus the suffering of the lepers, the paralytics, or the parents who lost their children did not mean any less than that of the hungry and the needy. By extrapolation, what applies to the lepers and others of Jesus' times applies also to the victims of the Holocaust, the Gulag, "ethnic cleansing," all "plagues," and so on. In the Beatitudes, as in Revelation, no sharp distinctions are made between different kinds of tears. But to establish what the main themes of the Beatitudes are we must discuss their redactional history, decide what exactly derives from Jesus, and explore the meaning behind the words and the images. One key fact that must be mentioned at the outset is that the Beatitudes as we know them do not all go back to Jesus' preaching. Whereas there is a great deal of controversy about the origin and history of the individual Beatitudes, scholars agree that neither Matthew's (5:3-12) nor Luke's (6:20-26) version can be fully traced to the historical Jesus. The most impressive and comprehensive study of the subject, Dupont's (1969-1973) threevolume Les Beatitudes, acknowledges, in agreement with other works of the last few decades, that both Matthew's and Luke's versions had their source partly in the teaching of the early church and were molded to some extent by the needs of the communities to which they were addressed. The evangelists did not aim at reproducing Jesus' words in their original form but rather at explaining his teaching as appropriate to the situation in which they were writing and the audiences at which they were aiming. Given the extensive redactional input in both
30
The Sermon on the Mount
Matthew's and Luke's version, the question naturally suggests itself: what exactly was "Jesus' version"? Remarkably, after two millennia of extensive discussions, there is still no consensus on this point and the vast literature on the subject covers an extremely broad spectrum of opinion. But although commentators still do not agree on what the Beatitudes mean, there has been in the last three decades or so a growing convergence on the question of what Jesus actually said and, in particular, on what he did not say. Since the issues involved in these debates are complex and the literature vast, I will start with a simple summary of facts, in seven points, and only later turn to a more comprehensive discussion of the key issues.
2. Basic facts about the Beatitudes The number of beatitudes Matthew's version has eight beatitudes (or nine, depending on how one counts, since verse 11 can be regarded either as a restatement of verse 10 or as an additional, ninth, beatitude). Luke's version has four beatitudes and four corresponding "woes."
Shared beatitudes (Matthew's and Luke's) Strictly speaking, there are no shared beatitudes, but four of Matthew's have partially matching ones in Luke. The key terms in these partially matching beatitudes are poor, weeping/grieving, hungry, and persecuted.
The source of the shared beatitudes It is widely held that the shared beatitudes were taken over by Matthew and Luke from a hypothetical shared source known as Q or Quelle, (German for "source") and reworked by each evangelist in his own way. The other beatitudes, as well as the Lucan woes, are widely held to have been added to the shared core by the evangelists.
Do all the shared beatitudes go back to Jesus1. Some recent commentators hold that of the four partially shared beatitudes only three go back to the historical Jesus: in their view, that of the persecuted derives from the situation of the early church rather than from Jesus' own ministry. Others, however, (including Dupont 1969-1973) regard it as very likely that this last beatitude, too, is authentic and represents an expanded and reworked version of a saying that does go back to the historical Jesus. On this point, even
The Beatitudes
31
the Fellows of the Jesus Seminar concur: "There were probably at least four beatitudes in Jesus' repertoire (poor, hungry, weeping, persecuted: Luke 6:2022)" (Funketal. 1993:512).
Whose version is closer to Jesus' own, Matthew's or Luke's?
Despite the continuing controversy, there is a growing consensus that on the whole Luke's version of the partially shared beatitudes is closer to Jesus'. Luke's innovations include (probably) the introduction of the word now and the substitution of the second-person plural you for die third-person plural they. As argued by Dupont (1969:11, 21-27; cf. also Gourgues 1995:84), it is likely that Luke projected the you of his fourth beatitude, addressed (in his version) to persecuted Christians, onto the earlier ones, treating them all as addressed to the suffering followers of Jesus.
The reconstructed version of Jesus' beatitudes
According to the growing scholarly consensus, therefore, Jesus' own beatitudes are likely to have looked as follows (see, e.g., Gourgues 1995:84): Blessed are die poor, for theirs is the kingdom of God. Blessed are those who hunger, for they shall be filled. Blessed are those who weep/grieve, for they shall laugh.
Reconstructing Jesus' words Jesus probably did not speak Greek, and in any case he didn't formulate his teaching in Greek; nonetheless, if we want to reconstruct and to understand Jesus' own words, our patli must lead through the Greek words in Luke's and Matthew's reworked accounts of his teaching. In the beatitude of the poor, Luke has the word ptochoi "poor" and Matthew has the phrase fjtochoi to pneumati, traditionally translated into English as "poor in spirit." In die beatitude of the hungry, bodi Luke and Matthew have the word fieinontes "hungering" (from peinao "be hungry, hunger"), to which Matthew has added, however, die phrase kai dipsoontes "and thirsting" and die complement ten dikaiosunen "righteousness" (in die accusative case). In the beatitude of the weeping/grieving, Luke uses the word klaiontes "weeping, crying," whereas Matthew uses penthountes "mourning, grieving." Since the Lucan version is generally accepted as being closer to Jesus' own than die Matthean one, it is widely (though not universally) assumed that the key Greek words pointing the way to Jesus' original beatitudes are ptochoi "poor," peinontes "hungry," and Iciaiontes "weeping." Scholars generally agree that behind the Greek kiaiontes and penthountes we should see the Hebrew (and also Aramaic) abelim "grieving/lamenting"; behind
32
The Sermon on the Mount
the Greek peinontes, the Hebrew raeb "hungry," "suffering hunger" (regularly translated into biblical Greek by the verb peinao); and behind the Greek ptochoi "poor," the Hebrew anawim and the Aramaic 'inwetan (Dupont 1969:11, 24-34), whose meaning will be discussed in some detail later. In what follows, I will discuss the likely meaning of Jesus' beatitudes in some detail, starring from the weeping, proceeding to the hungry before discussing the more difficult problem of the poor, and briefly touching on the controversial question of the persecuted. Having explored the meaning of the categories hinted at by the words "weeping" (abelim), "hungry" (raeb), and "poor" (anawim), I will turn to "blessed" (Greek makarios) itself (see Dupont 1969:11, 324-338) and address the question of what Jesus is likely to have had in mind when he pronounced certain categories of people to be "blessed."
3. Who are the weeping ones? The Greek words klaiontes (roughly, "weeping"/"crying") and penthountes (roughly, "mourning"/"grieving") are both renderings of the Hebrew and Aramaic word abelim, referring to physical manifestations of great suffering, such as (among the Israelites) loud crying and lamenting, tearing of one's clothes, covering of one's head with ashes, and so on (see Dupont 1969:11, 36). Prototypically, behavior of this kind was associated in Jewish culture with the death of a beloved person. Whom could Jesus have had in mind when he said that people who cry and lament like this are blessed? English doesn't have a word corresponding exactly to abelim because there is no corresponding cultural practice in Anglo culture. One should surely assume, however, that Jesus wasn't speaking about any culture-specific ways of expressing suffering but about suffering as such: the image of loud lament was for him a metaphor for all the suffering that people have to endure in their lives. Accordingly, I would identify the target of the beatitude of the weeping/grieving as follows: sometimes very bad things happen to people because these things happen, these people feel something very bad like a person feels something very bad when someone dies This very general interpretation differs from more specific interpretations that restrict the blessing to people who are suffering for a specific reason—in particular, to those who suffer at the thought of their own sins, at the thought of the sins of other people, or at the thought of other people's sufferings (but not their own). For example, the well-known commentator of the New Testament William Barclay ([1975] 1993:93) sums up the second beatitude in the phrase "the bliss of the broken heart," which is more paradoxical than Jesus' utterance itself, and he concludes the relevant section with the following summary (given in capital letters, p. 95): "The real meaning of the second beatitude is: O the bliss of the
The Beatitudes
33
man whose heart is broken for the world's suffering and for his own sin, for out of his sorrow he will find the joy of God!" Although the word "sorrow" and the phrase "broken heart" are quite apposite here (as a free paraphrase of Jesus' message), the phrase "the bliss of the broken heart," which seems to suggest a masochistic enjoyment of sorrow and grief, is unfortunate, and the references to the world's suffering and to one's own sin seem to be gratuitous additions. It is widely accepted in the literature on the subject that the beatitude of the weeping invokes the passage from the book of the prophet Isaiah (61:1-2), which the Lucan Jesus quotes at the beginning of his ministry (4:18-19): The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, Because he has anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor [anau>im]. He has sent me to heal the broken-hearted, To preach deliverance to the captives, And recovery of sight to the blind, To set at liberty those who are oppressed, To preach the acceptable year of the Lord. The images and phrases used by Isaiah make it quite clear that the people referred to are those to whom very bad things have happened and who feel something very bad because of this. It is to such people that the Messiah promised by the prophet brings the "good tidings." In the light of Isaiah's prophecy, commentaries such as the following (Strecker 1988:35) seem wide of the mark: it is uncertain what the expression penthountes ("mourning, grieving") refers to concretely: to grief over the present eon, which at the same time evokes a distance between the mourner and the world? Or is it a question of penitent grief, say, in the sense of the apocalyptic tradition of the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs? The latter would include the idea that those grieving over sin are at the same time supposed to stand away from the sin and overcome it. It is also conceivable, however, that Matthew understands mourn in the sense of abasing oneself. Thus, James 4:9 attests the imperative "Mourn!" beside "Be wretched!", in addressing sinners, who are thereby called to penitence and humility before God. It is hard to believe that the author is speaking here about Jesus' good news, promising consolation (in the first instance) to those who grieve over the death of their beloved. The overspecific interpretations (Strecker's "penitent grief," as well as Barclay's "vicarious penitent grief," and "sympathetic grief") can be portrayed as follows: (a) some people feel something very bad because they think that they did something very bad
(b) some people feel something very bad because they think that other people did very bad things
34
The Sermon on the Mount
(c) some people feel something very bad because they think that many bad things happened to other people
Although it can be argued that these three scenarios [(a), (b), and (c)] are compatible with the teachings of Jesus, there is no basis for reading them into the meaning of the beatitude itself. It is the commentators rather than Jesus who restrict the blessing to some specific categories of sufferers and to the kind of suffering that they regard as particularly noble and edifying: suffering for one's sins, suffering for the sins of the world, and suffering for the sufferings of other people. There is no reason to assume that Jesus meant to exclude people who suffer because terrible things have happened to them (e.g., painful illness or death of their children). On the contrary, it is to such people first of all that Jesus (as we know him from the Gospels) shows his compassion. The idea that he meant to exclude them from the hope offered to "those who cry" is arbitrary and groundless, nor are there any compelling reasons to think that that is how Matthew wanted to interpret Jesus' teaching. According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church (1994:427), "The Beatitudes . . . are paradoxical promises which sustain hope in the midst of tribulations" and which "respond to the natural desire for happiness" that "God has placed in the human heart in order to draw people to the One who alone can fulfil it." The reference to "tribulations" points in the direction of "bad things that happen to us" rather than toward "bad things that happen to other people" or "bad things that we do." This is in keeping with the reference to the "natural desire for happiness." Thus the Catechism interprets the blessing broadly, as directed at the unhappy; the broken-hearted; those who mourn, grieve, and cry in sorrow—whose unhappiness is contrasted with people's "natural desire for happiness" and to whom it promises an ultimate fulfilment of that desire. In endorsing such a broad interpretation of the beatitude of the weeping, the Catechism recognizes the universalism of Jesus' teaching, evident also in his parables, in his great scene of the Last Judgment (Matt. 25:31-46), in his teaching about the love of enemies, and in the universal application of the concept of neighbour. Jesus' image of the Father in Heaven who "makes his sun rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the just and the unjust" (Matt. 5:45) epitomizes his universalism. The Beatitudes, with their sweeping blessing for all those "who weep," epitomize it, too. The blessing is not even focused in any special way on the suffering of the "righteous" and the innocent, as the book of Job was. It is simply extended to everyone who suffers, in Meier's (1980:39) words, "with the full authority of the apocalyptic prophet he [Jesus] assures them of vindication on the last day."
4. Who are the hungry? Who are the "hungry"—the peinontes of Luke's second beatitude and the raeb of Jesus' original beatitude, translated by Luke with this word? The literal meaning of the word presumably used by Jesus is not in question. To quote Dupont,
The Beatitudes
35
It is not necessary to insist at length on the fact that the peinontes, about whom the beatitude speaks, are those "hungry" not in the Greek (or the French) sense but in the biblical sense; these people "are hungry" because they do not have the necessities, they are lacking indispensable food. Not only are they hungry, but they have no means to obtain the bread which would appease their hunger. They are the poor, who do not possess the essential minimum. Their real name would be "those suffering hunger" ("les fameliques"). (1969:11, 39) But it is not enough to understand the literal sense of the word that Jesus is likely to have used because Jesus often used words metaphorically. For example (as discussed above), it seems indubitable that when he spoke of the abelim (the "lamenting/grieving" ones), he meant this word figuratively, as a metaphor for, broadly, the unhappy (the sorrowful, the suffering, the afflicted)—that is, in universal terms, all those to whom "very bad things have happened" and who "feel something very bad because of this." Similarly, it seems clear that his word raeb, underlying the Greek peinontes, symbolized not only those who suffered hunger, in the literal sense of the word, but also those who suffered thirst, cold, homelessness, and so on, that is, those who were deprived of the necessities of life. As Dupont (1969:11, 39) put it, "they are the poor who do not possess the essential minimum." There is an ongoing controversy about the meaning of Jesus' first beatitude: who are the "poor" (Luke's ptochoi)! Did this beatitude refer (for Jesus) to a certain spiritual attitude or to a socioeconomic condition? I will discuss this controversy more thoroughly in the next section. But whoever the "poor" (ptochoi) are, the "hungry" must be, above all, those needy in a material, physical sense. As for Matthew's beatitude that is devoted to those who "hunger and thirst for righteousness," Guelich (1982) and others have noted that is not inconsistent with Jesus' teaching as a whole. But most commentators agree that the phrasing of this beatitude is in all probability Matthew's own and that Jesus' original version corresponded to Luke's "hungry" (peinontes, i.e., raeb) rather than to Matthew's "those who hunger and thirst for righteousness." It can be added that here, as elsewhere, the best clue to Jesus' intended meaning lies in his parables. As pointed out by Dupont (1969:11, 48), the meaning of the beatitude of the hungry is best explained by the parable of the rich man and Lazarus (Luke 16:1931; see chapter 17). The poor man, Lazarus, is described in this parable as "a certain beggar named Lazarus, full of sores, who was at his [the rich man's] gate, desiring to be fed with the crumbs which fell from the rich man's table. Moreover the dogs came and licked his sores." Lazarus is both hungry and poor, and the two attributes are inextricably linked: he is hungry because he is poor, and his poverty is manifested in his constant desire to feed on the crumbs that fall from the rich man's table. He is a beggar and no doubt lacks life's other necessities in addition to food. And he is "blessed": after he dies, the angels cany him to "Abraham's bosom." The character of Lazarus, then, is our best guide to the intended meaning of Jesus' second beatitude, and it suggests the following formula:
The Sermon on the Mount
36
(a) some people don't have anything (b) because of this many bad things happen to these people This formula overlaps with that assigned to the beatitude of the weeping since both share the component "many bad things happen to these people." But there is also a difference: the beatitude of the weeping focuses on the suffering due to misfortunes ("these people feel something very bad"), whereas the beatitude of the hungry focuses on the destitution that causes misfortunes ("these people don't have anything").
5. Who are the poor? According to the account developed here so far, Jesus did focus in one of his beatitudes on the poor—the destitute, the have-nots, the beggars. Symbolically, he designated this category of people as the hungry. But if "hungry" stands for something like "poor," what does "poor" itself stand for? The categories of people described by Jesus as blessed are not mutually exclusive, and in fact the "hungry" (raeb) and the anawim could largely overlap. It was not Jesus but Luke who used the word ptochoi "poor, destitute" (Jesus taught in Aramaic, not in Greek). As mentioned earlier, Jesus used, in all probability, the Aramaic word 'inwetan, that is, the Aramaic counterpart of the Hebrew word anawim (originally, "bowed down"), which was one of the key words of the Old Testament and which also played an important role in the Palestinian Judaism of Jesus' times (cf. Broer 1986; Dupont 1969:11; Gelin 1964; Guelich 1982). Although biblical scholars describe the meaning of anawim in many different ways, they generally agree that it was not the same as the Greek ptochoi but covered a broader range (roughly, "needy/lowly/oppressed/depending on God's mercy"). Since there is no exact equivalent of anawim in English either, it cannot be elucidated by any one English word (such as "poor") or by a series of nonequivalent English words. It can, however, be elucidated if it is presented as a unique configuration of universal human concepts.2 Guelich (1982:68) describes the meaning of anawim as follows: "In summary, the poor [i.e., anawim] in Judaism referred to those in desperate need (socioeconomic element) whose helplessness drove them to a dependent relationship with God (religious element) for the supplying of their needs and vindication. Both elements are consistently present. . . ." The literature on the Beatitudes is dominated by heated debates about the intended identity of the "poor" (ptochoi, anawim), and the issue is often presented in the form of an alternative: does it refer to those who are materially poor (destitute) or to those who are poor in spirit, that is, have the "right" attitude toward material possessions and seek their existential security in God? In other words, does it refer to a condition or to an attitude? All those commentators who have looked beyond Luke's Greek word ptochoi agree that the Semitic concept behind it (anawim) refers both to a condition and to an attitude, that is, that it has a socioeconomic dimension as well as a reli-
The Beatitudes
37
gious one (roughly, economically poor, socially oppressed, and religiously dependent on God). To quote Guelich (1982:97) again, "The Old Testament concept of the poor included a dual reference to the socioeconomic condition of the individual as well as the religious dimension of resultant dependency upon God and vindication." This suggests the following explication: anawim (a) (b) (c) (d) (e)
many bad things happen to some people because other people do bad things to these people these people know that they can't do anything because of this [because they don't have anything] at the same time these people know that God can do good things for them (f) they know that they can live because God wants to do good things for them, not because of anything else
Component (a) shows that the anawim suffer many misfortunes, (b) adds that they are oppressed by some other people, (c) presents them as powerless, (d) (which appears to be optional rather than essential) links their powerlessness with their poverty, and (e) and (f) show that they know that they depend on God. In the literature on the Beatitudes there is much discussion of how Matthew, with his phrase "poor in spirit," has "spiritualized," "ethicized," or "interiorized" Luke's simple concept of poor, allegedly more faithful to Jesus' original intention. But much of this discussion appears to be missing two crucial points: first, that Jesus' anawim (or its Aramaic equivalent) didn't mean "destitute" but stood for a more complex concept that included a religious dimension; and second, that acknowledging the religious ("spiritual," or "interior") aspect of Jesus' first beatitude is not tantamount to ignoring or downplaying his interest in the poor (the destitute, the hungry, and the dispossessed) because in any case there was also the second beatitude, the beatitude of the hungry, which focused specifically on the poor in the socioeconomic sense of the word. By translating anawim as "poor in spirit" (ptochoi to pneumati) rather than simply "poor" (ptochoi), Mat thew was evidently trying to explain this concept, for which Greek simply had no ready-made word. As C. Brown (1979:824) puts it, "The enlarged form in Matt, 'the poor in spirit. . .' brings out the OT and Jewish background of those who in affliction have confidence only in God." Gourgues (1995:32) remarks in this connection that in Psalms we often hear the cry of someone who presents himself as "poor and suffering" (Ps. 69:30), "poor and lonely" (Ps. 25:16), or, most frequently, "poor and unhappy" (Ps. 40; 18; 70; 6; 86:1; 108:22). In the majority of cases, the context clearly indicates that it is not a matter of material poverty. . . . To be poor involves being conscious of one's misery, whatever its face. . . . But what is the most important is the fact that the consciousness of one's misery turns the poor towards God.
38
The Sermon on the Mount
Having explicated the Old Testament concept of anawim in universal concepts, I have by no means elucidated it fully. To understand the meaning of the words used by Jesus is not the same thing as to understand what Jesus meant by them. Some aspects of Jesus' teaching were so new that they couldn't be fully expressed in existing words, and much of this teaching could be conveyed only by images and symbolic actions. For example, the new Christian concept of "humility" (tapeinophrosune; see Turner 1980:216-217) was forged not only by specific sayings but also by symbolic actions such as Jesus' washing of his disciples' feet.3 Similarly, the full meaning of Jesus' first beatitude was bursting the seams not only of the Greek word ptochoi "poor" but even of the culturally loaded Hebrew word anauiim. Jesus (as the evangelists understood him) wanted to identify himself with the prophet announced in Isaiah's 61:1-2 (cf. Luke 4:18-20): The Spirit of the Lord is upon me Because he has anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor [anaivim]. At the same time, however, he was developing his own idea of the anawim, the "poor in spirit," on whom God's special favor rests; and he was developing this idea not only through words but also through images, parables, and occasional symbolic actions. As noted by Dupont (1969:11), one such crucial image was that of a small child, linked with the episode of Jesus' blessing of little children (Mark 10:13-16; Matt. 19:13-14; Luke 18:15-17). To quote from Mark's (10:13-14) version of the story, 13. Then they brought young children to him that he might touch them; but the disciples rebuked those who brought them. 14. But when Jesus saw it, he was greatly displeased and said to them, 'Let the little children come to me, and do not forbid them; for of such is the kingdom of God.' Since this image throws an important light on the concept of anauiim, it deserves some discussion in the present context. The details of Jesus' sayings that involve little children are disputed, but in essence these sayings are generally regarded as authentic and, moreover, as indicating an attitude that was a startling departure from the standards of the ancient world. Funk et al. (1993:89) commented on this as follows: "In support of the authenticity of Mark 10:14, some Fellows pointed to Jesus' dramatic reversal of the child's traditional status in ancient societies as a silent non-participant. This perspective agrees with Jesus' sympathy for those who were marginal to society or outcasts (compare the beatitudes recorded in Luke 6:20-21)." The question of why the kingdom of God belongs to the likes of little children is debated in the literature. Some say, "because they are innocent" (e.g., Pirot 1935:520); others, "because they are humble" (e.g., Filson 1960:208); still others, "because they are marginal to society or outcasts" (e.g., Funk et al. 1993:89). Dupont (1969:11, 160) rejects what he sees as idealization of children
The Beatitudes
39
as the basis for an explanation, and he offers the following answer: if the kingdom belongs to little children it is not because of their alleged innocence or humility but "because of God's predilection for those who are little, weak, despised. To share this privilege of little children, adults have to make themselves little, lower themselves, to count for nothing. Not exactly because humility is particularly meritorious but because of what is known about God's dispositions: God resists the proud but gives his grace to the lowly (tapeinos)." Dupont adds (p. 181) that the poor are "blessed" because, being like little children, they are the object of God's special love for "those who are little" (literally, "what is little," ce quz est petit). What exactly does it mean, however, that both the poor and little children are "little"? In what sense are little children "little"? And how can adults "make themselves little"? Dupont's (1969:vol. 2) commentary on the links between these sayings and the Beatitudes is engaging, but ultimately it remains metaphorical. Furthermore, his conclusion that it is not the attitude that matters but the condition is unhelpful: in the children's case, it is apparently their condition that makes them especially dear to God, whereas in the case of adults who are supposed to "make themselves little," it would seem to be their attitude. What the two cases have in common is not articulated. I wish to propose the following interpretation, formulated without metaphors and by and large in universal concepts: little children know that they cannot live if someone (some "big person," i.e., a grownup) doesn't do good things for them; and they trust that some people (prototypically, their mother and father) want to and can do good things for them. And this is, 1 suggest, the meaning of Jesus' image of the "poor," the "little ones," the anawim, on whom God's special favor rests: they are people who know that they cannot live if God doesn't do good things for them and who think at the same time that God can and wants to do good things for them. Thus, the explication that follows can apply both to Jesus' anau/im ("poor in spirit") and to his model of a "childlike" attitude to God: Jesus' conception of the anawim and the childlike
(a) some people know that they cannot live if God doesn't do good things for them (b) at the same time these people think: (c) "God can do good things for me (d) God wants to do good things for me" The word know in (a) transcends, I believe, the need to choose between a condition and a religious attitude: if the people in question know that they cannot live without God's help and support, this implies something significant about their objective condition; at the same time, the fact that they are aware of this condition implies something significant about their state of mind as well. The explication taken as a whole expresses a "God-dependence" and a trust in God, consonant with Jesus' teaching elsewhere in the Gospels, including the
40
The Sermon on the Mount
Lord's Prayer and the injunction to ask, to seek, and to knock (Luke 11:9; Matt. 7:7; see chapter 4, section 11).
6. Who are the meek (Matthew's praeis,)? The English word meek here is misleading: it is no longer used in English in a way that could make clear what either Jesus' or Matthew's intended meaning might have been. Moreover, in modern English, it has become a somewhat pejorative word, suggesting something like weakness or spinelessness. Many commentators seem to believe that the beatitude of the meek is of little relevance to Jesus' teaching because it does not go back to the historical Jesus; in fact, they argue, it doesn't even go as far back as the Quelle, and so it must be a Matthean creation. But even if we accept that the beatitude of the praeis was added by Matthew, the question must still be asked: did Matthew add this beatitude for a good reason? In fact, it seems that Matthew added it to convey more fully what he thought Jesus had meant by his original beatitude of the anawim. Steeped as he was in the Jewish religious tradition, Matthew was keenly aware of the inadequacy of the Greek word ptochoi 'poor' as a would be equivalent of the Hebrew anawim, so as we have seen, he used instead the phrase ptochoi to pneumati 'poor in spirit'. Apparently, however, he wasn't fully satisfied with this translation either because he felt that it didn't adequately express the full meaning of Jesus' anawim; and this, it seems, is why he added another beatitude, that of the praeis, which the King James Version later translated into English as "meek." Commenting on Matthew's third beatitude (that of the meek) in relation to the first (that of the poor in spirit) Guelich observed: The first, with its reference to Isa. 61:1, and the third, with its reference to Ps. 37:11, ultimately go back to the same Hebrew term for "the poor" Cnwm) [i.e., anawim], . . . This Beatitude most probably arose as a parallel to the first in order to maintain the dual Old Testament force of the socioeconomic and religious connotations of the concept "the poor." The "meek" offered a balance in Greek for the strictly socioeconomic understanding of the "poor" at a time in the Church's mission when the first beatitude was in danger of being misconstrued in an exclusively materialistic sense. (1982:101) Guelich continues here, essentially, an approach initiated and given a more nuanced form by Dupont (1973:111, 486-545). Dupont, too, argued that Matthew had introduced the beatitude of the "meek" (in Greek praus, plural praeis) to better capture the full sense of the underlying concept of anawim. Dupont noted that Matthew's phrase "poor in spirit" represented his attempt to partially explicate this concept (going beyond what he saw as the inadequate rendering of anawim by the Greek ptochoi), and that by introducing the additional beatitude of the meek, he was trying to capture another aspect of the meaning of anawim,
The Beatitudes
41
which was not sufficiently reflected in his phrase "poor in spirit" (ptochoi to pneumati). In Dupont's (1973:111) discussion, however, both Matthean beatitudes that descend from anawim (the poor in spirit and the meek) preserve some religious and/or ethical aspects of this key concept, focusing, respectively, on people's relation to God (in the poor in spirit) and on their relation to other people (in the meek). Dupont also presents a more complex account of the meaning of anawim, pointing to its semantic evolution in Hebrew. In particular, he presents evidence from the Dead Sea scrolls that suggests that in Jesus' times this word was used in Palestine in a new sense, focusing on a person's relations with other people rather than with God. For example, the Rule from Qumran gives an important place to anawah (the noun that corresponds to the adjective anawim) in the relations among the members of the community. In the context of the Rule, anawah appears to suggest something like a patient, sweet, and gentle attitude to others, including those who treat one badly. It would appear, then, that Matthew added his beatitude of the praeis "meek" because he wanted to convey fully not only what anawim meant in Hebrew (and in the Jewish religious tradition) but also what Jesus meant when he used this word (or its Aramaic counterpart). And apparently Matthew—and the earlier Christian tradition on which he was relying—thought that Jesus wanted to convey more than the older meaning of the biblical anawim. As emphasized by Jeremias (1971:114), Jesus expressed the bulk of his teaching in images and parables (more than other Jewish teachers), as if he was aware that the old words, with their old meanings, could not adequately express what he really wanted to say. The metaphor of old wineskins, unsuitable for new wine (Matt. 9:16-17), can be understood as applying, inter alia, to Jesus' "picture-language": 16. No one puts a piece of unshrunk cloth on to an old garment; for the patch pulls away from the garment, and the tear is made worse. 17. Nor do people put new wine into old wineskins, or else the wineskins break, the wine is spilled, and the wineskins are ruined. But they put new wine into new wineskins, and both are preserved. The key biblical word anawim, serviceable and important as it was, was such an old garment or old wineskin, and it is remarkable that Matthew saw this fact so clearly. If we follow Matthew, then, we will assume that Jesus wanted to declare as blessed yet another category of people, in addition to the weeping, the hungry (i.e., poor, needy), and the lowly and poor in spirit. In trying to understand what he may have meant and what the early Christian tradition understood him as having meant, we should look for clues not only in the use of anawim (and anawah) in Palestine in Jesus' times but also—and in fact, especially—in the New Testament itself. In particular, we should examine the evidence from the use of the word praus "meek" elsewhere in Matthew's Gospel and throughout the New
42
The Sermon on the Mount
Testament. We should also examine the evidence from the images in which Jesus' teaching was frequently expressed. Discussions of the meaning of the Greek word praus as such can also be misleading; the question is not how this word was used, for example, by Aristotle nor even how it was used in first-century secular Greek, where it was contrasted with hupselokardia, roughly, "pride, arrogance" (cf. Barclay [1975)1993:97), but what it was intended to mean in New Testament Greek. As I will show below, the gloss "humble, gentle," offered for this word, for example, in the Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament (Newman 1971), cannot be taken as an adequate representation of its meaning. The best clue to the intended message of the beatitude of the praeis "meek" can be found in the pervasive New Testament image of a lamb. If Matthew's phrase ptochoi to pneumati "poor in spirit" was intended to convey, in part at least, something along the lines of "childlike," his word praus "meek" was intended to convey something like "lamblike." Translating this latter image into words (taking into account all the contextual clues), I would propose the following formula: some people don't want to do anything bad to anyone when other people do bad things to these people these people don't want to do anything bad to these other people because of this In support of this interpretation, I will point to the passage where Matthew's Jesus describes himself as "meek" (praus): "Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle [i.e., praus "meek"] and lowly of heart [tapeinos "humble"), and you will find rest for your souls" (11:29). The fact that the Matthean Jesus uses here (in Matthew's Greek version) the same word, praus, that is also used in the beatitude under discussion provides a vital clue to its interpretation. In particular, it suggests that praus cannot mean (for Matthew) "humble" because if it did there would be little point in conjoining praus with tapeinos "humble" (i.e., saying in effect, "humble and humble").
7. Exploring the image of the lamb and some related New Testament images To explain what he means by praus "meek," Matthew offers Jesus as a model. He does not say explicitly what feature or features of Jesus' person he has in mind. Instead, he identifies him with the Servant of the Lord described by Isaiah (42:1-4), in a passage that he quotes in the very next chapter (12:18-21) and to which I will turn shortly. As noted earlier, the identification of Jesus with Isaiah's Servant of the Lord is very prominent in both Matthew and Luke. In Matthew's Gospel, it is evident in the way Jesus replies to John the Baptist's question: "Are you the Coming One, or do we look for another?" (11:3-5). Jesus' reply echoes Isaiah (42:7, 61:1, and 35:5-6):
The Beatitudes
43
4. Jesus answered and said to them: 'Go and tell John the things which you hear and see: 5. The blind receive their sight and the lame walk; the lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear; the dead are raised up and the poor [i.e., the anawim] have the gospel preached to them.' The identification with Isaiah's Servant of the Lord is presented even more explicitly in Luke's gospel (4:18-19), according to which Jesus started his ministry by reading aloud a long passage from Isaiah (42:61:1) in the synagogue in Nazareth: 18. 'The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor. . . .' 20. Then he closed the book, and gave it back to the attendant, and sat down. And the eyes of all who were in the synagogue were fixed on him. 21. And he began to say to them: 'Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing". Clearly, this key passage is echoed in the Beatitudes themselves. Thus, Matthew guides his readers' understanding of the new concept of "meekness" (praotes) as follows: to be "meek" (praus) means to be like Jesus, and Jesus was like the figure described by Isaiah (42:1-4). Isaiah's description of this figure (adduced in Matt. 12:18-21) reads as follows: 1. Behold my servant, whom I uphold. My Elect One in whom my soul delights! I have put my Spirit upon him He will bring forth justice to the Gentiles. 2. He will not cry out, nor raise his voice. Nor cause his voice to be heard in the streets. 3. A bruised reed he will not break, And smoking flax he will not quench. In essence, what these images add up to is the idea of "not wanting to do anything bad to anyone" and, in particular, "not wanting to do anything bad to other people when these other people do bad things to us." This is of course consistent with Isaiah's key image of the lamb, which is quite crucial here, given the fact that this image is used throughout the New Testament as a synonym for Jesus, summarizing in the most concise way possible Jesus' attitude to both God and people. Here is Isaiah's (53:7-9) lamb image: 7. He was oppressed and he was afflicted, Yet he opened not his mouth, He was led as a lamb to the slaughter, And as a sheep before its shearers is silent, So he opened not his mouth. . . . 9. ... he had done no violence.
44
The Sermon on the Mount
The images of the weak reed that the Servant of the Lord will not break and of the smoldering flax that he will not extinguish refute a possible misinterpretation of the lamb image, that is, the idea that the Servant of the Lord doesn't want to do anything bad to anyone because he is weak and helpless like a lamb. In the light of these images, the Servant of the Lord doesn't want to do anything bad to anyone even if it would be extremely easy to do so. Thus, the Servant of the Lord is someone who simply "doesn't want to do anything bad to anyone." The reference to not crying out and not raising his voice ("he will not cry out, nor raise his voice") is equally instructive. The Greek word krauge, translated in the King James Bible as "cry out," is actually glossed in the Concise Greek-English Dictionary of the New Testament as "clamour, angry shouting." This, too, suggests that the Servant of the Lord, identified in the Gospels with Jesus, unmistakably shows by his manner that he does not want to do anything bad to anyone. Since all the evangelists identify Jesus with Isaiah's "Servant of the Lord," who "had done no violence" (cf. Mark 15:28; Matt. 8:1 7, 12:18-21; Luke 4:18-19; John 12:38-41), they all suggest a message that can be formulated as follows: you know: a long time ago, someone (prophet Isaiah) said about someone: "this person doesn't want to do anything bad to anyone (this person is like a lamb) everyone can see (know) this" Jesus is like this you can know because of this that Jesus is this person Another important context in which the word praus "meek" is used in Matthew's Gospel (21:5) is a quotation from the prophet Zechariah (9:9), describing the triumphant entry of the Messiah into Jerusalem: Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout, daughter of Jerusalem, Behold, your King is coming to you . . . Lowly [praus], and riding on a donkey, A colt, the foal of a donkey. Here, the Greek praus is translated by the English "lowly." Sometimes the word praus in this passage is translated into English as "poor" or even as "afflicted," presumably because the use of a donkey rather than something grander could be seen as a symbol of poverty. But Matthew's use of praus reflects a different interpretation of the prophecy. For him, the King-Messiah, sitting on a donkey, is not coming as a conqueror supported by military power. Although the donkey could lend itself to several different interpretations, it is also consistent with the interpretation of manifestly not wanting to do anything bad to anyone. Dupont states that
The Beatitudes
45
the donkey is a mount associated with the time of peace, in contrast to the horse, a mount associated with the time of war. This is precisely its meaning in the prophecy in Zachariah 9:9, which is continued in verse 10: I will cut off the chariot from Ephraim, And the horses from Jerusalem; The battle-bow shall be cut off. He shall speak peace to the nations. The king who comes on a donkey is the opposite of a warrior king, and this is precisely what the adjective praus is meant to indicate here. (1973:111, 544) The use of the word praus in the description of Jesus' entry into Jerusalem shows that the word doesn't really mean "gentle": entering the city on a donkey rather than at the head of an army doesn't show that the Messiah is gentle (has a gentle manner) but rather that he clearly does not rely on violence and military power ("he doesn't want to do anything bad to anyone"). Thus, we have made a number of connections that help us to understand who the "meek" (praus) in Matthew's beatitude are: a connection with the Matthean Jesus' self-description as "meek/gentle and lowly in heart"; with the prophet Isaiah's descriptions of the "meek," nonviolent, and lamblike Servant of the Lord; and with Matthew's version of the prophet Zachariah's description of the Messiah's nonthreatening entry into Jerusalem. Another crucial connection links the idea of "meekness" (praotes) with Jesus' image of "turning the other cheek," which will be discussed in detail in chapter 3, section 7. In explicating Jesus' use of anawim by means of praeis "meek," as well as ptochoi to pneumati "poor in spirit", Matthew was following in the footsteps of the translators of the Septuagint (a Greek rendering of the Hebrew Scriptures, undertaken in the third century B.C. for the benefit of hellenized Jews). Thus, in Psalm 37 (11) we find the celebrated line "the meek [praeis] shall inherit the earth," on which Matthew's beatitude of the meek is evidently modeled. This doesn't mean, however, that the intended sense of this beatitude can be simply assumed to be identical with the meaning of praeis in the Septuagint. According to Gourgues (1995:53), in the Septuagint "the praus is the opposite of the aggressor and the violent. Praotes (douceur) can be defined as an attitude of good will (bienveillance) and non-violence towards other people." Gourgues goes on to observe that in the New Testament epistles, in which this term occurs 11 times, it also refers to an attitude toward other people, and he concludes that this accords with the distinction that Matthew drew by apparently splitting Jesus' beatitude of the anaue Commandment, pp. 9-40. Trans. Reginald H. and Use Fuller. Philadelphia: Fortress Press. Schottroff, Luise. 1987. Das Gleichnis vom grofien Gastmahl in der Logienquelle. Evangeiische Theologie, 47:192-211. Schussler-Fiorenza, Elisabeth, ed. 1994. Searching the Scriptures. Vol. 11: A Feminist Commentary. New York: Crossroad. Schweizer, Eduard. 1975. The Good Neu>s According to Matthew. Trans. David E. Green. London: SPCK. Scott, Bernard Brandon. 1981. Jesus, Symbol-maker for the Kingdom. Philadelphia: Fortress Press. Scott, Bernard Brandon. 1989. Hear Then the Parable. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. Seneca. 1917. Ad Lucilium Epistulae Morales, vol. 1. Trans. Richard M. Gummere. London: Heinemann. Sevin, Marc. 1997. Les Paroles provocantes de Jesus. Paris: Cerf. Shorter, Aylward. 1997. Toward a Theory of IncuJturation. Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books. Shorto, Russell. 1997. Gospel Truth: The New Picture of Jesus Emerging from Science and History and Why It Matters. London: Hodder & Stoughton. Sifre. 1986. A Tannaitic Commentary on the Book of Deuteronomy. Trans. Reuven Hammer. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. Smith, B. T. D. 1937. The Parables of the Synoptic Gospels: A Critical Study. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Smith, Huston. [1958]1965. The Religions of Man. New York: Perennial Library. Smith, Huston. 1992. Forgotten Truth: The Common Vision of the World's Religions. San Francisco: Harper. Smith, Huston. 1995. Postmodernism and the World's Religions. In Walter Truett Anderson, ed. The Truth About the Truth, pp. 204-214. New York: Putnam. Solle, Dorothee. 1981. Paternalistic Religion as Experienced by Women. In JohannesBaptist Metz and Edward Schillebeeckx, eds. Concilium: Religion in the Eighties, God as Father, pp. 69-74. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark. Solov'ev, Vladimir. [1883]1966. Velikij spor i xrist'janskaja politika. Sobranie Socinenij, pp. 3-116. S. Petersburg: Prosvescenie; photo-reprinted, Bruxelles: Foyer Oriental Chretien. Sommer, F. 1948. The World's Greatest Short Story: A Study of Present-day Significance of the Family Pattern of Life. Oswega, Kans.: Carpenter Press. Spaemann, Heinrich. 1973. Wer ist Jesus von Nazareth-Fur mich?: 100 Zeit-genossische Zeugnisse. Munchen: Kosel.
References
493
Spooner, W. A. 1937. Golden Rule. In James Hastings, ed. Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics, 6:310-312. Sproul, R. C. 1992. Essential Truth of the Christian Faith: 100 Key Doctrines in Plain Language. London: SCM Press. St. Augustine. 1948. The Lord's Sermon on the Mount. Johannes Quasten and Joseph Plumpe, eds. New York: Newman Press. St Augustine. 1984. City of God. London: Penguin Books. Stenger, W. 1993. Introduction to New Testament Exegesis. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans. St. Gregory of Nyssa. 1917. The Catechetical Oration of St. Gregory of Nyssa. London: SPCK. St. Gregory of Nyssa. 1954. The Lord's Prayer; The Beatitudes. New York: Newman Press. St. Gregory of Nyssa. 1993. The Soul and the Resurrection. Trans, and intro. Catherine P. Roth. Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press. St. Isaac of Niniveh (Isaac le Syrian). 1981. Oeuvres Spirituelles. n.p.: Desclee de Brouwer. St. Isaac of Nineveh. 1984. Ascetical Homilies of St. Isaac of Niniveh. Trans. D. Biller. Boston: Holy Transfiguration Monastery. St. Isaac of Nineveh. 1995. The Second Part, chaps. IV-XLI. Lovanii: Peeters Press. Stott, John R. W. [1978)1992. The Message of the Sermon on the Mount: Christian Counterculture. Leicester: Inter-Varsity Press. Strack, Hermann Leberecht, and Paul Billerbeck. [1922-1928)1965. Kommentar £um Neuen Testament aus Talmud und Midrasch, 4 vols. Munchen: C. H. Beck. Strecker, Georg. 1988. The Sermon on the Mount. Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon. St. Thomas Aquinas. 1964. Summa Theologiae. London: Blackfriars. Tannehill, Robert C. 1975. The Sword of His Mouth. Philadelphia: Fortress Press. Tannen, Deborah. 1992. That's Not What I Meant. London: Virago Press. Taylor, C. [1897)1963. Sayings of the Jewish Fathers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Taylor, V. 1959. The Gospel According to St. Mark: The Greek Text with Introduction, Notes and Indexes. London and New York: Macmillan and St. Martins. Te Selle, Sallie. 1975. Speaking in Parables: A Study in Metaphor and Theology. Philadelphia: Fortress Press. Theissen, G., and A. Merz. 1998. The Historical Jesus: A Comprehensive Guide. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. Thiselton, A. C. 1992. New Horizons in Hermeneutics. The Theory and Practice of Transforming Biblical Reading. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan. Tillich, Paul. 1964. The New Being. London: SCM Press. Todorov, Tsvetan. 1998. (untided). In Simon Wiesendial, The Sun/lower. On the Possibilities and the Limits of Forgiveness (with a symposium), pp. 265-266. H. J. Cargas and B. Fetterman, eds. New York: Schocken Books. Tolstoy, Leo. [1884)1958. What I Believe. In A Confession, The Gospel in Brief, and What I Believe, pp. 303-539. Trans. Aylmer Maude. London: Oxford University Press. Torjesen, Karen Jo. 1998. "You are the Christ": Five Portraits of Jesus from the Early Church. In Marcus Borg, ed. Jesus at 2000, pp. 73-88. Boulder, Col.: Westview Press. Torrey, Charles. 1936. Our Translated Gospels. New York: Harper. Tucker, Gene M. 1987. Prophetic Speech. In James Luther Mays and Paul J. Achtemeier, eds. Interpreting the Prophets, pp. 27-40. Philadelphia: Fortress Press. Turner, Nigel. 1980. Christian Words. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark. Unamuno, Miguel. (1912)1972. The Tragic Sense of Life, in Men and Nations. London: Routledge.
494
References
Van Bragt, Jan. 1992. Inculturation in Japan. In Catherine Cornille and Veleer Neckebrouch, eds. A Universal Faith? Peoples, Cultures, Religions, and the Christ, pp. 49-72. Louvain: Peeters Press. Vermes, G. 1973. Jesus the Jew. A Historian's Reading of the Gospels. London: Collins. Vermes, G. 1993. The Religion of Jesus the Jew. London: SCM Press. Via, D. O. 1974. The Parables: Their Literary and Existential Dimension. Philadelphia: Fortress Press. Viviano, Benedict. 1990. The Gospel According to Matthew. In Raymond E. Brown, Joseph A. Fitzmeyer, and Roland E. Murphy, eds. The New Jerome Biblical Commentary, pp. 630-674. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Prentice Hall. Vogtle, Anton. 1996. Gott und seine Gdste. Das Schicksai des Gleichnisses ]esu vom gropen GastmaKL NeukirchetvVluyn: Neukirchener Verlag. Vorlander, H. 1975. Forgiveness. In Colin Brown, ed. The New International Dictionary of Neu> Testament Theology, pp. 697-103. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan. Wattles, Jeffrey. 1996. The Golden Rule. New York: Oxford University Press. Weder, Hans. 1978. Die Gleichnisse Jesu als Metaphern. Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. Weeden, T. J., Sr. 1979. Rediscovering the parabolic intent of the parable of the sower. Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 47:97-120. Weil, Simone. [1951)1973. Waiting on God. Trans. Emma Crauford. New York: Harper & Row. Weiss, Johannes. 1901. Die Evangelien des Marlcus und Lulcas, 9th ed. (MeyerK 1/2). Gottingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. Wierzbicka Anna. 1985. Lexicography and Conceptual Analysis. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Karoma. Wierzbicka, Anna. 1991. Cross-cultural Pragmatics: Tfie Semantics of Human Interaction. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Wierzbicka, Anna. 1992. Semantics, Culture and Cognition: Human Concepts in Culturespecific Configurations. New York: Oxford University Press. Wierzbicka, Anna. 1993. What Is Prayer? In Search of a Definition. In L B. Brown, ed. Tfie Human Side of Prayer: The Psychology of Praying, pp. 25-46. Birmingham, Ala.: Religious Education Press. Wierzbicka, Anna. 1995. The iconicity of part-of-speech membership. In M. Landsberg, ed. Syntactic Iconicity and Linguistic Freezes, pp. 223-245. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. Wierzbicka, Anna. 1996. Semantics: Primes and Universals. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Wierzbicka, Anna. 1997. Understanding Cultures Through Their Key Words: English, Russian, Polish, German, Japanese. New York: Oxford University Press. Wierzbicka, Anna. 1998. The meaning of Jesus' Parables: A Semantic Approach to the Gospels. In Benjamin Biebuyck, Rene Dirven, and John Ries, eds. Faith and Fiction: Interdisciplinary Studies on the Interplay Between Metaphor And Religion, pp. 1754. Frankfurt: Peter Lang Verlag. Wierzbicka, Anna. 1999a. Emotions Across Languages and Cultures. Diversity and Universals. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Wierzbicka, Anna. 1999b. What Did Jesus Mean? The Lord's Prayer Translated Into Universal Human Concepts. In Ralph Bisschops and James Francis, eds. Metaphor, Canon and Community: Jewish, Christian and Islamic approaches, pp. 180-216. Canterbury: Peter Lang. Wilder, Amos N. 1982. Jesus' Parables and the War of Myths. Philadelphia: Fortress Press.
References
495
Willis, Wendell, ed. 1987. The Kingdom of God in 20th-century Interpretation. Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers. Windisch, H. 1950. The Meaning of the Sermon on the Mount: A Contribution to the Historical Understanding of the Gospels and to the Problem of Their True Exegesis. Trans. S. MacLean Gilmour. Philadelphia: Westminster. Witherington, Ben, III. 1990. The Christology of Jesus. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. Witherington, Ben, III. 1992. Jesus, Paul and the End of the World: A Comparative Stud} in New Testament Eschatology. Downers Grove, 111.: InterVarsity Press. Witherington, Ben, III. 1994. Jesus the Sage: The Pilgrimage of Wisdom. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. Witherington. Ben, III. 1995. The Jesus Quest: The Third Search for the Jew of Nazareth. Downers Grove, 111.: InterVarsity Press. Witherington, Ben, III. 1998a. The Man} faces of the Christ: The Christologies of the New Testament and Beyond. New York: Crossroad. Witheringon, Ben, III. 1998b. Resurrection Redux. In Paul Copan, ed. Will the Real Jesus Please Stand Up1, pp. 129-146. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books. Wittgenstein, Ludwig. [1922)1974. Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (with an introduction by Bertrand Russell). London : Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner. Wolff, Hans Walter. 1987. Studien zur Prophetic: Probleme und Enrage Mit einer Werkbibiiographie. Miinchen: Kaiser. Wright, N. T. 1992. Who Was Jesus? London: SPCK. Wright, N. T. 1996. Jesus and the Victory of God. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. Wright, Tom. 1996. The Lord and His Prayer. London: Triangle (SPCK). Young, Brad. 1989. Jesus and His Jewish Parables: Rediscovering the Roots of Jesus' Teaching. New York: Paulist Press.
This page intentionally left blank
Index
abba, 147-148, 227-232, 234, 236-237, 333, 471 Abrahams, I., 78, 192, 197, 199-200, 202, 251 absolute truths, 167 achievement motif, 124 achievement, religion of, 124 Achtemeier, E., 82-83 adulteress, 182-183, 185 adultery, 71-89, 120, 467 in the heart, 76, 81, 83, 86-87, 467 word, 84, 86 agape, 116 Albright, W. F., 90, 126, 128, 211, 471 •allegorizing interpretation, 129, 316, 475 allegory, 260, 262, 276, 301, 316, 342, 412, 415, 473 Ambrose, 367, 393 amen, 227 analogy, 115, 195, 235, 446 anawim, 36-40, 45, 466 Anderson, W. T., 100, 167 anger, 61-70, 82, 441-442 Anglo culture, 32, 100, 321, 457 anthropology, 168-169
anthropomorphism, 52 anxiety, 175-176 apatheia, 70 apocalyptic images, 23, 92, 343, 350, 358-359, 369, 393, 464 apocalyptic literature, 157 Apostles' Creed, 18, 453 Appignanesi, L, 99 Aramaic, 9, 16, 31-32, 35, 41, 93, 165, 227, 229-231, 395, 471 Arapesh, 13-14 Aristeas, Letter of, 202 Aristotle, 51 Arndt, W. F., 301 Ascension, 450 Augustine, 70, 181, 182, 200, 250, 352, 368, 464, 467, 480 Auschwitz, 50 authenticity, 5, 22, 23, 47, 58, 61, 8081, 89, 92, 94, 102, 111-112, 122,126, 132, 140, 144, 149-150, 155-157, 175, 179-180, 183, 186, 192-194, 202, 218, 220, 257,275, 311-312, 316, 321, 332, 342, 346, 351, 357-360, 372, 381, 415, 465 authorial intention, 3-4
497
498
Index
bad deeds, 207, 210-212, 248, 329-330 bad people, 365, 367, 378-379, 418419, 432-433, 469 bad thoughts, 82 Bailey, K. E., 301, 304-306, 376-377, 390, 394-395, 415, 417, 433 Bakhtin, M. M., 137, 210 Ballantine, W., 455 Balthasar, H. U. von, 281, 350, 367, 369 Banks, R. ]., 64, 93-94, 96, 114 Barbel, ]., 353 Barclay, W., 32-33, 42, 80, 91, 154, 172, 215, 221, 238, 424, 453, 477 Barr, ]., 227, 230-231 Basil of Caesarea, 367 Bauman, C., 130, 186 Beatitudes, 27-56, 92, 357, 381-383, 430-431, 433, 466 Bella, E., 457 Ben Avuyah, Elisha, 469-470 Ben Sirach, 88, 394, 442 Berdyaev, N., 287-288, 340, 353-354, 359, 362-363, 472, 476 Bettiolo, P., 284, 318, 353 Betz, H. D., 57, 61, 66, 67, 74, 81, 8384, 87, 88, 97, 132, 136, 140, 142-143, 149, 151-155, 157-158, 166, 170-172, 176-178, 180-182, 190-191, 193, 203-206, 209, 213, 215, 227, 467 biblical hermeneutics, 11 Billerbeck, P., 64, 115, 192, 210 Bischoff, E., 199 blessed, 47-55 blindness, 163-164, 184 Blomberg, C., 260, 273, 286-287, 323, 364, 377, 382, 415 Blount, B. K., 6 Blumhardt, C., 290 Bockmuehl, M., 16 Bonhoeffer, A., 119 Bonhoeffer, D., 141-143, 188 Borg, M. ]., 6, 235, 451-453 Bornkam, G., 243 Borsch, F. H., 258, 284, 293, 296, 410411 Boucher, M., 257-260, 262, 264, 270, 285-286, 315, 374-375, 383, 395 Braun, H., 144 bread, 244-246. See also metaphor of bread
bread of life, 244, 246 Breech, J., 234-235, 253, 301, 376-377, 474, 478 broad-mindedness, 185 Broer, I., 36 brother, 63-64 Brown, C., 37 Brown, R. E., 3, 5, 6, 10, 17, 61, 182183, 229-230, 240, 241, 277, 437, 473 Bruce, F. F., 72, 87, 108 Brunner, E., 87 Buber, M., 190, 424, 459 Buddhism, 201, 441-442 Bulgakov, S., 289, 350, 367, 473 Bull, N. J., 194, 196 Bultmann, R., 138-140, 198-199, 205, 221, 227, 305 Butts, ]., 265 Butwin, F., 457, 461 Cadoux, A. T., 259, 455, 473 Caird, G. B., 235, 459, 479 Capon, R. F., 258, 270, 277, 279, 288, 291, 293, 328, 330 Carlston, C. E., 259, 261, 473 Carmignac, J., 472 Carson, D. A., 85, 89, 149-150 Casey, M., 14 Catechism of the Catholic Church, 28, 34, 233, 237, 244, 245, 251-252, 364, 468 Cathars, 95 Catholicism, 23 celibacy, 74 Chalcedon, Council of, 446 charitable deeds, 131-140, 143, 362 Charlesworth, J. H., 14, 226-231 Chen Chun, 199 Chesterton, G. K., 455 child-like attitude, 39-40 children, 38-40, 334. See also image of child Chilton, B., 14, 61, 472 Chinese, 48-49 chosen people, 58 cleansing of the temple, 69 Clement of Alexandria, 46, 141-143, 232, 290, 352, 457 closeness to God, 53-54, 152-155 coherence, 5, 23, 95 communion of saints, 18
index comparative religion, 168-169 compassion, 133, 137-138, 143, 362, 371, 376-379, 441 compliance, 107-108, 110 Compton, ]. E., 301 conceptual primes, 6, 7, 8 Confucianism, 441-442 Confucius, 198-199 conscience, 165-166 consumerism, 178 Cope, L, 476 Cost. See metaphor of cost covenant, 58 creation story, 73 criminal justice, 108 criterion of coherence, 162-163 criterion of depth, 162-163 Crosby, M., 48 Crossan, ]. D., 6, 16, 119, 121, 259, 264-265, 266, 273, 276, 281, 296297, 321, 339, 375-376, 379, 386, 398, 399-400, 426, 434-435, 442, 473 Cynics, 16, 70, 104, 119-121, 442 daily bread, 244-247 Daley, B., 370 Daly, M., 233 darkness, 166-167 darkness. See metaphor of light and darkness Daube, D., 75 Davidson, D., 302 Davis, J. J., 78 day. See metaphor of day De Caussade, J. P., 399, 403, 477 Decalogue, 64, 83, 199 deeds, 135, 141, 183, 207, 211-212, 225, 262-263, 407. See aho bad deeds; good deeds degrading look, 86-88 Delumeau, ]., 463-464, 480 Demosthenes, 80 demythologization, 15 Derrett, J. D. M., 270, 273, 305 Derrida, J., 100 Descartes, R., 445 Desert Fathers, 91 detachment, 159 Deuteronomy, 84 analogical function, 192, 197 dialogical use, 64
499
Dihle, A., 192-194, 200 discipleship, 127 dishonest steward. See parable of the dishonest steward dissimilarity, criterion of, 5 distance and separation. See metaphor of distance and separation distinctiveness, 157 divorce, 59, 71-81, 104, 467 Dodd, C. H., 6, 259, 260, 262, 271272, 277, 282-284, 342, 405-406, 416, 473 Donahue, J. R., 6, 269, 284, 315, 321, 324-325, 328-329, 346, 357, 376, 392, 415, 418, 427, 476 doorkeeper. See metaphor of doorkeeper; parable of the doorkeeper Downing, F. G., 70, 94, 104, 115, 120, 192, 199 Dwhrede, 127, 205, 316, 350, 367, 411, 457, 459, 461-463, 474, 477, 479 dualism, 365-367 Dunn, J. D. G., 122, 134, 442, 456, 467, 474, 479 Dupont, ]., 29-32, 34-41, 46-47, 51, 54, 207, 210-211, 267, 293-294, 347-348, 430, 433 early church, 29, 89, 91, 94, 149, 154, 183 Eastern Christian tradition, 23, 242, 289, 352-353 ecumenism, 23 Efrem, 442 Eichholz, G., 267-268, 304-305, 307, 343, 345-346 either-or, 92-93, 156, 171, 173 embarrassment, 5 enemies, 7, 105, 111-122, 124 enemy, concept of, 114 English, 64, 82, 141, 247, 447, 452, 478 Enoch, 62, 195-196 Entrevernes Group, 374-375 Epictetus, 70, 94, 104, 119-121 eschatological reward, 143 eschatology, 17-19, 238-239, 242-245, 253, 359, 368, 371, 392, 395, 400, 410, 456, 460, 472, 473, 480 Essenes, 62, 74, 114, 474 eternal life, 323, 451
500
Index
ethic, new, 193 ethical achievement,70-71 ethical advice, 64 ethical literature, 69 ethical radicalism, 93 ethical teaching, 197, 441-443, 454 ethics, 15, 16, 17, 18, 239, 242-243, 253, 395, 442-444, 473, 480 European cultural tradition, 11 European languages, 11, 478 Evangelii Nuntiandi, 13 evangelization, 13 evil, 169, 469 evil eye, 162 exegesis, 6, 13 Exodus, 19, 63, 65, 84 eye and the light, 161-169 eye for an eye, 196 Ezekiel, 238, 288, 391
French, 231-232 friend at midnight, See parable of the unjust judge and the friend at midnight Frost, R., 110-111 fruit, 206-214, 261-263. See also metaphor of fruit Frymer-Kensky, T., 14 Funk, R. W., 4, 5, 22, 31, 38, 46, 53, 72, 80-81, 85, 89, 92, 93, 102, 111, 114, 127, 128, 130, 132, 140, 150, 155-157, 172, 175, 180, 183, 186, 190, 192-193, 207, 212, 220, 241, 265, 273-275, 311-314, 318, 321, 332, 339, 342, 346, 351, 357358, 375, 379, 381, 386, 398,415417,423,428,437,456,467,470, 474 future, 177, 179
fairness, 321 faith versus works, 218 fasting, 149-155 father, God as a, 188-189, 217. See also metaphor of father Fathers of the Church, 50, 290, 367, 457 Fee, G. D., 6 Feldman, A., 470 feminine-maternal, 12, 233 Feyerabend, P., 99-100 fig tree. See parable of the barren fig tree figurative language, 150, 349 Filson, F.V., 38 Finnis, J., 169, 469 fire, 91 Fitzmyer, J. A., 5, 6, 17, 74, 115, 128, 150, 172, 175, 190, 204-205, 215, 227-228, 230, 238, 253, 280, 283284, 298, 305, 311, 338, 342, 344346, 381, 393, 395, 406, 423, 427, 477 Flusser, D., 405, 470, 478 Focolari movement, 476 forgiveness, 247-251, 313, 315-318, 451, 457-458 Foucault, M., 100 Fourth Gospel, 22, 69, 78, 97-98, 120, 130-131, 164, 182, 204, 213-214, 443 Fox, E., 130 free will, 297, 353-354
Gallo, M., 442 Gaudium et Spes, 164-165 Gehenna, 369 Gelin, A., 36 generosity, 162 Genesis, 59, 73, 75-77 Gentiles, 9, 72, 164, 467 German, 10, 64, 81-82, 141, 447, 471, 475 gift to God, 152 glory, own, 154 God as light, 98 God, concept of, 7, 20-21, 233 Goddard, C., 7, 447 God's grace, 323-326, 328, 468 God's justice, 328-329 God's love, 216-219, 282, 284, 293294, 303, 305, 316-318, 322, 327328, 334, 336, 338, 349, 363, 366, 369, 382, 457-461, 472 God's mercy, 316-318, 369, 371, 375, 378, 430, 460, 475 God's plan, 449 God's will, 59, 70, 105, 112, 136, 143, 148, 158, 161, 174, 215-219, 221, 243, 334-336, 363, 371, 399-400, 402, 426, 469 golden rule. See rule, golden good deeds, 134-138, 141, 142-143, 158, 207, 210-212, 214, 240, 322, 327, 329-330, 362, 375, 470. See also good works; right deeds
Index good people, 365, 367, 378, 418-419, 432-433, 469 good Samaritan. See parable of the good Samaritan good works, 130, 133, 136, 158, 240, 322, 339-340, 362. See also good deeds; right deeds Gourgues, M., 31, 37, 45, 56, 214, 375, 381, 383, 415, 418, 434-435 grace, 124, 323-326, 328. See also God's grace great feast. See parable of the great feast Greek, 16, 31-32, 35, 40, 42-46, 63-64, 72, 80, 82-84, 93, 122, 132, 208, 227, 229-231, 240, 247, 252, 311, 376, 389, 395, 466, 471, 479 Greek literature, 157 Greek philosophy, 248 Greeley, A., 14 Green, ]. B., 6 Gregory of Nyssa, 245, 282, 288-289, 350-353, 367-368, 457, 472, 473474 Gressmann, H., 457 Griffin, D., 166, 168-169 Guelich, R., 35-37, 40, 82, 84, 93 Gulag archipelago, 49, 168 Gundry, R. H., 236 Gunkel, H., 457 Haacker, K., 83-84 Hall, F. W., 80 Hamerton-Kelly, R., 227 happiness, 158 Harnack, A. von, 57 Harnisch, W., 354 Harrington, D. J., 227 harvest. See image of harvest hatred, 63, 65, 67, 70, 82, 113-114 Hayes, ]., 457 Haynes, S. R., 6 hearing versus doing, 218, 220 heart, 211-212, 407,468. See also people's hearts heaven, 158 Hebrew, 31-32, 36-41, 80, 230, 395, 479 Hebrew Bible, 20, 58 Hedrick, C. W., 259, 270, 273, 473 Hefley, J., 188 Hefley, M., 188 hell, 295, 353-354, 360, 368-369, 463464, 473, 477, 479-480
501
Hendrickx, H., 279-280, 285, 293-294, 381, 386, 420 Heschel, A., 20, 51-52, 134, 140, 459, 461 heteroglossia, 125, 137, 210, 434, 468, 480 Hick, ]., 445 hidden treasure. See parable of the hidden treasure and the pearl of great price hiddenness, 267-268, 275, 284-285 Hillel the Elder, 64, 112, 118, 192-194, 196-199 Hinduism, 201, 441 Hirsch, E. D., 4 historical Jesus, 29, 81, 93, 103, 130, 149-150, 193, 207, 211, 215, 218, 226, 332, 339, 360, 398, 475 Holocaust, 49, 168 holy Spirit, 190, 450 Hoover, R., 4 Hryniewicz, W., 281-283, 351, 359, 366, 457, 479 Hubner, H., 103 human values, 169 humility, 38 hungry, the, 34-36, 466 Hunter, A. M., 221, 245, 250 Huntington, S., 478 Huxley, A., 168 Huxley, T. H., 200 hyperbole, 16, 72, 99, 132, 134, 150, 172, 177, 181, 235, 286, 294, 317, 338, 345, 355, 437, 456-457, 459, 461, 474 hypocrisy, 132-133, 136, 141, 144, 146, 149, 153, 204, 441 illocutionary force, 382 image, 18, 90, 99, 120, 222, 233, 247, 254, 264, 267-268, 294, 302, 354, 366, 457, 477. See also apocalyptic images; metaphor of child, 334 the gate or the door, 204 God as a rock, 224-225 harvest, 259, 261 last judgment, 18, 34, 51, 135, 181, 218, 222, 224, 315-316, 378, 393, 450 leaven, 278, 287-289, 312. See also metaphor of leaven
502 image (continued) the light of the world, 126-131 lost coin, 289, 293 lost sheep, 289, 293, 297 master's return, 401 narrow road, 204 plank and speck, 181, 184 rock, 224-225 the salt of the earth, 126-131 seed, 261 self-mutilation, 91-92 servant, 334-335 sheep and goats, 363, 370 shepherd, 296 storms, floods and winds, 222, 224 turning the other cheek, 102-111 two foundations, 220 two houses, 220 two roads, 203, 216 Imbach, 52-53, 205, 284-285, 315, 354, 366, 427-428, 457 imperative constructions, 8 impure motive. See motive, impure incarnation, 449 inculturation, 11, 12, 13 injustice, 108 innate light, 166-167 inner conflict, 90 inner light, 167-169 intentional fallacy, 4 investment. See metaphor of investment invincibility, 120 invitation, God's, 342-345, 347-348, 363 ipsissima verba, 5, 58, 93, 129, 218, 465 ipsissima vox, 94, 228, 465 iron rule, See rule, iron irony, 137, 144, 164 Isaac of Niniveh (Isaac the Syrian), 23, 282, 284, 317-318, 345, 349, 353, 368-370, 473, 475, 477 Isaiah, 33, 37, 42-44, 50-51, 56, 69, 296, 367, 458-461, 463, 480 Iser, W., 265 Islam, 201 Israel, 17, 58-60 Israelite law, 84 Italian, 232 I-Thou relationship, 147-148, 190, 235, 424 ius talioms, 103-104, 106, 193
Index Jainism, 201 Jeremiah, 69, 457-459 Jeremias, J., 6, 41, 96-97, 130, 135137, 139-140, 143-144, 147, 192193, 197-199, 220-222, 225, 227232, 241, 259, 261, 264, 270, 275, 305, 315-316, 322, 324-325, 333334, 357-358, 360, 405-407, 410, 416, 427-428, 430, 432,471, 473, 475 Jesus' ethics, 7 Jesus' life, death and resurrection, 449450 Jesus Seminar, 4, 5, 22, 23, 38, 85, 89, 92, 93, 102, 111-112, 114, 127128, 132, 150, 155-156, 171, 180, 183, 186, 192-193, 207, 241, 274275, 312, 321, 346, 351, 357-359, 381, 398, 415, 423, 427 Jesus' teaching about God, 20 Jewish context, 9, 11, 14, 233, 375, 456, 462-463 Jewish culture, 32 Jewish literature, 1 57 Jewish Messiah, 11 Jewish religion, 1 70 Jewish wisdom, 157 Job, 34, 88 John of the Cross, 364, 369-370 John the Baptist, 42-44, 149, 164, 207208, 343, 471 John, Gospel of, 17, 69, 216 Johnson, L. T., 5, 16, 238, 251, 415, 465, 479 Jones, G. V., 259, 473 Judaism, 51, 157, 202, 441, 442, 470 judging, 179-186, 208 judgment, 390-392 judgmental, 184-185, 197 Julian the Apostate, 415 Julicher, A., 260-261, 276, 416, 430 justice, 52 divine, See God's justice human, 185-186, 329 Kaddish, 239 Kane, R., 100 karma, 441 Kasemann, E., 61 Keating, T., 326-327, 329-330, 424 Kiley, M., 238 Kimel, A., 445
Index
kindness, 441-442 King Jr., Martin Luther, 70 king, 217. See also metaphor of king kingdom of God, 17-19, 53-54, 70, 92, 116, 123, 137-138, 161, 175, 177, 179, 204, 213, 215-217, 221, 235, 239, 241-244, 261-262, 264, 266268, 272-273, 276, 278, 280, 282, 285-286, 289, 296, 312, 314, 323328, 334, 343-347, 351, 353-354, 368, 375, 399-400, 402, 411, 471, 473, 480. See also living with God Kistemaker, S. ]., 280, 283, 286, 294, 315, 323, 326, 334, 338, 374, 402, 406 Klassen, W., 113 Klausner, J., 14 Koch, K., 457 Kung, H., 21, 233, 442, 447 Kushner, H. S., 210 La Potterie, I. de, 98 laborers in the vineyard. See parable of the laborers in the vineyard Lachs, S. T., 63, 112, 114, 117, 162, 165, 192, 210, 213, 470 lamb, 42-44 Lambrecht, ]., 6, 65, 68, 72, 77, 96, 161, 162, 203-204, 206-208, 217, 266, 278, 281, 287, 302, 311-312, 321, 326, 330, 342, 347, 354, 357358, 360, 405-406, 411-412 Lane, W. L, 473 language of Jesus, 455-464 Lao-Tse, 201 Lapide, P., 14, 85, 87, 106, 109-110, 118, 123, 463 last judgment. See image of last judgment; parable of the last judgment Latin, 63, 82, 140-141, 194-195 Law, 57-61, 62, 64, 193, 430 Lawson, H., 99 Lazarus. See parable of the rich man and Lazarus leaven. See image of leaven; metaphor of leaven; parable of the leaven and the mustard seed Lecky, W. E. H., 80 left hand, 140-144 Leibniz, G. W., 6, 445 Leviticus, 63-66, 112-114, 475 lex talionis, 103-104, 106
503
lies, 100 life, 19, 91 light of the world. See image of the light of the world light, 98, 161-169 lilies of the field, 174-179 Limbeck, M., 77, 96, 143, 218, 222223 linguistic semantics, 5, 6, 11 Linnemann, E., 6, 259, 263, 267, 270, 272, 294, 430, 473 live, 466 living with God, 170, 174, 205, 213214, 217-219, 224-225, 241-243, 249, 264, 271-272, 276, 278-279, 287, 303, 327, 344, 364, 395, 400, 411, 436, 443, 472, 473. See also kingdom of God Lockyer, H., 128, 162, 258, 261, 391, 393 Loewenich, W. von, 212 Lord's Prayer, 29, 188-189, 226-254, 428, 471, 473 lost coin. See image of lost coin; parable of the lost sheep and the lost coin; lost sheep. See image of lost sheep; parable of the lost sheep and the lost coin Loughlin, G., 451, 466 love, 7, 68, 105-107, 111-122,124, 160, 241, 244, 375, 378-379, 411, 476. See also God's love acts of, 135, 363 of God, 358, 360, 362-363, 374 of one's neighbor, 112-113, 118, 192-193, 197, 202, 246, 358, 360, 362-363, 374, 376, 378, 411, 434435, 467 universal, 105, 118, 124 love commandment, 113, 117-118, 197198 Lubich, C., 476 lust, 80, 81-89 Luther, M., 10, 11, 63, 212 Luz, U., 14, 60, 62, 67, 93-96, 132, 140-141, 145-147, 151, 162, 208, 212, 224, 229, 232, 238, 245, 253, 469 Mack, B. L, 16 Mahabharata, 200 Mahnrede, 205
504
Index
Maillot, A., 267-268, 278, 280, 282, 295, 297, 305, 321, 326, 330, 384 mammon, 169-174, 176, 178, 393 Mann, C. S., 90, 126, 128, 211, 471, 473 Manson, T. W., 103, 162, 283, 305, 323, 325, 344, 358, 383, 398, 416 Marcion, 11, 208 marital intercourse, 77 Marmorstein, A., 470 marriage, 71-81, 87 marriage rituals, 75 Martha, 84 Mary Magdalene, 84 masculine-paternal, 12, 233 master's return. See image of master's return materialism, 178 Matisoff, J., 457, 462 Maude, A., 467 McArthur, H. K., 124 McKenna, M., 270, 424, 433 McKenzie, S. L, 6 meaning 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 15, 23, 57 meek, the, 40-46 Meier, J. P., 5, 34, 48, 65, 81, 84, 113, 141, 149-150, 162, 209, 217-218, 220, 227, 232, 238-239, 242, 286, 311, 315-317, 358, 360-364, 371, 398-399, 402, 471, 472 mercy, acts of, 360-361, 363, 477. See also God's mercy merits, 135 Merton, T, 115 Merz, A., 20, 217, 228, 379, 460 message, 267-268, 273, 382 metanoia, 208, 212, 315 metaphor, 90, 110, 116, 127, 144, 157158, 171, 176, 178, 181, 203-204, 233, 235-236, 241-242, 244, 253254, 267, 302, 359, 366, 445, 447448, 451-452, 456-457, 461, 467. See also image of bread, 244-247, 254, 445 closeness to God, 152-153 cost, 270 culture-specific, 12, 19, 241, 254, 451-452 day, 246-247 distance and separation, 249 the doorkeeper, 400 father, 12, 115, 227-228, 232-236, 241, 254, 432-433, 445, 471
fruit (fruidessness and fruitfulness), 207, 213, 407 investment, 270 king, 228, 235, 360, 471 the kingdom of God, 241-244, 254, 273, 445 leaven, 286, 474 the left hand, 141 light and darkness, 167 light for truth, 98, 163-164 the mustard Seed, 286 name, 237, 241 reversal, 48-55, 381-382, 384, 435-436 reward, 134, 143-144 servant, 338, 399, 407 sheep and goats, 365, 367 spatial, 53-54, 235 temporal, 53-54, 351-352 treasures in heaven, 158-159 turning the other cheek, 110 two roads, 203 universal, 19, 152 Michaels, J. R., 259-260, 265, 427, 473 minatory sayings, 205, 345-346 mitsvah, 224-225 Modestinus, 80 Moloney, F., 6, 182 Moltmann, J., 28, 29, 50-51, 56, 242, 277, 281, 290, 355, 368, 370, 403, 466, 471, 472, 476 monitory sayings, 205 monogamy, 71-81 Montefiore, C. G., 62, 100, 112, 118, 138, 147, 150, 192, 199, 210-211, 239, 251, 253, 301, 358, 360, 369, 374-375, 382, 386, 405, 416, 434, 470, 471 Moore, S. E., 473 moral greatness, 119-120 moral law, 164 moral nihilism, 167 moral norms, 167 moral relativism, 167 moral values, 169 Morgan, G. C., 128 Morwood, M., 240, 247-248, 444 Mosaic Law, 73-74, 77-79 Moses, 59-61, 64, 74, 318 motive, 134, 138, 144, 146, 151-152, 361-362 impure, 136, 140 pious, 146, 153
Index profit, 136 pure, 136, 137, 152, 362, 409 self-interested, 146 selfish, 134 Muhammed, 201 Milller, P., 335 multiple attestation 5 murder, 63, 65-67, 70 in the heart, 82 mustard seed. See metaphor of the mustard seed; parable of the leaven and the mustard seed mystery, 14 name. See metaphor of name narrow gate, 202-206. See also image of the gate or the door narrow road. See image of narrow road natural law, 165, 169 Natural Semantic Metalanguage, 466, 469 neighbor, 34, 64, 103, 112-117, 119-120 concept of, 375, 379 word, 115 Neusner, ]., 14, 61 New Testament, language of, 19, 166 New Testament theology, 19 Newbigin, 185, 468 Newman, B. M., 42 Nicaea, Council of, 446 Nicene Creed, 60, 446, 451-454 Nida, E., 14, 237 nirvana, 441 Nocke, R, 338-339, 359, 457 nonresistance, 110, 455 nonretaliation, 104, 108, 120, 441 nonviolence, 70, 107, 110, 441-442 Nova, D., 14 oaths, 93-102 obedience, 10, 11, 145, 148, 152, 215216, 221, 469 Ochs, P., 14 O'Farrell, F. P., 467 Old Testament, 11, 63, 67, 84-87, 94, 103, 112-113, 116, 119, 133, 157, 162, 227, 296, 329, 374, 436, 457 openness, 100 Origen, 50, 208, 214, 282, 287, 367368, 457, 473 ostentation, 10, 153-154, 468 outculturation, 12, 13 overstatement, 72
505
Palestinian Judaism, 36, 134, 227 parable, of the barren fig tree, 209 dishonest steward, 313, 316, 414421 doorkeeper, 339, 397-403 good Samaritan, 143-144, 197, 357, 362, 371, 373-379, 418 great feast, 282, 287, 341-355 hidden treasure and the pearl of great price, 18, 137, 266-273, 316, 411, 426 laborers in the vineyard, 320-331, 343, 345-346, 417-418 last judgment, 356-372, 385, 398399, 407 leaven and the mustard seed, 268, 272, 274-291,348,354,360,417,419 lost sheep and the lost coin, 280-281, 291-299. 302, 305, 321, 333, 344346, 360, 417, 419 Pharisee and the tax collector, 118, 123-124, 138, 142-143, 158, 181182, 306, 321-322, 407,417-418, 429-437 prodigal son, 118, 181-182, 247, 278, 282, 297-298, 300-309, 316-317, 321, 323, 326, 343-346, 360, 366367, 376, 417, 432 rich fool, 388-396, 401 rich man and Lazarus, 35, 49, 52-53, 380-387, 393, 407 servant's reward, 332-340, 407, 409 sower, 257-265 talents, 316, 339, 404-413, 417, 419 two builders, 215, 219-225 two sons, 216, 218 unforgiving servant, 310-319, 372, 417, 419 unjust judge and the friend at midnight, 191, 312-313, 316, 420, 422-428 paradox, 99 parallels, 156-157, 166, 192, 200-203, 239, 253, 360, 381, 441, 467, 475 Parousia, 398, 403 pater, 229-232 Paul, 73-74, 89-90, 96, 98, 106, 164, 407, 442, 467, 468, 474, 475 pearl of great price. See parable of the hidden treasure and the pearl of great price
506 people's hearts, 66-67, 122-123, 135, 287-288 Percy, E., 103 perfection, 115 perfectionism, 122-123 Perkins, P., 259, 473 Perrin, N., 6, 16, 17, 288-290, 348, 354, 472 persecuted, the, 46-47 persistence, 424-425, 427-428 Peter, 470 Petzoldt, M., 354 Pharisaic Judaism, 134, 434 Pharisee and the tax collector. See parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector Pharisees, 60, 73, 78, 95-96, 122-125, 134, 138, 149, 185, 212, 405-406, 471 Philo, 94, 192, 213 picture-language, 41 pious motive. See motive, pious Piper, J., 66-67, 103, 105-106, 111, 114-116, 119, 195 Pirot, L, 38 plank and speck. See image of plank and speck platinum rule. See rule, platinum Plummer, A., 338 Polish, 232 polygamy, 74-76 poor, the, 35, 36-40, 466 Pope John Paul II, 87, 163, 165-166, 473, 475, 476 Pope Paul VI, 13 Porpora, D., 185, 194, 197-198, 200 possessions, 155, 170-174, 176 postmodernism, 100, 102, 167-168 poverty, 29, 173, 178, 385-386 Powell, M. A., 23, 472 prayer, 144-149, 151. 186-191, 423428 efficacy of, 188 private, 147-148 predestination, 441-442 Prejeant, R., 6 Price, R., 17, 441, 443, 461 primordial truths, 166 priorities, 346 prodigal son. See parable of the prodigal son profit motive. See motive, profit
Index
prophetic tradition 457-463 Prophets, 58-61 Protestantism, 23 Proverbia Aesopi, 207 providential care, 178 prudence, 180-181 public discourse, 22 pure motive. See motive, pure purgatory, 441-442 Quakers, 95 Quelle, 30, 40, 80, 127, 156-157, 175, 186, 207, 211, 474 Qumran, 41, 114, 225, 475 quotation marks, 135, 137-138, 145, 339, 402, 434, 480 rabbinic Judaism, 63, 67, 115, 117, 133 rabbinic literature, 100-101, 114, 210, 224, 470 rabbinic sayings, 118, 162, 433 rabbinic teaching, 62-64, 136, 150, 210, 220, 479 radicalism of Jesus, 67, 72, 83, 87, 9294, 156-157, 385, 416, 433, 474 radicalization, 65-66, 68, 76 Ragaz, L, 130 Rahner, K., 123, 368 reciprocity, 195-196, 202 recompense, 49-55, 137, 384 religious metaphors, 5 remarriage, 76 respect, 185 resurrection of the dead, 451 retaliation, 103-111 retribution, 103 retribution, law of, 193-194 Revelation, 19, 29, 56 revenge, 103-111, 117 reversal. See metaphor of reversal reward, 134-140, 141, 143-145, 159, 322, 324-327, 335-336, 339-340, 362-363, 402, 480 doctrine of, 140 rich fool. See parable of the rich fool rich man and Lazarus. See parable of the rich man and Lazarus Ricoeur, P., 6, 194, 198, 227 right deeds, 224-225. See also good deeds; good works righteous, the, 34, 294, 322, 342, 365, 379, 430, 433-434, 478, 480
Index
righteousness, 122-125, 225, 480 acts of, 135 greater, 68 rigorous ethics, 122-123 ritual, 150-152 Robinson, J. A. T., 69, 284, 473 Rock. See image of rock Roger of Taize, 424 Roman, 80 Room, A., 477 Rorty, R., 99, 467 Rost, H. T. D., 168, 192. 200-202 Ruether, R. R., 233 rule golden, 191-202 iron, 196 platinum, 252 silver, 194-196, 198, 200, 202 tinsel, 196 Russian, 232, 362 Ryken, L, 261, 263, 456 Saldarini, A. J., 64, 115 Salinger, J. D., 159 salt of the earth. See image of the salt of the earth salvation, 92, 242-243, 279-282, 287, 295, 328, 340, 344, 354-355, 363, 369-370, 376 Samaritans, 115 Sanders, E. P., 14, 122-123, 134, 136, 158, 225, 241, 460, 472 Sandmel, D., 14 Schechter, S., 135, 470 Schlatter, A., 96 Schlosser, ]., 241, 472 Schnackenburg, R., 312 Schneiders, S., 3, 4, 6, 9 Schottroff, L, 70, 106-107, 342 Schiissler-Fiorenza, E., 6, 443 Schweizer, E., 82, 87, 227, 239, 243, 245, 311 Scott, B. B., 259, 265, 273, 295, 430, 473 second coming, 398, 401, 403, 450 seed, See image of seed self-castration, 16 self-control, 70 self-defense, 108-110 self-fulfilment, 197 self-interest, 160. .See also self-interested motive
507
selfishness, 160-161. See also selfish motive self-mutilation. See image of selfmutilation self-righteousness, 142, 144 semantic analysis, 199 semantic exegesis, 6, 254 Seneca, 115, 119-121, 199, 393-394 Septuagint, 45, 389, 395 Servant of the Lord, 42-44 Servant. See image of servant; metaphor of servant servant's reward. See parable of the servant's reward Sevin, M., 7 sexual intercourse, 80 Shaw. G. B., 195 sheep and goats. See image of sheep and goats; metaphor of sheep and goats shepherd. See image of shepherd Shorter, A., 12, 233 Shorto, R., 119 Sifre, 224, 470 Signer, M., 14 silver rule, See rule, silver simple concepts, 7, 106 sin, 32-33, 69, 79, 88-93, 247-249 sinners, 69, 118, 208, 225, 249, 293298, 303-305, 322, 342, 347, 365, 379, 419, 430- 431, 433.434, 436-437, 478, 480 skopcy, 16 skopos, 146, 151, 468 Smith, B. T. D., 259-261, 383, 394, 405-406, 416-417, 433, 473 Smith, H., 100, 166-169 smugness, 142-143 Sokolowska, Z., 161 Solle, D., 233 Solov'ev, V., 362, 476, 478 Sommer, F., 301 Son of God, 451 sower. See parable of the sower Spaemann, H., 267 spatial metaphors. See metaphors, spatial Speyr, Adrienne von, 367 Spooner, W. A., 194-195 Sproul, R. C., 445-446, 452, 479480 Stenger, W., 6 Stoics, 70, 104, 115, 119, 121
508
Index
Stott, J. R. W., 75, 88, 91-92, 158, 170, 172, 178, 187-188, 203204, 468 Strack, H. L, 64, 192, 210 Strecker, G., 33, 62, 66, 85-86, 89, 91, 93-94, 107, 136, 142-144,146148, 150, 152, 162, 171, 173, 181, 205, 222 submission, 107-108, 110 suffering, 28-56 swearing, 93-102 symbolic actions, 38 tabernacle of God, 19 talent, 477 talents. See parable of the talents Talmud, 470 Tannehill, R. C., 132, 150 Tannen, D., 431 tax collector. See parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector Taylor, V., 473 Te Selle, S., 267, 301-302, 308 temporal metaphors. See metaphors, temporal temptation, 92, 251-254 Ten Commandments, 59, 83, 85 Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs, 152 Theissen, G., 20, 217, 228, 379, 460 theodicy, 29 theology, 15 theopathy, 50 theory versus practice, 218-219 Therese of Lisieux, 468 Thiselton, A. C., 6 Thomas Aquinas, 467, 469 Thomas, Gospel of, 46, 176, 211-212, 257, 269, 342 Tillich, P., 196, 289, 314, 350, 359, 365 Time magazine, 17 tinsel rule. See rule, tinsel Tobit, book of, 192 Todorov, T., 469 tolerance, 185, 441-442 Tolstoy, L, 95, 101, 162, 185-186, 290, 467 tomorrow, 177 topos, 146 Torah, 61-62, 67, 76, 85, 192, 197, 220, 470 Torjesen, K. J., 443
Torrey, C. C., 415 totalitarian movements, 102 transformation, 275, 278, 282, 286-288, 350 treasure, 155-161, 176, 216. See also parable of the hidden treasure and the pearl of great price treasures in heaven, 155-161, 173, 178 trees, 206-214 Trent, Council of, 468 Trinity, 445-447 tropos, 146, 151, 468 trust in God, 39, 175, 178, 190-191, 237, 412, 425, 427 truth, 96-102, 163-164, 435, 467 dismantling, 99-100 and God, 98, 100, 467 truthfulness, 96-102 Turner, N., 38, 466 turning the other cheek. See image of turning the other cheek two builders. See parable of the two builders two foundations. See image of two foundations two houses. See image of two houses two roads. See image of two roads; and metaphor of two roads two sons. See parable of the two sons ultimate reality, 21 Unamuno, M., 50-51 unforgiving servant. See parable of the unforgiving servant uniqueness, 94 universal constants, 168 universal human concepts, 6, 7, 8, 9, 13, 15, 16, 21, 106, 116, 313, 441443, 445-447, 451, 454, 463, 465, 469, 480 universal love. See love, universal universal message, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 34, 233, 254, 272, 302, 342, 364, 405406, 463 universal metaphor, 19 universal moral law, 167-168 universal moral truths, 167 universal relevance, 260, 371, 372 universal salvation, 18, 279-282, 285, 287, 295, 354-355, 369-370, 474. See also salvation universal words, 8,9, 106, 168, 313
Index universalism, 112, 218, 364, 378, 476 universalist commandment, 64 unjust judge. See parable of the unjust judge and the friend at midnight unjust steward. See parable of the dishonest steward values, 48 Van Bragt, Jan, 371 Veritatis Splendor, 163, 165 Vermes, G., 14 Via, D. O., 6, 323, 325, 400-401, 409 violence, 70 Viviano, B., 86. 172, 175 Vogtle, A., 342 Vorlander, H., 249 Vulgate, 63, 82, 195 watchfulness, 398, 400-403 Wattles, ]., 192, 195-196, 200 Weder, H., 354 Weeden, T. J., 264 weeping ones, the, 32-34, 466 Weil, Simone, 143-144, 240, 361-363, 376-377 Weiss, ]., 416 well-wishing rule, 200-201 Western Christian tradition, 242
509
Western culture, 91, 321, 333 widow's two mites, 132 Wierzbicka, A., 7, 8, 21, 69, 90, 146, 244, 362, 447, 471 Wilder, A. N., 259, 473 Willis, W., 472 Wisdom of Solomon, 442 wisdom sayings, 4 Witherington III, B., 5, 14, 16, 61, 125, 277, 443, 446, 452-453 Wittgenstein, L, 446 woes, 30 Wolff, H. W., 457, 459 women, 74, 84 attitudes towards, 87 dignity of, 84 Jesus' attitude to, 82-84, 88 rights of, 82-83 as sex objects, 85, 87 Wright, N. T., 4, 6, 7, 14, 15, 16, 22, 277, 472 Wright, T., 240, 250 Yiddish, 457, 462 Young, B., 470 Zachariah, 44-5 Zwingli, 67