Forgetting What
Lies Behind?
It was late at night and the university library was about to
close. I was feverishly working to complete a project for one of my classes. A
bell sounded, indicating it was time to shut down and leave the building. As I
and a few other students began shutting down our computers to go home for the
night, a security guard suddenly began yelling at us to leave the building
immediately! Apparently we weren't moving quickly enough, and the guard, probably
tired from a long day at work, was quite irritated. We told her we would leave
as soon as we could, but it would take us a few minutes to pack up. Annoyed, she
wrote down our names and threatened to report us to the administration. We, in
turn, returned the favor, taking down her name and saying that we would report how
rudely we were treated.
When I got back to my apartment, I immediately wrote down
what had happened. I wanted to be sure that if I was contacted by the
administration, I would have an accurate report of the evening's events. Knowing
how fallible human memory can be, I wanted to write everything down while it
was still fresh in my mind. Most people would say this was a wise thing to do.
But it raises an interesting question about the New
Testament Gospels. Although liberal and conservative scholars differ a bit over
when these documents were written, most would agree that the earliest Gospel (probably
Mark) was written anywhere from twenty to forty years after Jesus' death. And
the latest, the Gospel of John, probably dates to around sixty years after
Jesus' death.
But why did they wait so long to write their accounts? Some
scholars say this was plenty of time for Jesus' followers to distort and
embellish their Master's original words and deeds. Consequently, they insist,
by the time the ministry of Jesus was recorded in the Gospels, it had already reached
a form that was partly fictional. In short, the oral tradition which lies
behind the Gospels is alleged to have been corrupted before the Gospel writers
ever "put pen to papyrus."{1} In the words of the Jesus Seminar:
The Jesus of the gospels is an
imaginative theological construct, into which has been woven traces of that
enigmatic sage from Nazareth—traces that cry out for . . . liberation from . .
. those whose faith overpowered their memories. The search for the authentic
Jesus is a search for the forgotten Jesus.{2}
Is this true? Did the faith of Jesus' earliest followers
really overpower their memories of what Jesus said and did? Is our faith
in the Gospels well-placed—or misplaced? In the remainder of this article we'll
see that there are good reasons to believe that the Gospel writers told us the "Gospel
truth" about Jesus!
Why the Wait?
Do the New Testament Gospels accurately preserve for us the
things which Jesus said and did? Many liberal scholars don't think so. They maintain
that the oral tradition upon which the Gospels are based became quickly
corrupted by the early church. If they're right, then some of what we read
about Jesus in the Gospels never really happened. As some of the fellows of the
Jesus Seminar put it:
Scholars of the gospels are faced
with a . . . problem: Much of the lore recorded in the gospels and elsewhere in
the Bible is folklore, which means that it is wrapped in memories that have
been edited, deleted, augmented, and combined many times over many years.{3}
This raises some important questions for us to consider. How
carefully was the oral tradition about the words and deeds of Jesus transmitted
in the early church? Does the evidence indicate whether or not it was corrupted
before the Gospels were written? And why on earth did the Gospel writers wait
so long to write their accounts?
Let's begin with that last question. Why did the Gospel
writers wait so long to record the ministry of Jesus? Let me offer two
responses to this question. First, compared with other ancient biographies that
are generally considered reliable, the Gospels were written relatively soon
after the events they narrate. The Gospels were written anywhere from twenty to
sixty years after the death of Jesus. Although this may initially seem like a
long time, it's still well within the lifetime of eyewitnesses who could either
confirm or contradict these accounts of Jesus' public ministry. By contrast, "The
two earliest biographies of Alexander the Great were written . . . more than
four hundred years after Alexander's death . . . yet historians consider them
to be generally trustworthy."{4} Comparatively speaking, then, the Gospel
writers really didn't wait long at all to write their accounts.
Secondly, however, we may not even be looking at this issue correctly.
As the authors of the recent book, Reinventing Jesus, point out:
It might be better to ask, Why were
the Gospels written at all? If we think in categories of delay, then this
presupposes that the writing of the Gospels was in the minds of these authors
from the beginning. However, this is almost certainly not the case. What was
paramount in the apostles' earliest motives was oral proclamation of the
gospel.{5}
In the early years of the church the story of Jesus was
being told and retold by eyewitnesses of these events. But still, some might
ask, might these "events" have become gradually embellished with the story's
retelling, so that what's recorded in the Gospels is no longer trustworthy?
To Tell the Old, Old Story
How accurately was the oral tradition about Jesus' life and
ministry preserved before being written down? Was it corrupted by his
earliest followers prior to being recorded in the Gospels? Many liberal
scholars think so. But there are good reasons to think otherwise.
In the first place, we must remember that "the interval
between Jesus and the written Gospels was not dormant."{6} In fact, this period
was filled with a tremendous amount of activity. The earliest followers of
Jesus told and retold his story wherever they went. This is important, for as a
recent book on Jesus observes:
If the earliest proclamation about
Jesus was altered in later years, then surely first-generation Christians would
know about the changes and would object to them. It would not even take
outsiders to object to the "new and improved Christianity," since those who
were already believers would have serious problems with the differences in the content
of their belief.{7}
Not only this, but New Testament scholar Craig Blomberg lists
many other reasons for believing that this oral tradition was accurately
transmitted by Jesus' earliest followers.{8} First, Jesus' followers believed
that He "proclaimed God's Word in a way which demanded careful retelling." Second,
over ninety percent of his teachings contained "poetic elements which would
have made them easy to memorize." Third, "the almost universal method of
education in antiquity, and especially in Israel, was rote memorization, which
enabled people accurately to recount quantities of material far greater than
all of the Gospels put together." And fourth, "written notes and a kind of
shorthand were often privately kept by rabbis and their disciples." Although we
can't be sure that any of Jesus' disciples kept written notes of His
teachings, it's at least possible that they did.
Finally, we must bear in mind that the Gospels are not the
product of merely one person's memories of the events of Jesus' life. Instead,
the oral tradition which lies behind the Gospels is based on numerous
eyewitness reports. This is extremely important, for as the authors of Reinventing
Jesus remind us, the disciples' "recollections were not individual memories
but collective ones—confirmed by other eyewitnesses and burned into
their minds by the constant retelling of the story. . . . Memory in
community is a deathblow to the view that the disciples simply forgot the
real Jesus."{9}
What About the Differences?
Thus, there are excellent reasons for believing that the
first Christians accurately preserved and transmitted the stories about Jesus before
they were recorded in the New Testament Gospels. But if this is so, then how do
we explain the fact that the sayings of Jesus and his disciples are sometimes
worded differently in different Gospels?
To cite just one example, consider the different ways in
which the Gospel writers record the dialogue between Jesus and his disciples on
the occasion of Peter's famous confession at Caesarea Philippi. Jesus begins by
asking his disciples a question, but Matthew, Mark, and Luke each word the
question differently. Matthew records Jesus asking, "Who do people say the Son
of Man is?" (Matt. 16:13).{10} But in Mark the question reads a bit differently,
"Who do people say I am?" (Mark 8:27). And in Luke it's a bit different still, "Who
do the crowds say I am?" (Luke 9:18).
Not only is the precise wording of Jesus' question different
in each of these Gospels, but the wording of Peter's response is as well. In
Matthew, Peter answers, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God"
(16:16). But in Mark he simply says, "You are the Christ" (8:29), and in Luke, "The
Christ of God" (9:20).
Now clearly these are not major differences. In each
case the gist of what's said is the same. But we must also acknowledge
that in each case the details are different. What's going on here? If
the stories about Jesus were accurately preserved before being recorded in the
Gospels, then why are there these subtle, yet real, differences
in the words attributed to Jesus and Peter in each of these three accounts? Or to
put this question in the words of Darrell Bock, how are we to understand such
sayings in the Gospels—are they live, jive, or memorex?{11}
On the one hand, the view which says such sayings are merely
unhistorical "jive" just doesn't do justice to the evidence we've already
considered regarding how carefully the oral tradition about the life of Jesus
was transmitted by his earliest followers. Nor does this view adequately
account for both the internal and external evidence for the historical
reliability of the Gospels.{12}
On the other hand, the "memorex" view, which holds that the
Gospel accounts of Jesus' spoken words represent the exact words He spoke on
the occasions reported, doesn't seem to square with the actual evidence of the
Gospels themselves. The Gospel writers do, as we saw above, report the words of
Jesus and his disciples differently, and this is so even in cases where we can
be quite confident that the incident occurred only once.
This leaves us with only one more option to consider.
A "Live" Option
Dr. Darrell Bock has persuasively argued for what he calls a
"live" option in explaining the differences between the Gospel accounts.{13} He
describes this option this way:
Each Evangelist retells the . . .
words of Jesus in a fresh way . . . while . . . accurately presenting the "gist"
of what Jesus said. . . . [T]his approach . . . recognizes the Jesus tradition
as "live" in its dynamic and quality. We clearly hear Jesus . . . but . . .
there is summary and emphasis in the complementary portraits that each
Evangelist gives . . . .{14}
In other words, the Gospel writers are not always giving us
Jesus' exact words, but they are always giving us his genuine voice.
This distinction is absolutely necessary. For one thing, it helps explain the observed
differences among Jesus' sayings in the Gospels. It also sits well with the
fact that most of these sayings had already been translated by the time they
were first recorded. You see, most of Jesus' original teaching would have been
done in Aramaic, the dominant language of first-century Palestine. The Gospels,
however, were written in Greek. Since "most of Jesus' teaching in the Gospels
is already a translation," we're not reading his exact words even when
we're reading the Gospels in Greek.{15} Finally, Jesus' longest speeches can be
read in a matter of minutes. Yet "we know that Jesus kept his audiences for
hours at a time (e.g., Mark 6:34-36)." It seems evident, then, "that the writers
gave us a . . . summarized presentation of what Jesus said and did."{16}
But if the "live" option is correct, and the Gospels don't
always give us Jesus' exact words, does this mean that their reports of Jesus'
teaching are untrustworthy? Not at all. The way in which the Gospel writers
recorded the words and deeds of Jesus was totally consistent with the way in
which responsible histories were written in the ancient world. As Dr. Bock
observes, "the Greek standard of reporting speeches required a concern for
accuracy in reporting the gist of what had been said, even if the exact words
were not . . . recorded."{17}
This is exactly what a careful study of the Gospels reveals
about the way in which their authors reported the words of Jesus. Although
these writers lived before the invention of audio recorders, they nonetheless
strove to honestly and reliably record the gist of Jesus' teachings. We can
therefore read these documents with confidence that they are telling us the "Gospel
truth" about Jesus in a fresh and dynamic way.
Notes
1. J. Ed Komoszewski, M. James Sawyer, and Daniel B. Wallace, Reinventing Jesus: What The Da Vinci Code and Other Novel Speculations Don't Tell You (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Kregel Publications, 2006), 21.
2. Robert W. Funk, Roy W. Hoover, and the Jesus Seminar, The Five Gospels: The Search for the Authentic Words of Jesus (New York: Macmillan, 1993), 4, cited in Komoszewski, Sawyer, and Wallace, Reinventing Jesus, 21.
3. Robert W. Funk and the Jesus Seminar, The Acts of Jesus: The Search for the Authentic Deeds of Jesus (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1998), 6, cited in Komoszewski, Sawyer, and Wallace, Reinventing Jesus, 29.
4. Craig Blomberg, quoted in Lee Strobel, The Case for Christ (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House, 1998), 33.
5. Komoszewski, Sawyer, and Wallace, Reinventing Jesus, 26.
6. Ibid., 29.
7. Ibid., 30.
8. The following points are taken from Craig L. Blomberg, "Gospels (Historical Reliability)," in Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels, eds. Joel B. Green, Scot McKnight, and I. Howard Marshall (Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 1992), 294.
9. Komoszewski, Sawyer, and Wallace, Reinventing Jesus, 33-34.
10. All biblical citations are from the New International Version (NIV).
11. Darrell L. Bock, "The Words of Jesus in the Gospels: Live, Jive, or Memorex?" in Jesus Under Fire, eds. Michael J. Wilkins and J. P. Moreland (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House, 1995), 73-99.
12. See Craig L. Blomberg, The Historical Reliability of the Gospels (Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 1987).
13. The discussion which follows is largely dependent on the essay by Darrell Bock, "The Words of Jesus in the Gospels," 73-99.
14. Ibid., 77.
15. Ibid.
16. Ibid., 77-78.
17. Ibid., 79.
© 2006 Probe Ministries
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About the Author Dr. Michael Gleghorn is a research associate with Probe Ministries. He also serves as an instructor at Grand Canyon University where he teaches Christian Worldview. He earned a B.A. in psychology from Baylor University, a Th.M. in systematic theology from Dallas Theological Seminary, and a Ph.D. in Theological Studies (also from Dallas Theological Seminary). Michael and his wife Hannah have two children. They are active in a local church in Surprise, AZ. |
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