Author Archives: sheffieldbiblicalstudies

Geza Vermes as New Testament Scholar

There are a number of online recollections of Geza Vermes, all of which, as far as I can see, recognise his importance as a scholar of early Judaism and the New Testament, particularly the quest for the historical Jesus. I want to look at his importance for New Testament studies, with the qualification that this aspect of Vermes’ career was, of course, part of Vermes’ Jewish studies.

A number of historical events and trends came together at the right time for Vermes, particularly by the late 1960s and early 1970s. He had begun his (re-)conversion back to Judaism from Christianity and at this point had plenty of experience working in Jewish studies. More broadly, there were major cultural shifts after 1967 which were starting to emphasis issues concerning Israel and Judaism. This was particularly happening in America after the Six Day War, which itself came at a time of post-war Jewish concerns about assimilation into American culture, a new post-Holocaust generation of Judaism, and the emergence of Holocaust museums among other things. This may have been more prominent in America but America was starting to become the centre of biblical studies and similar trends can be found in the UK too. It was also the beginning of an era where liberal multiculturalism (and its enemies) was beginning to develop, notably in the UK. When we combine these cultural and historic trends with Vermes’ training, wide-ranging knowledge of Jewish sources, and a personal interest in both Christianity and Judaism, alongside family memories of the Holocaust, he was able (perhaps uniquely) to challenge to dominant anti-Jewish rhetoric and heavily Christianized discourse of historical Jesus scholarship.

One notable thing about his famous book, Jesus the Jew (1973) is that it was simultaneously both controversial and then well-received, at least in terms of the language of Jesus the Jew. His autobiography, Providential Accidents, gives a good account of the initial problems then surprising acceptance of his ideas. With hindsight, his historical and cultural context helps explain this. And Vermes, along with E.P. Sanders, was clearly successful in changing the scholarly rhetoric about Judaism. Today, scholars will often do their very best to claim what they have reconstructed is ‘very Jewish’. But one point needs to be stressed. Vermes’ Jesus (if we can use his own implicit and sometimes explicit distinction) was to be sharply differentiated from the Christ of faith. Vermes’ Jesus was Jewish in the sense that everything this Jesus did was also found in early Judaism and early Jewish sources.

Yet at the same time, Vermes’ work is still problematic for scholarship whether or not this is acknowledged (often it is not). His version of Jesus’ Jewishness did not have a strong emphasis on Jesus ‘transcending’, ‘overriding’, ‘making redundant’, or even ‘intensifying’ aspects of Judaism (Judaism, that is, as assumed or constructed by a given scholar or scholarship more generally) that is still found in scholarship and is not so different from the pre-Vermes era. In other words, this makes Vermes stand out from the constant rhetoric of Jesus the Jew that has come after Vermes. I think it is worth being blunt by stating that scholars continue to use Vermes as a Jewish scholar and his influential work on ‘Jewishness’ to justify supercessionist positions (implicit or explicit) that Vermes would not have accepted nor recognised and, unlike Vermes, often without reading sources from the Judaism supposedly ‘transcended’. Apart from some notable exceptions, Vermes’ challenge has still not been met on a widespread scale in historical Jesus scholarship.

There are other notable areas where Vermes shifted the academic discussion or anticipated later scholarly trends such as the ‘son of man’ debate and the role of Nazi scholarship in New Testament studies. Vermes’ appendix to the third edition of Matthew Black’s Aramaic Approach to the Gospels and Acts (1967) was his most significant contribution to the son of man debate. Perhaps most crucially, Vermes collected a number of Aramaic texts containing the Aramaic idiom (variants on bar nash) which he argued was a circumlocution – effectively a way of saying ‘I’. The debate moved on after Vermes did the initial hard work – including discussions about ‘son of man’ also including a reference to a wider group of people as well as the speaker – but it was always clear just how much he had influenced scholars such as Casey and Lindars. While Vermes hinted that he was open to such developments in the son of man debate, there are a number of instances where his reading of the relevant Aramaic texts continues to be influential. One example would be the idea of the speaker using the circumlocution in embarrassing, controversial or dangerous situations.

His discussion of Nazi scholarship in Jesus and the World of Judaism (1983) is worth mentioning because it is probably the most overlooked book in his work on Jesus and because he discussed the work on Nazi Jesus scholarship nearly twenty years before it became commonplace in New Testament scholarship. While more detailed work has now been done (partly because more primary sources have become available since Vermes wrote Jesus and the World of Judaism), it remains an important critique which anticipated some of the more recent critiques of the extent of the influence of Nazi New Testament scholarship.

There is a strong case for Vermes being the most influential historical Jesus scholar of his generation. In some ways he was perhaps even more influential than Sanders whose historical Jesus work and challenge to the anti-Jewish rhetoric in New Testament scholarship owes something to Vermes. Others wrote bigger books but none of them changed the rhetoric of the debate as Vermes’ Jesus the Jew did.

James Crossley

The Bible, Critical Theory and Reception seminar 2013!

The Bible, Critical Theory and Reception seminar

University of Chester, 12-13th September, 2013

The third annual seminar will be dedicated to some of the latest developments in biblical studies. Building on the success of the Bible and Critical Theory seminar and journal in the southern hemisphere, this approximate northern hemisphere equivalent will welcome papers in the general areas of critical theory, cultural studies and reception history. Reception history is broadly understood to include the use, influence and receptions of biblical texts in all aspects of culture (e.g. film, pop music, literature, politics etc). This two-day seminar will be held in Chester, 12-13th September, 2013. The seminar will be free of charge, though accommodation will have to be found privately. Further details (including confirmed speakers, times, locations, and accommodation tips) will be made available on the Sheffield Biblical Studies blog and the BCTRS Facebook page in due course.

Anyone interested in presenting a paper (typically in a 30 minute slot), or would like any other further information, should contact James Crossley and/or John Lyons. Paper proposals should include a title and abstract (c. 250 words). Postgraduate students are warmly invited to offer paper proposals. The deadline for participation and call for papers is 1st August, 2013.

Centre for the Social-Scientific Study of the Bible

From Chris Keith:

St Mary’s University College announces the launch of the Centre for the Social-Scientific Study of the Bible with a special lecture from Prof. John Barclay (Durham University) on ‘Paul and the Gift: Gift-Theory, Grace, and Critical Issues in Pauline Interpretation.’ The event will occur on May 3 in the Waldegrave Drawing Room on the campus of St Mary’s University College, with the lecture commencing promptly at 5:30 pm. This event is open to the public and free. For reservations, please contact Sam Chant (samantha.chant@smuc.ac.uk) and for information please contact Chris Keith (chris.keith@smuc.ac.uk).

 
Abstract:  This lecture attempts three tasks: first, to use the anthropology of gift and historical studies of gift-giving in the Graeco-Roman world (including ancient Judaism) to raise appropriate questions about Pauline and early Christian discourses concerning gift; second, to outline ways in which gift-giving can be and has been ‘perfected’, that is, drawn out to an absolute or extreme form for the sake of definition or polemical advantage; and third, on this basis, to outline some of the key configurations of grace in the history of reception of Paul, and thus to clarify central issues currently mired in conceptual confusion. 

Religion and Radicalism

The snowy Religion and Radicalism conference: a full report on the most important results from Herrnhut is given by Roland Boer here. The program and abstracts are available here.

 

 

 

 

Ralph P. Martin

Apologies for the lateness of this.

As many will now know, Ralph P. Martin recently died. There are online obituaries (e.g. here, here, here, and here). Martin was Professor Associate here at Sheffield from 1988 to 1996. He supervised several PhD students during this time and became a regular at departmental events hosted at SBL. Martin was, of course, author of a number of books and articles in New Testament studies, including (among other things) widely read work on the theology of Mark and Phil. 2.6-11.

Keith Whitelam’s article on on Al Akhbar

“Obama and Palestine’s Forgotten Past” is available here.

Hidden Perspectives

…is a new project at Sheffield and the brainchild of Katie Edwards. It is so modern, it has a Facebook page. And there is a blog too which is run by Emily Foster-Brown. It is a ‘very pink’ blog. Here is the ‘About’ blurb:

Hidden Perspectives is a large-scale pioneering public engagement project that aims to open up interpretations of biblical narratives to underrepresented groups. The project is a jointly organised by Dr Katie Edwards at The University of Sheffield and LaDIYfest Sheffield.

Hidden Perspectives encourages inclusive discussion on dominant interpretations of biblical texts and narratives found in scholarship and mainstream culture. Working with groups and individuals from range of faith and non-faith backgrounds, this ambitious project aims to foster an atmosphere of inclusivity and diversity in which biblical texts can be interpreted.

In 2013 the project will focus on sexuality, gender and the Bible and intersecting issues relating to identity, diversity and representation.

Whitelam, Rhythms of Time: New Website

A website for Keith Whitelam’s new book is found here: http://rhythmsoftime.com/

There is also a Facebook and Twitter presence.

Philip Davies and the FD Maurice Lectures

Philip Davies will be giving the FD Maurice Lectures at Kings College London on the theme of “The Good Book: The Bible and Secular Society”. They will take place on February 26,27 and 28 February.

More details to follow.

Kevin Brook on Khazars, Jews and Malina et al

In a recent Bible and Interpretation article I co-wrote with Robert Myles about how Bruce Malina and some of his co-authors have a peculiar understanding of Jewish (racial) identity. One of these examples concerns an old anti-Jewish/Semitic polemic concerning Khazar origins of contemporary Jews, a view continued in more contemporary far right groups. For instance:

It is a common mistake in scholarship to consider first-century Israelites around the Mediterranean basin as the type of single-voiced entity one finds in the forms of modern Ashkenazi Jewishness in the United States and northern Europe. The Khazars were a Turkic people who converted to rabbinic Judaism in the ninth century C.E., to eventually settle in largely Slavic lands. Eight-four percent of all Jews before World War II lived in Poland, and they were Khazar Jews (see the website http://www.khazaria.com). Most Christians derive their image of ancient Semitic Judeans from images of contemporary non-Semitic Khazar Jews. The point is there was no lineal development from early Israel to contemporary Khazar Jewishness… As Diane Jacobs-Malina (manuscript in progress) has written:
‘Cutting through layers of Jewish image-management to get at the facts of Jews-in-relation-to-Everyone Else is a daunting procedure. The propensity to substitute flattering stories for the unvarnished historical kernels has emerged as the unifying element from the creation of Israel-in-the-Bible, through the Hellenistic revisions which produced instant antiquity, to writers like Josephus. This tendency manifested itself in the creation of the Oral Torah and its many interpretations culminating in the Bavli [the Babylonian Talmud]. A greater challenge presented itself with the descendants of Central Asians living in Khazaria (southern Russia) who converted to Rabbinic Judaism in the ninth century. These Khazars had to be recast not only as a Semitic people, but as the biological heirs of the Old Testament’s literary characters. This mythical transformation has been accepted as a fait accompli by many Zionist Jews and Christians. From Israel-in-the-Bible to Hollywood, from marketing to the contemporary media; story-telling and image-management are the core values of Jewish group identity which characterize their relations to Everyone Else.’
The point is, for readers of Paul interested in understanding Israelites in the first century C.E., the accretions of the past two thousand years have to be removed. Ancient Israelites have little in common with the Jews of today aside from Israel’s scriptures, which Christians share as well

(Malina and Pilch, Social-Science Commentary on the Letters of Paul, pp. 179-80)

Or again:

…modern readers will think John makes reference to those persons whom readers today know from their experience to be Jews. The fact is, from a religious point of view, all modern Jews belong to traditions developed largely after the time of Jesus and compiled in the Babylonian Talmud (sixth century C.E.). As for ethnic origin, Central European Jews (called Ashkenazi Jews) largely trace their origin to Turkic and Iranian ancestors who comprised the Khazar empire and converted to Judaism in the eighth century C.E. (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th ed. Micropaedia, 5:788; on the Internet: http://www.khazaria.com). Thus, given the sixth-century C.E. origin of all forms of contemporary Jewish religion, and given the U.S. experience of Jews based largely on Central European Jews, themselves originating from eighth-century C.E. converts, it would be quite anachronistic to identify any modern Jews with the ‘Judeans’ mentioned in John’s Gospel or the rest of the New Testament…in all of the sixty-nine other instances in John where the term Judeans (Greek Ioudaioi) appears, there is nothing of the modern connotations of ‘Jew’ or ‘Jewishness’… (Malina and Rohrbaugh, Social-Science Commentary on the Gospel of John, 44)

Notice the citation of www.khazaria.com. In the comments section of our article Kevin Brook, who runs khazaria.com, made the following remarks:

The Malinas’ citation of my site Khazaria.com shows they can’t understand their own sources since some pages on Khazaria.com contain evidence of most modern Jews’ descent from the ancient Israelites. This includes genetic evidence showing that Ashkenazi Jews, Yemenite Jews, Sephardic Jews, Persian Jews, Karaites, and Samaritans share ancient roots in the Middle East from the days of Israel…the Israelite component remained persistent and large…See how the evidence stacks up with the Malinas’ false claims “Ancient Israelites have little in common with the Jews of today” and “contemporary non-Semitic Khazar Jews”. Thanks to these so-called “scholars” for citing my work, but too bad they read it selectively.

This is further evidence of the somewhat problematic understanding of ‘Jewishness’ and contemporary Israeli and Jewish identity by Malina and some of his co-authors. For, as Brook points out, the source material used to make the dramatic claim does not even support the case. We are therefore left with no supporting evidence from Malina et al apart from micropaedia/Encyclopaedia Britannica. More on that when I work out how to cut and paste the entry.

Update:

There is a different use of sources by Malina that is also not without its difficulties. As Deane Galbraith points out, Malina has previously circulated (and defended) to a number of biblical scholars ‘a pro-holocaust-denial “joke” written by a far-right holocaust denier with the pen-name of Michael James’ (see “Big Pharma Pushes ‘Miracle Cure’ For Holocaust Denial Syndrome”. This spoof, which has been widely circulated, contains defences of Holocaust denial and Holocaust deniers such as David Irving.