According to the Scriptures: The Death of Christ in the Old Testament and the New
By David Allen
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David Allen
He’s an older, retired man. His family attended church weekly and that became a foundational base in his life. With an interest in the Bible, he read it to gain understanding of the God he was following and serving. In order to better understand what was being said and taught.
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According to the Scriptures - David Allen
According to the Scriptures
© David Allen 2018
Published in 2018 by SCM Press
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All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, SCM Press.
The Author has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the Author of this Work
Except where otherwise indicated, Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, Anglicized Edition, copyright © 1989, 1995 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Citations to the LXX are from the New English Translation of the Septuagint (NETS), as the recognized critical translation of the various Septuagint texts.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
978 0 334 05550 1
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Printed and bound by
CPI Group (UK) Ltd
Contents
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
2 The Old Testament in Mark’s Passion
3 The Old Testament in Matthew’s Passion
4 The Old Testament in Luke–Acts’ Passion
5 The Old Testament in John’s Passion
6 The Old Testament in Paul’s Depiction of Jesus’ Death
7 The Old Testament in Hebrews’ Passion
8 The Old Testament in the ‘Passion’ of the Other New Testament Epistles
9 Conclusion
Bibliography
Endnotes
Scriptural Index
Acknowledgements
This book arises out of a combination of areas of personal interest. I have been involved with the Annual Old Testament in the New Testament Seminar for a number of years now, and it remains a regular locus for stimulating and collegial engagement with a key area within biblical studies. I am grateful to all the members of the Seminar for their various contributions and engagement over that time, but I would particularly note the support of the Seminar’s professorial convenors, Susan Docherty, Steve Moyise and the late Maarten Menken (whose encouraging, but nonetheless robust, scholarly insights we all miss).
The focus on Jesus’ death and the Passion Narratives arises out of my teaching on such matters at the Queen’s Foundation, Birmingham. I have welcomed the various ways in which I have been able to explore these matters with students, and this book is all the better for their contributions and feedback. And I remain particularly grateful to my colleagues at Queen’s, and for their various ways in which they offered support (consciously or otherwise!) during the research and writing of the book. I am privileged to call them friends.
Particular thanks also go to the team at SCM, both for their patience with me in producing the book, and for their close attention to it as it went through the editing and production process.
1
Introduction
‘If all you know is the New Testament, you do not know the New Testament.’
This catchy soundbite is apocryphally attributed to the renowned German biblical scholar Martin Hengel (1926–2009), the author of numerous volumes relating to New Testament (NT) and early Christian interpretation.¹ This book seeks to take Hengel at his word. Or at least it aspires to do so in relation to the importance of knowing the Old Testament (OT), in order that one might engage with how the NT writers go about formulating their particular discourse or narratives. That is, the imagery, vocabulary and culture of the OT permeate the NT writers’ reflection on Jesus Christ and, with Hengel, one ventures that one cannot satisfactorily engage with the NT texts without paying attention to the way such OT imagery is shaping the account. Similarly, assessing the impact of the OT on the origins of the NT, Craig Evans concludes: ‘Only the gospel itself makes a greater contribution in NT thought.’² Or to put it another way, when seeking to exegete or engage with a NT text, a valuable first question to ponder is: ‘Where or how is the Old Testament operative in this?’
The other key dimension to the shape of this book derives similarly from the claim of another German biblical scholar, Martin Kahler (1835–1912), the renowned contributor to the so-called ‘Quest for the Historical Jesus’.³ Reflecting on the extended attention that the Gospel of Mark devotes to Jesus’ final week (Mark 11—16), particularly when compared to the comparatively sweeping coverage of Jesus’ prior life and ministry (Mark 1—10), Kahler famously opined that Mark was a ‘passion narrative with an extended introduction’.⁴ In so doing, Kahler underscored both the significance of Jesus’ death for Mark (and, by extension, for the other canonical evangelists too), while also emphasizing the way the ‘story’ of Jesus’ death derived from a self-standing, discrete narrative in its own right – a so-called Passion Narrative. While we might query the basic premise of his assertion (there is an inherent unity to Mark’s account – notably through its consistent mode of structuring material in A-B-A triads – and Mark 1—10 is surely far more than just an ‘introduction’), Kahler’s articulation of a focused Passion recounting still holds, and it would seem to have been a discrete ‘source’ available to Mark, probably found originally in oral form.
This book seeks to proverbially juxtapose Hengel and Kahler, and thereby generate a conversation as to the way the NT is shaped by OT motifs and ideas, but specifically within the scope of the putative Passion Narrative(s). Put specifically, this book is a study of the way the NT writers utilized the Jewish Scriptures in order to describe, articulate and evaluate the death of Jesus.⁵ The notion that Jesus Christ died and was raised according to the Scriptures (1 Cor. 15.3–4) seems to have become an established datum at a very early stage within christological formulation, and thus may well reflect the existence of some form of Passion Narrative that both contributed to, and was shaped by, such formulation. The fact that Paul can speak of Jesus dying kata tas graphas (‘according to the Scriptures’) as being effectively a creedal formula that he is ‘handing on’ to the Corinthians (1 Cor. 15.3) would also indicate that it is pre-existing material, rather than that which he is creating de novo. The structure of the creedal formula seems to testify to this, the three repeated ‘hoti’ clauses (i.e. ‘that . . .’) suggestive of a form that enabled easy remembrance and recitation.
We assume, therefore, that the formulation of understanding Jesus’ death through the lens of scriptural testimony was an early feature of church practice, and one that predated the Pauline correspondence. The fact that Paul can also speak of this tradition being ‘of first importance’ (1 Cor. 15.3) likewise adds further weight to the mooted relationship between Jesus’ death and its scriptural warrant and attestation. The appeal to kata tas graphas might also be said to incorporate two dimensions, or be doing ‘dual diligence’. On the one hand, the Scriptures provide an answer to the ‘Why did it happen?’ question – why or what occasioned the crucifixion of Jesus the Messiah? On the other, it could be seen as still answering the same ‘why’ question, but in respect of what Jesus’ death achieved – that is, it was for our sins (cf. Gal. 1.4).⁶ As Douglas Moo surmises in respect of Jesus’ death: ‘it was not only the necessity, but the significance as well, that was derived from the will of God revealed in the OT’.⁷ As a rule of thumb therefore, Chapters 2—5 of our book, in engaging with the gospel Passion Narratives, will consider the first question, in respect of what OT texts the evangelists appeal to in terms of narrating Jesus’ death, and the interpretative contexts they so adopt. Chapters 6—8, where we turn to the epistolary correspondence, will consider more the second aspect, and seek to evaluate their reflection on the achievements of Jesus’ death. This is only a rule of thumb, however, as the gospel writers themselves are also theologians in their own right, and therefore trying to offer some explication of why Jesus died; Mark 10.45 (Matt. 20.28), the so-called ‘ransom logion’,⁸ would be one such example. Equally, both Paul and Hebrews are seemingly aware of Passion Narrative material, and such tradition crops up at various places within their respective correspondence.
Of course, in terms of 1 Corinthians 15.3–4, Paul neither specifies the particular texts that he had in mind, nor indicates whether or not he was alluding to a wider scriptural perspective/narrative. Had he done so, far fewer books or theses would have been written attempting to identify those particular passages! Instead Paul’s very silence on these matters is surely an interpretative datum in its own right, and thus enables the space for further exploration, encouraging the consideration of the different ways the Passion may have been understood or conceived of in scriptural terms. As well as exploring what specific texts might have generated the tradition espoused in 1 Corinthians 15.3, we will want to explore what it might mean for such texts to be functioning as ‘Scripture’, and thus how the early Church arrived at such fundamental, creedal formulations.
The Old Testament and the Passion
The foundation for Hengel’s claim – and likewise the evidential backdrop to Kahler’s Passion Narrative speculation – is manifest from even a cursory examination of the Passion Narratives in the Synoptic Gospels. Mark’s use of Psalm 22, for example, would seem a significant example in this area – is this really a psalm of christological abandonment, or is it rather one espousing divine vindication (Ps. 22.1; cf. Mark 15.34)? Is God present with Jesus on the cross, or is the scene actually the ultimate, climactic moment of desertion? And to which of these perspectives is Mark appealing through the use of the psalm? Or what are we to make of Jesus’ (apparently) strange quotation of Zechariah 13.7 (cf. Mark 14.27; Matt. 26.31), namely that the sheep will be scattered in the aftermath of his death? Is such an appeal to Zechariah an obscure reference, or might Mark and Matthew rather be engaging with a wider interpretative process? And why do Luke and John not include the same ‘shepherd’ claim at the equivalent point in their Passion retellings? Comparable questions likewise arise in terms of the non-gospel material, where similar associations are made with the OT in respect of Jesus’ death, and like 1 Corinthians 15.3, they may evidence the early framing of a Passion Narrative. For example, why does Hebrews cite Psalm 40 in terms of Jesus’ high-priestly self-offering (Heb. 10.4–10), and how does it relate to Hebrews’ wider exposition of the New Covenant, with such exposition drawing foundationally on Jeremiah 31 (Heb. 10.15–18; cf. Heb. 8.7–13)? Or what value might 1 Peter glean from patterning Jesus’ suffering and death against the imagery of Isaiah 53 (1 Pet. 2.21–25; cf. Isa. 52.13—53.12)? And are there other NT texts that might be doing likewise?
Furthermore, there are a number of other instances across the NT corpus in which the ‘unspecified’, broad scriptural attestation of Jesus’ death – akin to that found in 1 Corinthians 15.3 – is similarly evidenced. Elsewhere in his letters, for example, Paul can speak of a messiah – and, by extension, the messiah’s death – being promised by the prophets and in the Scriptures (Rom. 1.2; cf. also Rom. 16.26), suggestive of a very broad or expansive scriptural attestation. Similarly, Acts 3.18 has Peter confirming that the suffering messiah was the fulfilment of scriptural testimony – indeed that it was spoken in advance through all the prophets. As with the creedal formula of 1 Corinthians 15.3–4 (and, as we shall see, as is the case for a number of OT citations), there is no particular OT text specified, but rather the implication that the tenor of Scripture points towards the death of the Messiah in this regard. Later on in Acts, and in more narrative fashion perhaps, the text depicts Paul, reasoning from the Scriptures, the necessity that the Messiah should suffer and be raised from the dead (Acts 17.2–3). Such activity is not queried or unpacked further – rather, it is presented as an assumed practice and does not require any justification or explanation on Luke’s part. Likewise, within the Lucan resurrection narrative, in two separate incidences, Luke’s Jesus can explain how his suffering and death – and, of course, likewise his resurrection – are attested to and promised within the Scriptures (Luke 24.25–27, 44–46). In both incidences, Luke offers a broad scriptural tapestry for Jesus’ exegetical discourse, without specifying any particular passages in support. (He cites Moses/Torah and the prophets in the first instance, and Moses/Torah, the prophets and the psalms in the second; the extent of these references may have something to say about the emerging status of the Hebrew canon, as we note below.) Indeed, the very lack of interest in citing specific scriptural texts, and instead the appeal to the wider, fuller arc of scriptural narrative, warrants further comment and explanation, both for understanding the perception of the Scriptures in the first-century context and for the way they were being used.
We will therefore have cause throughout the book to consider how/when the NT writers identify particular passages in respect of Jesus’ death, and to what extent that matters, or alternatively whether the important element is that Scripture qua Scripture is being fulfilled. The ‘resigned’ claim of Jesus in Mark 14.49 that the Scriptures must be fulfilled would seem to be a primary testimony to this, as would 1 Peter’s declaration that the OT prophets testified in advance to the sufferings destined for Christ (1 Pet. 1.10–11). To this end, Simon Gathercole’s evocative turn of phrase would seem apposite: 1 Corinthians 15.3–4 ‘is thus not the peculiar eccentricity of an apostolic lone ranger but the proclamation of the whole apostolic college’.⁹ Or to put it another way, Paul’s Corinthian claim would seem to be standard, early Christian fare.
We recognize, of course, that the Gospels ‘narrate’ the death of Jesus in a different way from that of the rest of the NT, and therefore, by implication, there are generic differences in this regard. The Gospels use some form of Passion Narrative (pre-existent, or otherwise), and embed that into a wider narrative or biographical discourse in a way that epistolary literature lacks the generic capacity to do. At the same time, however, one should not overestimate the distinction between the different types of discourse. The gospel writers are simultaneously theologians, interpreting the Passion through their own particular lenses, and potentially use different OT texts to do this. As we will see, each gospel writer reads or understands Jesus’ death in different ways, and their respective choice of OT citations is a significant factor in this regard. Likewise the epistolary – and apocalyptic – material will/can still ‘narrate’ the death of Jesus, but with a particular slant, again shaped by a particular lens or focus. For example, scholars have recently argued that Paul works with a narrative of Jesus Christ, and that his theology is narratively shaped in this regard.¹⁰ This story of Christ, which is perhaps most succinctly summarized in the Christ hymn of Philippians 2.6–11, clearly incorporates Jesus’ death (indeed, it is surely the integral part), and we will observe how Paul might use the OT to unpack its significance and effect.
In sum, then, it is difficult to dissent from Joel Marcus’ summary declaration regarding the presence of a primitive Passion Narrative and the core, contributory role of the OT within it:
The Gospel accounts of Jesus’ suffering and death, probably in dependence upon this pre-Gospel passion narrative, are more strongly marked with OT references than any other sections of the Synoptics, with the possible exception of the birth narratives in Matthew and Luke.¹¹
Indeed, we might suggest that it is particularly Jesus’ birth and death that have excited distinctive scrutiny in terms of use of the OT. It is these especially significant events – the incarnation and the Passion – that, by their very nature, necessarily evoked and occasioned focused consideration of the relevant OT testimony. Steve Moyise’s recent volume, Was Jesus’ Birth According to Scripture?, seeks to ponder such matters in terms of the birth narratives;¹² our volume might be seen as asking similar questions, but from the perspective of Jesus’ crucifixion and death.
Why so? An early Passion Narrative
Alongside the idea that the early Church tradition rooted their understanding of Jesus’ death within scriptural testimony came the associated notion that a narrative or recounting of the death of Jesus had emerged to accompany such tradition and thereby narrate the story of Jesus’ death.¹³ It is this conceptual Passion Narrative to which Kahler refers above, and scholars generally concur that some form of broad tradition – or traditions? – was in place and acted as a source or foundation, both for the Passion accounts we find in the canonical Gospels and similarly for the reflection we find in the other NT texts.¹⁴ Different explanations arise as to how it might have originated, but some pre-Pauline form would seem to be warranted, Paul’s letter testifying to an existing body of material relating to Jesus’ death.¹⁵ Some have ventured, for example, that the origins of the Passion Narrative and its narration lie in early Christian liturgical practice.¹⁶ The ‘proto-eucharistic’ tradition associated with 1 Corinthians 11.23–26, and the implications therein of a recounting of Jesus’ death, may be significant in this regard; for example, both formulae effectively carry the vicarious ‘for you’ designation (11.24; 15.3). The words of institution are also the other established tradition Paul specifies that he is handing over to the Corinthians (just like 1 Cor. 15.3–4), and within such recounting, there is the implication of some narration of the events surrounding Jesus’ death, and the instructions he left for its ongoing remembrance.¹⁷ One may equally see the impact of a primitive Passion Narrative account within early Christian preaching and proclamation; Paul, for example, can speak of presenting Christ crucified as part of his mission to the Galatians (Gal. 3.1), or can encapsulate his mission to Corinth summarily as (their) knowing nothing except Christ crucified (1 Cor. 2.2).
Debates as to the origins of the Passion Narrative have invariably generated historical-critical approaches to the gospel accounts, notably in terms of source and form criticism, and these have similarly impacted on historical-Jesus concerns. The precise scope and content of any such Passion Narrative therefore remain contested, however, and there may actually be multiple sources or formats at work within the overall Passion tradition. Luke’s narration of Jesus’ death, for example, famously differs from that of its Synoptic counterparts, incorporating material and a flavour – particularly around Jesus’ innocence or righteousness – that are not replicated in Matthew or Mark; it exhibits stronger parallels, perhaps, to the ‘Passion’ of characters in Acts, such as Stephen or Paul.¹⁸ And, of course, while the concept of a Passion Narrative is a convenient one for our discussion of the Gospels’ use of the OT in relation to Jesus’ death, it is less appropriate perhaps for discussion of the epistolary material. Hence we might speak alternatively of a broader or more general ‘Passion tradition’, thereby offering an umbrella term for the way the NT writers engage with the implications of Jesus’ death.
Therefore we are advisedly cautious about speaking of a generic or ‘fixed’ form of the Passion story, and remain generally agnostic as to its particular form(s) or shape. As such, the explicit content of the primitive (i.e. pre-Markan) Passion Narrative is outside our present scope. John Dominic Crossan’s work is perhaps indicative in this regard.¹⁹ Crossan proposed that the Passion Narrative took the form of what he terms a ‘Cross Gospel’, and this narrative provided the essential contours and content of the Passion – and Resurrection – narratives. He proposes that this filters into Mark (and the other Gospels), and eventually becomes the text we know of as the ‘Gospel of Peter’.²⁰ It putatively contained four core elements (Jesus’ Trial, the Abuse, the Crucifixion and the Burial), and one can see how it might have formed a discrete Passion Narrative in its own terms. With Crossan, there seems to be good evidence of pre-existing tradition around those four themes, but pace Crossan, we do not need to speculate on the Cross Gospel form and the putative relationship to the Gospel of Peter. Even so critical a scholar as Martin Dibelius can conclude: ‘The Passion story is narrated by all four evangelists with a striking agreement never attained elsewhere’;²¹ the Lucan variations not withstanding, the pre-existence of a Passion tradition makes sense in view of such ‘striking agreement’.
In general terms, one might aver that the four canonical Passion Narratives have five scenes in common: Jesus is arrested at night in a garden; he is questioned by the chief priests; he is interrogated by Pilate and condemned to death; he is executed by crucifixion; he is buried in a nearby stone tomb. There seems good reason, then, to think that these derive from a shared or common narratival source. We are not seeking to reconstruct the ‘prehistory’ of this Passion Narrative but merely to suggest that its existence seems to be plausible, probable even, and a contributory factor to making sense of what appears within the Passion accounts. Aspects of such a Passion Narrative – and their explication – are rooted in OT citation, as the testimony of 1 Corinthians 15.3 would seemingly confirm.
More specifically for our concerns, of course, the existence of a Passion account, and the emerging narrative traditions around Jesus’ death, explicitly frame our presenting question. A primary difficulty for the early Church, arguably the primary one, was the essence of Jesus’ (cruciform) death, and the necessity to justify why worship might be offered to one who had suffered such a cruciform demise. The ‘foolishness’ of the cross forms an explicit element of Paul’s kerygmatic exposition to the Corinthians (cf. 1 Cor. 1.18–31), and he likewise recognizes how it is a stumbling block to Jews (1 Cor. 1.23), particularly as the crucified one is ‘cursed’ by such a death (Gal. 3.10–14; cf. Deut. 21.22–23).²² The early Church may also have been faced with the question that one of the most prominent OT cruciform deaths (i.e. that of Haman – Esth. 7.9–10) was actually the very one that signalled Israel’s triumph by the death of their enemy (rather than that of their messiah). That is, the immediate response to Christ’s death is that it might be construed as contra – rather than kata – the Scriptures, and that the scriptural testimony might be seen as depicting Christ’s death as his defeat rather than his triumph. In terms of the need to justify Christ’s death instead as victory, we might see a particular burden in this regard in respect of John’s Gospel. On the one hand, John is absolutely clear that the cross is Jesus’ moment of glory and triumph (12.32), but the gospel narrative needs explicit warrant of that fact. The preceding Johannine signs have manifested Jesus’ significance, but in terms of the cross, it becomes incumbent on John to show that the crucifixion is the ‘fulfilment’ of Jesus’ messianic credentials, not the critique or destruction of them (cf. John 19.24, 28, 36–37).²³ And for John, of course, it is not only the offence of the cross that requires OT warrant, but likewise, how does one explain the ‘Jewish’ rejection of the one crucified (cf. John 1.11; 12.37–41)? Does such rejection have similar scriptural warrant?
In short, a ‘crucified Christ’ is a problem – a contradiction in terms, one might say. How could it be that God’s Messiah – God’s Anointed One – would suffer such an ignominious, horrific death, one reserved for slaves or criminals? It is the ‘problem’ that occasions Cleopas and his fellow traveller’s disappointment, as they journeyed to Emmaus and reflected on the cruciform death of one whom they had believed to be the one who would redeem Israel (Luke 24.18–21). Well in advance of Paul’s letters – if the testimony of 1 Corinthians 15.3–4 is indeed pre-existing tradition – the early Church needed to find justification or support for what was so ‘unexpected’ or counter-intuitive. If the resurrection was always the divine goal or intention, why didn’t God just prevent Jesus’ death? Why was the death necessary?²⁴ Rather than seeking to water down the offence or scandal of the cross, as the early Church might have chosen to do, instead it seeks to embrace that offence and affront, and stipulate the reasons or justification for it.²⁵ Morna Hooker, for example, hence surmises that the early Church had to move from saying that the cross did not make sense to it being shown that it did make sense.²⁶ The ‘making sense’ appeal is geared –