Jesus, the Unprecedented Human Being. Giosuè Ghisalberti

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about.”42 Jesus was a “first-century AD Galilean Jew, a man firmly situated in time and space.”43 “Jesus was a man of his time.”44 Collins writes: “Jesus was fully conditioned by the culture and thought-world of his time.”45 “Jesus belongs ←20 | 21→firmly in the world of first-century Judaism”46 Aslan, even more absolute and ignoring many aspects of the gospels and how he ministered to Jews and Greeks, Romans and Samaritans, and many others still, believes that “Jesus was a Jew preaching Judaism to other Jews. His was a Jewish mission, one concerned exclusively with the fate of his fellow Jews. Israel was all that mattered to Jesus.”47 The apparent certainty of historians could not be further from my fundamental conviction. Those predisposed to the apparent comfort of history and the facts known about it, however, must necessarily exclude the possibility of Jesus being capable of extricating himself from his time and place and to conceive such a radical transformation of the human, of the world, it could only be done so from the creation emanating from his life. There are simply too many incomparable ideas expressed by Jesus and preserved in the gospels to be constrained by what Bultmann has called “the hegemony of historicism.”48

      Among the most insistent as to Jesus’ identity and, consequently, the formation and development of the Christian church, no one perhaps has been more adamant than Vermes.

      Returning to the upheaval caused by the migration of Christianity from

      a Jewish milieu to pagan Syria, Asia Minor, Egypt, Greece and Rome –

      there can be little doubt that if in one sense some continuity persisted, in

      another, the uprooting was so thorough that as a source for the historical

      understanding of Jesus of Nazareth, the reliability of the Gentile church,

      together with all its literature, composed especially for it, can be ruled out.

      In many respects, the Hebrew Bible, the Pseudepigrapha, the Qumran writings,

      and the enormous body of rabbinic literature, are better equipped to illuminate

      ←21 | 22→

      Jesus is present as logos.

      The reader respects the narratives as the medium of meaning regarding

      Jesus and engages the Gospel narratives in the way that literary critics

      engage other such narratives, with specific attention to the literary elements

      of plot, character and theme… such a disciplined reading engages the human

      Jesus as a literary character in the narratives written about him within fifty

      to seventy years after his death. (168)

      To add to Johnson’s argument for being able to access Jesus’ character – and all four gospels are in no way incompatible on his character – a further analysis will be attempted here: it is not only his character that can be assessed, but also his self-conception and what it means for anyone who begins to understand the purpose of his teaching. A hermeneutics of the gospels does not concern itself either with a method or with a theory; it presupposes, from the beginning, that ←23 | 24→understanding is an ontological condition, and one with a particularly dynamic ability when it is animated by the spirit – and the reader may choose to understand the word (for themselves) any way

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