The Early Church on Jesus
Ben Witherington offers a potpourri of thoughts about early Christian belief.
Review by Gary M. Burge | posted 2/14/2007 08:50AM
The last 15 years have seen numerous attempts to reconstruct the life of Christ. For good or ill, the novel theories of Dominic Crossan, Marcus Borg, and Elaine Pagels have found their way into the public media. For example, in Rabbi Jesus: An Intimate Biography, Bruce Chilton concludes that Jesus was traumatized by the death of his father, suffered from some mental illness (bipolar perhaps), and stirred his Galilean followers to march on Jerusalem.
In 1995, Bart Ehrman offered a more scholarly (but misguided) assessment in Misquoting Jesus, in which he argued for a merely human Jesus. Dallas Theological Seminary's Darrell Bock answered him in The Missing Gospels: Unearthing the Truth Behind Alternative Christianities.
At first glance, Ben Witherington's new book appears to engage these debates. Both the title and introduction suggest that this volume offers a scholarly apologetic for the New Testament Jesus. And in a final appendix we find a stinging dismantling of James Tabor's primary theses in his speculative book, The Jesus Dynasty.
But this book goes in two different directions. In fact, Witherington, a professor of New Testament at Asbury Theological Seminary and a first-rate scholar, spends most of this book touring the inner circle of Jesus' immediate followerswomen such as Joanna (whom he suggests is the apostle Junia), Mary (Jesus' mother), and Mary Magdalene; and men such as Peter, the Beloved Disciple (Lazarus in his view), James, and Paul.
On occasions where urban legend has run away with a character such as Mary Magdalene (thanks in part to The Da Vinci Code), Witherington helpfully straightens things out. But in each case his aim is to explain what these people believed and taught.
In this respect, What Have They Done with Jesus? is a veritable potpourri of thoughts about early Christian belief. We walk through summaries of First Peter and Paul's relation to the law, an explanation about Johannine authorship and the identity of the Beloved Disciple, even details about the Nag Hammadi discoveries and the teachings of James.
And while the chapters follow the stories of each character nicely, one begins to lose sight of the original goal: What have they done with Jesus? A redaction critic might wonder if this book was written for another purposeto give a splendid introduction to the earliest Christians and their thoughtand then fitted by the publisher into the agenda of saving Jesus from critical scholarship.
Each chapter ends with an addendum entitled, "What we've learned and what that knowledge tells us about Jesus." It is as if a good book was given an extra task not originally on the agenda.
But for the lay reader, it works. Witherington's language evokes the tone of popular culture much like a blog or People magazine (which will delight some, but exasperate others). Chapter and section divisions include "Gullible's Travels," "Naughty Gnostic Gospels," "For Pete's Sake," "Simon Says," "O Brother, Where Art Thou," and "Hey Jude, Don't Make It Bad." Yet this whimsical style stands with substantial discussions about the New Testament and its earliest witnesses. For some laypersons, it may be the ideal combination that is both charming and challenging.
Gary M. Burge is a professor of New Testament at Wheaton College and Graduate School.
Related Elsewhere:
What Have They Done with Jesus?
is available from ChristianBook.com and other retailers.
More about Ben Witherington, including information about his other books, is available from his website.
February 2007, Vol. 51, No. 2