On Monday I
outlined the way in which science needed to be seen, not as a single
world view, but as a set of things human beings do: finding
its meaning, its significance in the context of all the other things
that human beings do, and therefore in search always of a framework
of understanding about human dignity and human distinctiveness, which
needed to be provided from somewhere other
than its own methods and results. And that led on last night to
considering the world of politics: a world where there is, or
there should be, vigorous debate about these issues of human
dignity. We looked last night at the ways in which a community
with distinct and particular convictions about human destiny and human
nature fitted in to a society very often far from sure about these things.
And I made the point that where both science and politics are concerned,
part of the function of the Church is to draw out the assumptions that
underlie our most pressing public debates, and try and stimulate a more
candid and a more far-reaching discussion about these fundamental matters.
But to speak as I did last night – of the Church in particular as
a community within society, that sees itself as a kind of ‘citizens’
body’, as offering to the rest of society a distinctive set of beliefs
about what makes human beings human – prompts the question of how
the Church came into being, and the relation of its faith to historical
events.
If
we do indeed believe that a radically new possibility has come into
the world, both of knowing about human beings and of acting humanly,
that something new has entered into the world that affects the definition
of human destiny, how exactly is such a belief brought into being? In
its earliest phases of development this belief rests on the view at
its very heart, that Jesus of Nazareth has re-defined what’s involved
in being human. And that is expressed in a variety of images and
metaphors in the New Testament. Here is the image of God in humanity
restored. Here is the second Adam, the beginning of the human
race renewed. Here is the ‘firstborn of all creation’.
There’s a powerful sense in the New Testament, that whatever else
is said about Jesus of Nazareth, one thing has to be underlined:
there is a beginning of something here. And that is the
beginning of precisely that sense of an enlarged, expanded humanity,
capable of things of which humanity was not capable before. Thus
the events of the life of Jesus are understood as new beginning, as
a gift and a breakthrough. Jesus doesn’t simply appear as the
natural conclusion of a long process and no more: something is
introduced into our world and into our language by the events of his
life. And that of course means that if certain things are not
true about Jesus within the framework of history, there is no
new definition of human destiny and there is no new possibility
in being human.
Pontius
Pilate in St John’s Gospel is reported as saying; ‘Behold
the man’, at one point in the trial of Jesus. As usual in St
John’s Gospel, what people say means a great deal more than lies on
the surface: and from the very earliest days of Christianity,
that – probably – skeptical phrase of Pilate’s has come to be
understood as saying; here is humanity, renewed.
But if we’re to take that seriously we need to pursue the question
‘what do we need to know to be true about Jesus of Nazareth?’
And on the basis on what we have before us, in the New Testament and
elsewhere, what trust can we repose in these things?
So
to begin with this evening, I want to suggest a number of aspects of
the life of Jesus as reported to us in the Gospels, which are fundamental
in understanding how a new sense of being human could have arisen from
his life. The first is something reported on a number of occasions
in the Gospel narrative and picked up by some of the earliest believers:
the recollection that Jesus addressed God in a distinctive way, that
he used for God the word Abba, ‘father’, a familiar and intimate
word used significantly in the records of Jesus’ prayer in the Garden
of Gethsemane on the night before he suffered. That recollection
preserved in the Gospel story is preserved also indirectly in the letters
of St Paul when he twice refers to the fact that the Holy Spirit working
in the lives of Christians gives us the liberty to call God exactly
what Jesus called him. What Jesus says to God, and what
his saying to God says about God, is part of the clearing of
the ground for something new. Jesus addresses God with unprecedented
intimacy, unprecedented within his own religious tradition, and that
intimacy becomes characteristic of the way Jesus’ followers talk to
God. And to talk to God like this presupposes certain things about
God, that God’s attitude to us is fundamentally that of a parent,
and that we are destined to be at home with God in the sense
that a child is at home with a parent. There’s more to be said
about that, but I’m simply describing those minimum conditions which
would need to be true about Jesus. If there had been nothing in
the life of Jesus suggesting that distinctive intimacy with God, then
his followers would not have spoken in those terms, would not have prayed
in those words.
Secondly,
Jesus in the Gospels is presented to us as engaged in the task of re-establishing,
recreating, membership in the people of God. He doesn’t simply
rest content with existing definitions of what’s involved in belonging
to God’s people. He proposes a new criterion: trust in
what he himself is saying. The criterion of belonging with God
is no longer an exact and complete observance of the law or the sacrificial
system, it’s no longer even ethnic identity, (although that doesn’t
come out wholly clearly in the Gospels themselves, it’s followed through
very promptly in the life of the early Church). Jesus is redefining
what you need in order to belong with God, and redefining it in terms
of trust in him as a person and in the words he speaks and the promises
he gives. And on the basis of that, his first followers understand
that the community of his friends and associates is potentially limitless.
It is as wide as the human race itself.
Thirdly,
Jesus is presented in the Gospels as someone who claims the freedom
to declare to others that God has forgiven them. He claims in
his work of healing and exorcism to clear the way between human .beings
and the holy. By his act of reaching out, touching, healing, and
forgiving, he establishes a relationship between a person and God.
The Gospel stories reflect very sharply the controversy that this provoked,
because of the obvious shock involved when someone claims to be able
to establish relationships between human beings and God.
And
the fourth element of basic significance, and perhaps the most controversial
of these, is that Jesus is shown to us in the Gospels as someone aware
that he lives at risk, that he is overwhelmingly likely to die
at the hands of the political and religious systems of the day.
But he is also presented to us as understanding that risk, that likely
death, as significant, as something that unlocks or releases
a future, that pays a price, that delivers a ransom, that in various
other ways again establishes a relationship between humanity and the
divine.
Now
those different aspects of the story of Jesus as told in the Gospels
begin to clarify for us what’s distinctive about the claims, the self-understanding,
of the earliest Christian community. It is a community which speaks
to God in the language of intimacy. It’s a community which sees
its potential limits as set only by the limits of the human race itself.
It’s a community in which people speak to one another, in the name
of Jesus, words of release -- absolution in the technical language
– because Jesus has spoken to them words of absolution, of
release. And it’s a community which looks to the execution of
Jesus as a significant, vital, central moment or event in everything
that it understands and does. The cross of Jesus becomes an essential
focal point in what’s talked about. The community speaks of
itself in terms of its members being ‘children’ and ‘heirs’
of God, and, in looking at the cross, the community sets itself under
and judges itself by the death of Jesus understood as an act of self-surrender,
self-giving. So that is in part, the way in which the story of
Jesus and the understanding of the first Christian community, interlocks.
If none of those things was true about Jesus, the community would rest
upon a fiction. And so, although establishing any or all of those
things about Jesus wouldn’t instantly give a knock-down argument for
Christian faith, Christian faith would not long survive the demonstration
that none of those things was in fact true about him.
We
have very little in the way of supposedly neutral records of Jesus in
the first century. We have a couple of mentions in historians
and others of the time, which tell us very little. We have the
Gospels, written, it’s fairly safe to assume, between twenty-five
and fifty or sixty years after the crucifixion. Dates are notoriously
debated among scholars. It’s interesting to see that the consensus
of a lot of recent scholarship has pushed the dates back rather than
forward into a shorter time span. Whatever we say about that,
these are records which came into existence within the lifetime of those
who had been with Jesus. But that’s only part of an answer to
the question ‘are these traditions trustworthy?’ In some ways more
interesting is the question of whether this picture fits generally into
what we can know of the whole society in which Jesus lived; what
we can know about Judea under Roman occupation in the first century.
(Those of you who have been following The Passion on the BBC
this week will have some seen some of the results of scholarship in
this area portrayed effectively and very dramatically.) And one can
at least say this: that what the Gospels present as central in
the life of Jesus, fits into the context without too much strain.
We know there were debates about whether it was possible for anyone
to speak for God, debates about whether prophecy in the old sense happened
any longer. We know there were debates about who counted as a
member of the people of God and that there were rival systems and proposals
for understanding that. We know that crucifixions – that is,
executions for sedition – were widespread, and that anyone involved
in challenging political authority in that context would have been very
foolish indeed not to reckon on the possibility of execution.
Jesus of Nazareth was probably about five or six years old at the time
of one of the great revolts against the Romans in Galilee, which produced,
according to the historians, two thousand crucifixions along the roadsides.
The young Jesus would have seen what a crucifixion looked like, many
times over.
The
point I’m making is that those areas of the portrait of Jesus which
the Gospel gives us and which I’ve described as arguably central to
the understanding of the early Church, are aspects to which the historical
context we know about is quite friendly - curiously, in some people’s
eyes, more friendly than that historical context might be to some of
the attempts, in more recent years, to reconstruct a portrait of Jesus
radically different from that of the Gospel, often on the basis of discoveries
or supposed discoveries, alternative gospels, or alternative traditions.
Leaving gently on one side, for one moment, the extravagant fantasies
of The da Vinci Code, we still have a series of minority Christian
documents from a little bit later: the Gospel of Judas,
which made a great impression a couple of years ago; and similar
texts from the early Christian period which are often seized upon by
those who would like to construct an alternative portrait. Many
things could be said about the arguments involved. But one perhaps
not often enough underlined is that the Jesus who appears in many of
these ‘alternative’ gospels is one who has a far less clear and
specific historical anchorage than the Jesus of the Gospels. The
Jesus who speaks in these alternative texts is, as often as not, someone
who might have been talking almost anywhere, whose specific engagement
with the politics and society of first-century Judea is invisible.
That in itself inclines me – you won’t be surprised to hear –
to feel unmoved by the claims of these alternatives.
It’s
been pointed out that some of these versions of Jesus in alternative
gospels from probably later periods, fit very happily into a modern
spiritual framework, which is very wary of pinning itself to any specific
community and tradition, or any particular human story. The timeless
wisdom associated with Jesus in these stories sits quite easily with
post-modern framework. But what is lost in all this is precisely
the Jesus engaging with, arguing with, and transforming a real and specific
social and political world, and I think that is a significant loss –
to put it very mildly.
So
far, we’ve been looking at aspects of the story of Jesus as the Gospel
tells it, and aspects of the early Church, to understand how the way
in which the Church began to think and speak about itself is bound in
with the kind of life that Jesus is claimed to have lived: but
there is something more, something much more challenging and problematic.
Given all of this, it might still be possible to say that the Church
existed because it was inspired by Jesus, but the New Testament
from its very earliest layers, says more than that. It says that
the Church is, presently, here and now, addressed by Jesus,
activated by Jesus; Jesus is not a figure of the past, he
is someone whose breath, whose spirit, here and now animates
the community of believers. He is an agent, a subject,
not a memory, he doesn’t appear as passive or something/someone
who is thought about or remembered by believers who are
active: he takes initiatives and is present as an agent, a
judge, a friend, someone who invites and welcomes, someone who actively
introduces us into the presence of the God he called Abba,
Father, so that as we breathe his breath we say the same thing to God.
In other words, Jesus, for the first Christian communities is alive.
And that brings us on to the largest historical question that there
can be: that of the Resurrection. The early Christian community
exists, not simply because it believes all these things about Jesus
as a matter of historical memory, it exists because it understands Jesus
to have been raised from the dead.
It’s
simple enough, in one way, to dismiss any further discussion with the
claim that ‘miracles don’t happen’. But that may be a slightly
risky assumption if you believe in a God who is eternally and unconditionally
active. The philosopher Wittgenstein (no great pillar of Christian
orthodoxy) remarked on reading the Gospel of St John that we could
have no prior idea what the Act of God would look like if
translated into human terms, and therefore he was not at all prepared
to approach the Gospel of St John with a set of ready-made, rationalist
questions. What would be ‘natural’ for a person embodying
God’s ‘action without reserve’? Beware of approaching that with
too many a prioris. But let’s be more specific:
what is claimed about the Resurrection of Jesus in the Gospels;
and what kind of credence ought to be placed in the story as it’s
there told?
I
want to spend a little time looking at the way in which the story is
told; because I’d say where the Resurrection is concerned the
actual form of the narrative in the Gospels tells us a good deal.
And one aspect of the form of the narrative is this: whereas in
the rest of the Gospels you will frequently find what you might call
‘well-polished’ ways of story telling, nuggets of tradition that
have been polished and refined and handed on in conventional form, and
whereas you’ll find in the rest of the Gospels, allusions to this
or that event having happened, especially in the story of Jesus’ passion
‘so that prophecy might be fulfilled’, the stories of the Resurrection
have about them a quality of ‘rawness’, an unpolished character,
which is very striking when set against the rest of the Gospels.
It’s rather as if people don’t yet quite know how to tell this story.
Jesus performs a miracle of healing in his ministry (let’s say) and
those who witness this and pass on the story, imperceptibly mould this
in the shape of stories about healing associated with the prophets Elijah
or Elisha in the Old Testament. There’s nothing sinister about
this, this is how stories get told. This is the kind of event
for which you have a model of story-telling. More radically, the
story of Jesus’ death shows evidence of people reflecting long and
hard over its details, to find connections with texts of the Old Testament.
Jesus’ robe being gambled for by the Roman soldiers becomes the fulfillment
of the words in the Psalms: they cast lots for my garments.
You can see the story-telling process at work, what I call the refining
and polishing.
But
how are you going to tell this story? You find in the various
stories of the Resurrection - the story of the walk to Emmaus in St
Luke’s Gospel, and the story of Jesus appearing to Mary Magdalene
in St John’s Gospel to take the two most marked examples - narratives
that don’t sound like anything else in the Gospels, or indeed anything
else in the whole Bible. And I think that basic, literary fact
about the way the Resurrection stories are told should make us
think. We’re not here dealing with events which fell into familiar
patterns. The level of sheer unclarity in some of the stories,
particularly where they touch on the difficulty of recognizing the risen
Jesus: the unclarity about the sense in which you can say that
he appears as a body and yet clearly doesn’t behave like a body (coming
through locked doors); all these tensions and stresses within
the story-telling itself suggest – at the very least – that what
happened on the first Easter Sunday was surprising. It
still is. It doesn’t fit into the conventions, it generates
its own forms of story-telling, so that it becomes far more plausible
to say that, whatever happened on the first Easter Sunday, it was something
which caused people to revise their perspectives, to cast around for
new language and new images to speak about it, something which allowed
the friends of Jesus to think through once again the story and the teaching
and the death of Jesus, as a unit, and to leave a great deal of unfinished
business which the whole of the New Testament seeks to deal with.
It’s what makes the story of Jesus’ death not just a story about
another martyr for a good cause: it’s what makes the story of
Jesus’ after-death reality not just a story about how he was spiritually
exalted to heaven; there’s something else going on which is
about a return to the circumstances and relationships of this earth
on the far side of death. And that is of course how the Jews of
those days understood Resurrection - not a transfer to another realm
above, but people standing again upon the earth.
All
of this is part of what makes me continue to take the stories of the
Resurrection in the Gospels with complete seriousness, as reflecting
a historical reality. In spite of endless scholarly investigation
and debate it’s proved very hard indeed to move the stories of the
empty tomb and the apparitions ‘out of focus’; they won’t
easily be dissolved or rationalized. And it’s interesting that
the Gospels themselves already anticipate the sort of objections you
might raise: ‘yes’ says St Matthew, ‘you could say that
somebody stole the body’; ‘yes’, says St Luke, ‘you could
say that this is a ghost story’; yes, you could say this is
about hysterical illusion on the part of over-excitable women.
The Gospel writers already know the sort of questions that are
likely to arise, and yet they obstinately go on telling the story as
if to say ‘but we don’t know what else to say’, because that is
what is received. And so if we’re talking about breakthrough
-- the sheer literary shape of the Gospels, the way they’re written,
the way the story is told – this seems to prompt the question of what
it was that caused this explosion of new story-telling and new language
strong enough to persist in a way that allowed the first Christian communities
to say without ambiguity, He is alive. The breakthrough
is not only into a new theory about humanity, but into a tangible reality,
a new world of experience in which Jesus is encountered as living.
If the tomb was not empty and the stories of apparition and encounter
are fiction, it is indeed very hard to understand how and why the conviction
of Jesus alive became so dominant. You have to come up with
a better theory.
I
hinted already that it’s extremely hard to come to absolute certainty
on any matter of history, including those about the life and
Resurrection of Jesus. Coming to the evidence in the way that
any historian might, perhaps all the historian as such can say is that
something happened, obscure to the processes of investigation, which
generated a new community and a new language. But neither the
historian nor anyone else has a set of neutral facts lying around, waiting
to be interpreted once they’ve been carefully catalogued. Ultimately,
belief that the Resurrection happened remains a step of trust,
of faith, a step associated with understanding yourself, your humanity
and your future, in the context of this new community.
When
I first began to study theology, it was quite fashionable to quote the
German philosopher who had said that ‘eternal truths can’t be proved
by matters of accidental historical fact’ and therefore to pull apart
faith and history. But the fallacy in that axiom is of course
that what is proposed by Christian faith is not a set of eternal truths,
as it were, a mathematical formula. What is proposed is life in
community in what’s been called the Body of Christ, life in a community
defined by relationship to Jesus, and that does depend on a historical
narrative and a historical location.
I’ve
been trying to outline what it is about the life and ministry of Jesus,
first of all, that shapes the way in which the first Christian communities
talk about themselves, but then to look at that crucial, triggering
moment which allowed the emergence of new ways of talking and thinking,
new ways even of story-telling, which is somewhere in-between the execution
of Jesus on the cross and the appearance of the communities whose literature
we read in the New Testament. In that gap is the Resurrection.
The gap itself is undoubtedly a historical fact, as even the most skeptical
historian would have to admit. The Christian is challenged to
take the step of saying ‘this is what happened’, and I believe that
that step is not groundless or irrational.
But
before I finish, I’d like to turn very briefly to the related question
affecting issues around faith and history: whether the history
of the Church itself – the community of faith – generates faith
or not. If the Church claims that humanity has been renewed, does
it look as if it has been? Because if we were able to point only
to two thousand years of conspicuous moral failure by the Church, there
would be – at first blush – a case for saying ‘whatever you might
think ought to have been possible for humanity turns out not
to have been: we’ve gone on much the same as ever’.
There’s quite a strong case for that. The history of the Church
overall is not uniformly and shiningly an example of humanity transfigured.
And yet the Church continues to say every time it acts liturgically,
performs public worship, we believe we have been made anew,
created afresh in and through Jesus. We believe Jesus is active
in his spirit here and now. It is said very particularly in those
actions that Christians call ‘sacraments’. And that is one
of the things which might perhaps give us a little bit of pause before
we assume that the history of Christianity is simply one massive dis-proof
of the claims of Christ. The Church doesn’t say ‘we
are perfectly realizing the possibilities of new humanity’;
the Church does say that when it gathers to receive the bread
and the wine which Jesus gave over to his disciples at the Last Supper,
someone is active in our midst other than ourselves. We may be
conspicuous failures in our new humanity - we normally are - but there
is something that does not desert us, there is a possibility renewed
by Jesus. More than that, however, if the overall history of Christian
faith across the centuries is, at best, a little bit uneven, it remains
true that the Church points to certain human lives – the lives of
those it calls ‘holy’, the Saints – as if to say ‘well, it
can happen’, and if only one saint across those twenty centuries
has been credible and authentic, the skeptic has got to explain that
away. People have sometimes said that, whereas the Christian has
to struggle with the problem of evil, it’s equally true that the skeptic
has to struggle with the problem of good. If it is shocking,
dreadful and agonizingly difficult to understand how dreadful evil in
human beings and in the world around is possible in a world made by
a loving God, one is still left with the question of how then there
come to be human lives which have about them certain qualities of newness,
of radical challenge. For the Christian, those are the lives that
make not only belief in God but belief in humanity and its transformability,
credible. And even one such life becomes in its own way, a kind
of argument.
The
poet W H Auden abandoned Christianity quite early in his life.
During most of his early adulthood he was involved in a wide variety
of political activities and intellectual commitments which were about
as hostile to traditional Christianity as you can get. When he
finally, and rather reluctantly, came back to the practice of Christianity
it was, he said, because he’d met a good man and it had shaken him.
The good man in question was Charles Williams, novelist, poet and essayist.
They’d met on professional business because Charles Williams worked
for the Oxford University Press. W H Auden said that when they
met, they didn’t discuss anything except publishing business, yet
Auden went away with the conviction that he had seen something fresh
and challenging which he had not otherwise encountered in human beings,
and he needed a way of making sense of it. It’s just one story
about the way in which a life can appear transparent, can break through
a huge accumulation of perfectly good and plausible arguments against
belief. Even one saint might tip the balance. But that,
to sum up, is a challenge to the Church itself, a challenge to the Church
to make history: that is to go on striving to make what
it says credible by nurturing transformed lives; to pass on the
record of lives which realize what has been promised; and perhaps,
as importantly to pass on the skills of repentance and honesty, the
skills of recognizing how we fail, and where we fail. It’s in
this dual way that the Church moves through history inviting faith.
It points to what doesn’t change, the givenness of a presence
in the midst, an agent who invites. And it proposes for our belief
a set of assertions about Jesus of Nazareth, rooted in a familiar history,
but not confined just by record of the past. The Church points
to that, and points to the way in which Christians, however far they
range a field are drawn back to that presence and that record, to examine
themselves and discover afresh who they are, which is what repentance
means. And the Church also proposes for our consideration, those
lives in which repentance has borne fruit, where a new creation has
become more visible.
And
so it is that, drawing together the themes of all these three evenings,
the Church offers to the world around not so much a single, quickly-digested,
ready-made system of ideas: it offers a place in which to stand
from which we may see certain things about God and humanity.
It offers a set of practices claiming to give a context to all else
that we do: a vision of what humanity is capable of – for good
and for evil – that will help us orientate ourselves in the decisions
that face us. It offers – at the end of the day – precisely
what Jesus himself is said to have offered and it proclaims what he
proclaimed. ‘Change your mind’, says Jesus in the Gospels:
‘Pick up the instruments of execution and follow’, says Jesus in
the Gospels: ‘Knock, and the door will be opened to you’,
says Jesus in the Gospels: ‘And when you talk to God, say
Father’. That remains the heart of the Gospel that
Christians proclaim, the Good News which we ambitiously but humbly believe
is that which orientates and shapes all our human enterprise God-wards.
©
Rowan Williams 2008