The Gospel Beyond the Gospels
eBook - ePub

The Gospel Beyond the Gospels

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eBook - ePub

The Gospel Beyond the Gospels

About this book

Within a few decades of the death of Jesus of Nazareth, there emerged within the infant church five literary and theological geniuses: Paul and the writers of the Gospels.

No works of literature have been subjected to such close, persistent scrutiny by so many over the centuries. Yet the Gospels continue not only to fascinate, challenge and inspire, but to reveal new treasures and throw up fresh problems.

Much depends on the questions we ask of them and the level of curiosity and honesty we bring to this task. For while the Gospels represent four magnificent attempts to come to terms with Jesus and the God he revealed, we cannot be surprised when they fail. We should, however, be astonished that they take us so far into Truth - then point even further on.

In this glorious book, Trevor Dennis urges us to follow some of those pointers, to investigate where they lead in the search for the bright gospel beyond the Gospels. We will find ourselves in territory that is sometimes disturbing and sometimes heartening... But never less than truly exhilarating.

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Information

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Contents

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Introduction
1 ā€˜Do you see this woman?’
Turning the spotlight
An outpouring of love
A different anointing
Living among the dead
A matter of focus
2 ā€˜The Vikings were all men!’
A furious letter
ā€˜Follow me’
What do the Evangelists mean by ā€˜the disciples’?
The failure of the men
The women as witnesses of the crucifixion
The women and the resurrection
Joanna and the disconsolate rich man
A tale of two sisters: Luke
A tale of two sisters: John
A tale of two sisters: John again
Concluding reflections
3 Rejection rejected . . . and reinstated
What shall we call the parable?
Luke’s parable or Jesus’ parable?
Beware being told what to think
Beware the scribes and the Pharisees! Or should we?
A lost sheep and a lost coin
The Two Brothers, Act 1, Scene 1: Home: father and son
Act 1, Scene 2: Far from home: the younger son
Act 1, Scene 3: Returning home: son and father
Act 2, Scene 1: Outside: the elder son
Act 2, Scene 2: Outside: father and son
Narrative and counter-narrative: the challenge of the parable
Rejection reinstated
4 ā€˜Here is God: no monarch he, throned in easy state to reign’
Defacing God
Narrative and counter-narrative: God seated on a throne, or on a mat on the ground?
God as mother
Returning to the Gospels: first, a prologue and stories of Jesus’ birth
ā€˜I am among you as one who serves’
Riding into Jerusalem
Mayhem in the Temple
No sticky end
Resurrection
Metaphor matters
Notes

Introduction

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We can so easily take the Gospels for granted. It is truly astonishing, however, that four narratives of such literary brilliance and theological profundity were composed within a few decades of Jesus’ death and resurrection. Yet they fail, as all Christians and their writings do, to come to terms in every respect with what Jesus taught and with how he lived and died. They point beyond themselves to a more radical gospel they sometimes obfuscate or even deny. They provide the signposts, go ahead of us on the journey, and in many ways articulate that other gospel with great power. Sometimes, however, they do not look hard enough or sufficiently maintain their gaze; sometimes they retreat to safer ground; sometimes they lead us astray.
This book will explore that theme, not by any comprehensive treatment (that would require a very big volume) but by means of a number of examples.
In our first chapter we will focus on some of those people in the Gospels who encounter Jesus and whose lives are profoundly changed by him. These are among the one-sceners, as we call them, people who appear in the narrative without introduction, have their one scene and then are gone. Usually the Gospels do not name them, and those we have chosen to explore are either left unnamed entirely or else, in one case, given a name which clearly does not belong to him. By swinging the spotlight onto them and holding it there, we will seek to arrive at a fuller picture of the impact Jesus had on them. We will be trying to do them honour. In the process we will discover that we are honouring Jesus, also.
Much of our discussion in that chapter will be concerned with Jesus’ meetings with women (or perhaps a single woman). The second chapter will explore more systematically the part women played in Jesus’ circle. We will be feeding largely on scraps, picking up hints where we can find them, since none of the Gospels do these women credit. Nonetheless, the things they do tell us are of the utmost significance, and we will reach at the end a startling conclusion.
While the second chapter ranges widely through all four Gospels, the third will confine itself to Luke, to the stunning Parable of the Two Brothers (we will explain why we call it that, rather than The Prodigal Son) and finally, and much more briefly, to a particular story within his Passion narrative. Serious and unresolved tensions within his Gospel will become apparent.
Such tensions, and more of them, will be the concern of our final chapter, which will be the most far-reaching. What kind of figure can we find in the Gospels, if we look for Jesus with a fresh and unclouded eye? What kind of God do we encounter there? To put it very simply, do we find a king and a warrior or a footwasher; a God who sits for our great fear on high throne or one who chooses to sit on a mat on the ground? That question has always been an urgent one, but in these days of Daesh and the excesses of fundamentalism in all faiths, including Christianity, it could hardly be of greater importance.
The Gospels are utterly fascinating documents, the more interesting the harder we look into them. They are magnificent, but they are flawed, and some of their material is toxic. We need to be as honest as we can about both their strengths and their weaknesses. We need to unearth their treasures, hold them in our hands, wonder at them, and then reinter them in our souls and in our living; we need also to recognize what is indefensible and refuse to take part in defending it. We need to stop taking the Gospels for gospel. We need to find the gospel beyond the Gospels, the greater Truth to which they all point.

1
ā€˜Do you see this woman?’

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Turning the spotlight

When we were at university and before we were married, my wife and I went to a student production of Hamlet. It was a fine one, with a strong performance from the lead actor. Fifty years on we still remember it. But our most vivid memory is of the gravedigger in Act 5, Scene 1. ā€˜Wait!’ you say. ā€˜There are two gravediggers in that scene, not just one.’ Not in this production, there weren’t. One was enough. We had seen the actor before in the Cambridge Footlights. He only had to walk on stage and the audience would collapse in laughter. Now Hamlet is a tragedy that does what it says on the tin. By Act 5 you are in desperate need of some light relief, and Shakespeare gives us the gravediggers to release the tension before once more he turns the screw. Our one gravedigger quickly had us all laughing, and the comedy continued once Hamlet and Horatio came on stage. But then it got serious, or was meant to. Hamlet began his great speech on the skull of Yorick, which the gravedigger had lifted from the ground and handed to him. ā€˜Alas! poor Yorick. I knew him, Horatio . . .’ It is one of the great speeches of a very great play, but we could hardly hear the words. The gravedigger was sitting with his legs dangling over the edge of the grave, while from up his sleeve he took a banana, peeled it, bit by bit, piece by piece, and slowly ate it. We all tried to smother our laughter. But we couldn’t help it, and Hamlet’s wonderful words were lost as our shoulders shook and our hands were clapped on our mouths.
You will not find a stage direction about a banana up the sleeve in Shakespeare’s text! Having given the stage to the gravediggers at the start of the scene, come Hamlet’s speech on the skull of Yorick he means all our attention to be turned towards the prince. But in this production we the audience effectively swung the spotlight round and shone it on the gravedigger and his banana, and then held it there.
In all four Gospels the spotlight is fixed on Jesus almost the whole time. He appears almost immediately in Mark, Matthew and John, and although Luke has a long first chapter before he is born and devotes the first 20 verses of chapter 3 to John the Baptist, every word of those passages is still designed to prepare us for Jesus’ entrance. Once on stage, in any of the Gospels, he hardly ever leaves it. The Evangelists would wish us to keep our eyes on him at all times. But what if we choose not to? Or at least, what if we also pay particular attention to the people around him? The Jesus of the Gospels’ extraordinary narratives meets a large number of people. Often he is surrounded by a crowd, but the Gospels have many stories of his encounters with individuals, where he makes a dramatic and profound impact upon them. What happens if we turn our spotlight on these minor characters and hold it there?
The number of examples we take in this chapter will be very small, just three. That will enable us to explore them in depth, to look hard and keep looking.
We could not help ourselves in that theatre in Cambridge. That will not be the case here. We will have to make a conscious choice, and because the presence of Jesus in the story is always so beguiling, and because we have for so long done what the Evangelists wanted and kept our eyes fixed on him, we may find it hard to widen our vision and change our focus. But let us try. What will we see, I wonder? And equally important, what will we not see?

An outpouring of love

Let us begin with a famous story in Luke 7.36–50. The title of this chapter is taken from it. There are not so many stories which appear in all four Gospels, but this might seem to be one of them. It is a story of a woman anointing Jesus, and as such it has its parallels in Mark 14.3–9, Matthew 26.6–13 and John 12.1–8. In John, and only in John, the woman is named, as Mary of Bethany, and he lends her actions a very particular significance. There are other large discrepancies between these passages, however. In Mark and Matthew the woman anoints Jesus’ head; in Luke and John she anoints his feet. Luke’s version, the longest of the four, is the only one placed relatively early in the narrative of Jesus’ ministry. The other Gospels tell of the woman as they reach the events leading to Jesus’ crucifixion. For them the story has dark overtones. The woman’s anointing, be it of his head or his feet, is done in preparation for Jesus’ burial. Her actions speak of Jesus’ imminent death and suggest that his burial will be a hurried one, with not enough time to anoint the body before it is laid in the tomb. Not so in Luke. His is not a dark story, though it has some shadows on its surface. His is almost pure love story. In truth the versions in the other Gospels are love stories also, but in Mark and Matthew, and in John too at first sight, the woman’s love is more hidden and obscured by the gathering clouds, clouds that in Mark, Matthew and Luke will thicken to pitch black when Jesus hangs on the cross. In my Greek New Testament and my NRSV translation Luke’s story is given the heading, ā€˜A sinful woman forgiven’.1 The Jewish Annotated New Testament entitles it, ā€˜The Pharisee and the woman who loved much’2 and that is much better. I would prefer to call it simply, ā€˜An outpouring of love’.
When we turn the spotlight on the woman in Luke, what do we see and what do we hear? When Jesus arrives, as he will tell us later, she is there already. ā€˜From the time I came in,’ he will say to his host, ā€˜she has not stopped kissing my feet’ (7.45b). She is not, however, among the invited guests. A Pharisee called Simon has asked Jesus to eat with him, and the woman has found out about it. She has, it seems, been searching for Jesus, and has seized the opportunity given to her. Luke devotes just one verse to the preliminaries, and then cuts to the chase:
And a woman in the city, who was a sinner, having learned that he was eating in the Pharisee’s house, brought an alabaster jar of ointment. She stood behind him at his feet, weeping, and began to bathe his feet with her tears and to dry them with her ...

Table of contents

  1. The Gospel beyond the Gospels