BibleProject - What Does the Word "Gospel" Mean — Top 5: Re-Release E4
Episode Date: August 9, 2021The word “gospel” has acquired many meanings since the biblical authors first used it. What does it really mean? In the fourth of our five most-listened-to podcasts, Tim and N.T. Wright discuss th...e meaning of this important word in its original context, and explore what it means for Jesus to take charge as King and for his disciples to build his Kingdom.QUOTEWhen God takes charge, he doesn’t send in the tanks, he sends in the meek and the poor and the hungry-for-justice, the merciful, the peacemaking, etc. And by the time the people with the tanks and the guns have realized what’s going on, the meek and the merciful and the poor in spirit have established schools and orphanages and hospitals, in order to show what it looks like when God becomes King. At Jesus’ final return, all those things will be part of God’s new world because they were already beginning at Jesus’ first coming.Show produced by Cooper Peltz, Dan Gummel, and Zach McKinley. Show notes by Lindsey Ponder. Powered and distributed by Simplecast.Original episode and show notes are available here.
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Hey, this is Cooper at Bible Project.
I produce the podcast in Classroom.
We've been exploring a theme called the City,
and it's a pretty big theme.
So we decided to do two separate Q and R episodes about it.
We're currently taking questions for the second Q and R
and we'd love to hear from you.
Just record your question by July 21st
and send it to us at infoatbiboproject.com.
Let us know your name and where you're from,
try to keep your question to about 20 seconds
and please transcribe your question when you email it.
That's a huge help to our team.
We're excited to hear from you.
Here's the episode.
Hey, this is John.
And this is Tim.
And this is Bible Project Podcast.
If you've been following along,
you know that the last few weeks we've been re-releasing
episodes from our Bat Catalog in this podcast.
Yeah.
This is the first time in 250 plus episodes and five years that we've
ever taken a break. So we're doing that. It's great. They won't last forever.
No, there's actually only two more re-releases and then we'll be back into the regular rhythm
of new content, some really exciting stuff coming up. But we're re-releasing the top five most downloaded,
most streamed podcast episodes.
And this is number four.
And this is a conversation that you had with Dr. Anti Wright.
It was actually kind of a special episode
because you got to go flyover and hang out with him.
Yeah, yeah.
I was in St. Scotland for an academic conference,
and that was where at the time he was a professor,
and so I was able to get to spend half a day with him.
It was real privilege.
I've been reading and learning from his work for years,
a couple decades actually,
and so I got to sit in his like research office,
surrounded by not just floor to ceiling books, but piles of books
in every conceivable place they could fit.
It was like, you had to find a path,
to the books, to the chairs in the table.
And we talked about the meaning of the word gospel,
or you on Gellion, in the New Testament,
is really special day, special conversation.
I enjoyed it a lot. It is a really special day. Special conversation. I enjoyed it a lot.
It is a really great conversation. It's rare in this podcast that we got to do something like that.
Whenever we've done interviews, they're typically online. Yeah, that's right.
And so it's a very personal conversation. For that reason, and I'm glad we get to re-arrit.
So here it is. It's fourth most listened to episode,
what does the word gospel mean featuring and you write? are beginning a new series of sorts on the gospel. Yeah. We have two videos coming out this fall
about the word gospel.
Yeah.
One of them is a word study.
How is a word gospel used?
Yep.
In the Bible.
Yeah, that's right.
But the gospel is also four different books
in the Bible.
Yeah, in the New Testament.
So we have a how to read the Bible series
and we're going to do a whole video
on how to read this genre of literature.
Yeah, yeah.
The gospel according to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
So those will be the two videos
and we had a conversation leading up
to how to read the gospel.
And we're going to have those conversations
on this podcast.
However, you had the opportunity to sit down
with Tom Wright and just discuss the word gospel,
which is gonna be more about the word study,
kind of idea, what is that word mean?
Yeah, we've gotten the chance over the last year
to have a few conversations with the New Testament scholar,
NT Wright.
And so this was another one of those.
It was really great.
And actually, you'll hear me reference it at the beginning.
I was in Scotland, which is not a thing that's normal for me.
I was in Scotland to be a part of a small conference
with some other Hebrew Bible awesome people.
And it was on the campus of the same university
that Antirite teaches at, and so I reached out to him
and was able to spend some time with him.
And so we recorded this conversation,
yeah, which is all about the Greek and Hebrew biblical words
for a gospel and goodness.
It's a pretty fast paced conversation.
We are ranging over lots of parts of the Bible. So I think in the show
notes we'll probably reference the main scripture texts that we're talking over. There were multiple
points where I made a little note of like go back and think about this more. So you might need to do
the same. Yeah this is two people who have the Bible very internalized and thinking about these things, just going at it.
It was Bible nerd fest.
It was just my version of a very, very time.
So I hope Tom had a good time too.
So anyway, I learned a lot in this conversation,
just a lot to fascinating things will come up.
I think you'll learn a lot too about the word gospel,
what it meant.
Back in the first century,
what it means in the Hebrew Bible and what it means for us still today.
Thank you for joining us.
Yeah, here we go.
All right, Tom, thank you for taking some time to sit down and talk about biblical theology
and other awesome stuff.
Thank you.
That's good to be with you.
Yes.
For me, this is a special opportunity.
We've been able to talk on the phone, but to be able to sit here with you in place where
you do your work.
It's really special for me, so thank you for taking the time.
Thank you.
To do this.
So, at the Bauer Project, one of the series of videos that we work on
is called Word Studies.
We'll do these short little tours.
They're both word-focused,
but theme-focused on Greek and Hebrew words.
And we are currently working on
as of what this is August 2019.
So it's in production about the phrase good news
or the words vocabulary for good news,
which in Hebrew it's the verb basade and then in Greek New Testament the noun yuan galeon.
So you've explored this quite a bit and I've learned a lot from you. So let's think about it this
way. So when you're reading the Gospels say Mark chapter one, the first sentence of Mark, tells you, this is the beginning of the Good News about Jesus.
Paul, obviously, the Yuan-Ga-Lian, the Gospel,
this is thematic throughout his writings and his vocation.
There's two main backgrounds
that seem significant for understanding
the meaning of these Good News words.
One is the Hebrew Bible, but the other one also
is the Greek and Roman backgrounds
for these royal announcements of goodness that would be announced about emperors and so on.
So maybe here's an interesting place to start. In your mind, when you pick up the gospel of
Mark and you read the Yuangeleon, does your mind simultaneously go to Hebrew Bible and to what you know of like Roman propaganda?
What would a reader of Mark's gospel? What does Mark want his readers mind to connect to when he
opened with the sentence like the good news about Jesus? The question about Mark is wonderfully
complicated and also wonderfully simple in that when Mark puts that line at the beginning
of his gospel, assuming it was Mark who put it there because there is a school of thought
which says, well, the end of Mark seems to be lost, the beginning of Mark seems to be a
bit jerky and awkward because he says, as it's written in Isaiah the prophet and then you
get a quote from Malachi and Bum-Bum, how does that work?
And some people have thought that maybe the phrase,
RKU2, Yufangeli, Yuzukrischu,
beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ,
some manuscripts had son of God,
maybe a heading that somebody aftermark
has put on there because,
whereas you can leave the end of the gospel
with the sort of dot, dot, dot,
it's hard to do that at the beginning.
So that's the first footnote, sorry about that.
But then if this is a way of saying,
this is the beginning, then the answer to the question,
what did he mean by it is read the rest of the book and see.
So because this is the point about word studies,
and I love word studies, you know,
concordances and dictionaries are some of my favorite books
when people ask me which of the books
that have influenced you most, I was shocked them by saying, actually, concordance to the Septuagint of stuff like that, because these are tools which
get you right into the heart of a world, but as soon as you get into that world, you have to realize
that people don't live on etymologies, they live on narratives, and the meaning of a word, it's it's it's use in a context and the context is usually a story.
So what story is being told? Now in the Hebrew Bible, the Mavaseh, the one who announces the
good news in Isaiah 40 and Isaiah 52, it's a very specific good news where you've got Israel in exile
in Babylon and Yahweh, Israel's God, apparently having abandoned
Israel and the good news is he's coming back. That's Isaiah 41 to 11. He's coming back.
This is the good news and the heralds are shouting, he's coming. And then that theme, you
have to wait for its day new more through the next 10 chapters or so until in 52, you
get it again. And now the watchman are lifting up
their voices and shouting because how lovely upon the mountains are the feet of the one who brings
this good news. The good news is Yahweh has overthrown Babylon, he's won the Great Victory,
he has released his people from captivity and he himself is coming back personally to Zion
in order to be king. So it's our God reigns is the theme.
So good news is about somebody becoming king,
namely God.
And then of course,
and you can track that through the uses
that's the same vocabulary used about David.
Yeah, absolutely.
And Solomon would be inaugurated.
These types of things.
That's right.
The wonderful examples.
Yeah, that's right.
I think it's okay.
That the royal arrival is the thing.
And then of course in Isaiah, it's such a shock because here is the royal arrival, but
I'm chapter 52.
And then we get the fourth servant song.
What does it look like when the arm of Yahweh is revealed?
It looks like somebody who has despised and rejected and beaten up and killed. And that paradox then, of course, bursts out into 54 and 55.
So you need the whole narrative.
You can't just take it out.
And I think what's happened in our traditions is that people have allowed the word study sort
of eagerness, which is a way of saying, we want to take this text really seriously,
what the etymology, what's the, what's it come from, to serve a different purpose where
it's assumed that we know what the gospel ought to be because we modern Western Christians
are still trying to play out the late medieval questions about an angry God and a hell and
a judgment and a
judgment and all the rest of it. So we want a gospel that'll rescues from that.
So at the best we treat all the stuff about Yahweh returning to Zion as a
metaphor, as a figure. Rather than actually know that's the reality and it's
our stuff that's the later corruption. So then once you get that sense of a long period between whenever the book of Isaiah was put together,
which I don't know, and I expect you don't, nobody really knows, but between then and the time of
Jesus, there are lots of people who are praying and waiting and hoping and something I was working on
earlier this week, the ways in which Isaiah 40 to 55 and the theme of
consolation of Zion being restored and Zion being a bereaved mother who is now told she's going to
have her children and more now. That theme is picked up in first, Enoch, it's picked up in
fourth Ezra, it's picked up in the book of Baruch and these are second temple period books
picked up in the book of Baruch, and these are second-temple period books which are saying, we are still in this state of desolation, and we need the good news, we need the consolation,
and the New Testament fits right in there, and it says, now, we will tell you the story,
which is shocking in the same way that Isaiah is shocking, but this is the real good news. And here's the point about good news before
we segue into Roman studies, is that the difference between news and advice, which people
often get wrong, that when there was a book published by the Jesus Seminar 20 years ago
called The Five Gospels, and it had the gospel of Thomas in there as well as Matthew, Mark,
Luke and John, and when I reviewed that book, it suddenly dawned on me, what's going on?
When you put Thomas in there, Thomas is not about events that have taken place as a result
of which the world is a different place.
Thomas is about here are some teasing sayings which might help you reorder your interior
space.
In other words, if you say that they're all really like Thomas,
what you're saying is it's not good news, it's good advice.
And there's all the difference in the world between news.
News is something has happened as a result of which
a whole new set of possibilities opens up,
which you may or may not like, but there they are.
This is how the world now is.
And especially, the death of a monarch and the accession of a new monarch
or some great victory in battle, or whatever, this is news,
everything is going to be different now that we've experienced this.
So that's the sort of story the gospel is telling.
Thanks. So, yeah, you're affirming that within the storyline of the Hebrew Bible,
that section of Isaiah is like a poetic condensation of the themes and storyline of the whole Hebrew Bible.
God's purposes are to restore blessing to the nations, this is Abraham, promised Abraham,
through the family of Israel, Israel, because it's replayed the sin of Adam on a scale even
larger than the story of Adam and Eve
landed them in exile. And so the good news is about the restoration of God's kingship and
blessing over Israel and through them back out into the world. And that's the word good news.
It's attached to that particular storyline. Yes, that's right. The question of the blessing to
the nations as opposed to simply the blessing
of Israel and maybe a few others will come in on it. That's a very tricky one at the moment.
When I wrote my biography of Paul a couple years ago, I sent it to a leading Jewish rabbi who
I know and said, can you please read through this and tell me if there's anything in here
that makes you as a Jew today feel uncomfortable. And he got back to me with all the two things which
I was able to correct. It was just little turns of phrase.
But one of the things he said to me was,
I guess if you look at certain bits of the Psalms
and Isaiah, you can see that maybe Paul had a point.
But from the point of view of today's Jews,
some of Paul's successes have made life
very difficult for us, or worse than that effect.
I totally get that, I totally understand that, but it does seem to me that that theme of the radical inclusion
of Gentiles within the blessing, which then you can track back to the Abraham stories.
Though I don't think that's so explicit in Isaiah 40-55. It does say look to Abraham, but
you could read that simply in terms of the restoration of Israel. But
nevertheless, both in 40 to 55 and in 56 to 66, you do have this sense both of the massive
restoration of Mother Zion and of the extraordinary blessing of people coming from far away.
That's right. So that's a primary Hebrew Bible context as we go into the Gospels.
As what you were saying was the four canonical Gospels
are clearly intending to pick up that narrative.
Yep, and say this is how I'm talking about the event
that is good news.
As distinguished, you brought up the Gospel of Thomas,
which again for our listeners, if you're not familiar,
Google it.
It's public domain, you can read it.
And it's really interesting.
Yes, yes, yes.
But these are Jesus offering really esoteric advice.
Yes, yes, yes.
It is, there's no narrative at all.
Exactly.
And no connection to the Hebrew Bible.
And that's the difference.
And that is exactly the point.
In fact, any sense of connection to the Hebrew Bible is rather deliberately broken in the
gospel of Thomas, that we don't want that stuff.
Yes.
It's ultimately anti-Jewish.
It's going away from the narrative world, which is about a God who made the world loves a'r ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn ymdyn y which is of course what a great many people in the first century and in the 21st century have wanted to do with
Very understandably granted the mess that the world has been in that's fair. Okay, so that's
Hebrew Bible. Yeah
another primary context and I'm
Less like familiar with all of these primary sources in terms of Greek and Roman authors. I do remember still when
Someone first I think it was Ben witherington's commentary on mark had a long quotation in terms of Greek and Roman authors. I do remember still when someone first,
I think it was Ben Witherington's commentary on Mark,
had a long quotation, I don't know how to pronounce it,
the pre-en.
The pre-enie.
The pre-enie.
Yes, yes.
In Christian.
So Greek place name, it's Western Turkey.
That's right.
And pre-enie.
And I think it's dated.
Nine BC.
Yeah, something like that.
I was going to say in the last decade BC.
Yeah, that's right.
So this is announcing the birth of Octavian. And I thought for listeners, I'll just... It'd be the birth day of. Yeah, that's right. Yeah. So this is an announcing the birth of Octavian.
And I thought for listeners, I'll just...
It would be the birth day of Octavian.
That's right.
Yes, yes, that's right.
So I'll just read it real quick.
Sure.
And then that might be good launching pad for you to talk about.
So this is an inscription announcing, we're celebrating,
I guess, the birth.
Birthday, yes.
Birthday.
Augustus.
Oh, sorry, the birth day, exactly.
Augustus Stroke Octavian has been emperor for 20 years by the stage.
I see.
So, it's just, by the way, it's his birthday.
That's right.
So, imagine this as your birthday card.
Yeah, really?
Like your announcement to invite for your birthday.
Because Providence has ordered our life in the way of the divine and since the emperor
through his epiphany, his appearing,
has exceeded the hopes of all former good news, surpassing not only the benefactors who came before him,
but also leaving no hope that anyone in the future will surpass him.
And since the birthday of the God, Thou was for the world, the beginning of beginning of his goodness may it be decreed and then the
inscription goes on. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, talk to us how people would hear that.
Well, well, well. I mean, of course, the question of who said what about the emperor at what stage
is quite controversial among ancient historians because it looks as though the further east you go
in the Roman Empire and what we call Turkey is roughly sort of halfway to their far east as it were, then
the easier it was to have the emperor being demonized, whereas they rather carefully
didn't do that in Italy itself, that would have been seen as too politically dangerous.
But by the second century it's happening all over and is being mocked, but at this stage,
what's happened is that Augustus came to
power, Augustus troke Octavian came to power after the death of his adopted father, Julius
Caesar. And there was a massive civil war because Julius Caesar had made it quite clear that
whoever was going to run Rome was the one with the biggest army in the most effective power base.
And so it was a matter of different people grabbing
at power. And so Octavian won out by defeating Antony when they had already the two of them
defeated the conspirators, breuters and Cassius. And you have to imagine that this civil
war was fought out largely in Greece and Turkey rather than in Italy itself. They went somewhere
else to have their battles as they were.
But so the whole of the sort of central Mediterranean world
was involved in this horrible turmoil,
which side are you on, which horse are you gonna back?
And does this mean our city is gonna be destroyed?
Does it mean we're all gonna be enslaved, et cetera,
et cetera, et cetera.
So when Augustus then says,
it's all over, we now have peace,
I've settled the matter, etc.
There's a kind of a collective sigh of relief. Something has happened as a result of which the
world is a different place. And so they then call on various themes from ancient mythology, etc.
to talk about a golden age. And Horace has this wonderful song which is all in praise of Augustus through
whose victory you know the world has become a wonderful glorious place.
And Virgil writes the enid in such a ways to tell the whole story of Rome climaxing with
this amazing moment and you can sort of feel the shimmering music in the movie.
And something amazing has happened. It's the appearance
of a god at last. And so the thing that I find doubly fascinating is one that they use this
very explicit language and that that means that in Western Turkey, in Greece and in Rome itself,
anyone reading the letter to the Romans, anyone reading Mark 1, 1 would say, uh-oh, we've got a clash of narratives here. Here's a Jewish
narrative, but it seems to be saying something which looks rather like ours, so which one we're
talking about. But the narrative is, and I've tested this out with classicists, because as far as I
know, nobody else in the ancient world was telling a thousand year narrative with the good news about somebody becoming king as its climax.
Now, the early Christians, I don't think got it from Rome because they clearly are deriving it from Isaiah, etc. and the Jewish narrative.
The vocabulary.
Exactly, well, it was a little bit of a storyline.
And the storyline.
And likewise, the Romans certainly didn't think, oh, these Jews have got an interesting storyline.
Let's borrow it.
But somehow, and again, that inscription from Praini
talks about the Providence of God.
I want to say it in quite a different way.
Somehow in the Providence of God,
when the time had fully come, if you like,
our Galatians 4, these two storylines
are coming inside by side independently, both talking about a great event as a result of which somebody who is the appearing of a god has brought peace and justice to the world.
And of course the answer then is, just have a look at how that played out. Augustus's successor was Tiberius, then you had Caligula, then you had Claudius, then you had Nero, then you had the Euror of the Four Emperor and 69, they were all civil war again, then Jerusalem was destroyed for
Spasian became Emperor. Was that really the beginning of peace and justice for the world, or was that
simply yet another wretched power game? Meanwhile, this strange little movement, which starts in Palestine in the 30s and the 20s and
30s, grows like a mustard seed until within a couple of centuries the emperors are worrying
about it.
Isn't that fascinating?
Yes.
So you have this clash of narrative.
So I think it makes for like a historical parable.
Oh, it really does.
It really does.
And I and others have written quite a bit about this.
It's fascinating just a bit of history.
Yes, it's a, wow, how did that happen?
But then when you sort of reflect theologically,
if you've got two narratives, both competing
for the same space, you either have to say
they're both talking rubbish,
or one's true and the other's false, or whatever.
And in a sense, that is precisely what John's gospel
particularly is all about.
If you think of where John's gospel reaches its climax,
it's the conversation between Jesus and Pontius Pilate
in John 18 and 19, which is the kingdom of God
versus the kingdom of Caesar.
And they're arguing about kingdom and truth and power.
And pilot crucifies Jesus.
But John has told you that this is the revelation of the love of God. 1 tbc 1 tbc 1 tbc
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1 tbc 1 tbc You know, it's interesting about that example is that Matthew Mark and Luke often called
the synoptics, use a lot of you on Galeon vocabulary throughout their narrative, and famously, John uses that vocabulary very little.
But what's interesting about what you just said was the royal significance of GSS' reality and his message is the same subject matter of the Gospel of John.
It's just he's doing it in a different way.
That's right.
And of course, John too talks about the kingdom
I mean, and so that's right. Yeah kingdom of God
So yes, which is also an isianic theme of course and John draws
Very importantly at key moments on the same passages of Isaiah who has believed our report and John
John 12 is the kind of initial climax of the gospel And then we go into the farewell discourses, and it's in John 12 that you get that, as I quote.
And there's a lot of Isaiah wove and in subtly
as you go on through.
So that's very helpful.
I'll summarize that a bit.
You're saying in the broader,
recent memory of somebody reading the gospels
in the first century, we're hearing Paul arrive
and Desoliniiki and hearing him
announce goodness.
They're aware of, especially if they're Gentiles, what they're primarily aware of is how that
Civil War resolved and of hearing the propaganda about the good news of the emperor.
But then if there are disciples of Jesus and they're meeting on the Lord today and eating
the meal together, then they're now learning these disciples of Jesus and you know they're meeting on the Lord today and eating the meal together, then they're now
learning these stories of Jesus, they're learning the broader narrative, the makes sense of him.
And this word you on Gleon is once again right at the center.
Well you know this occurred to me while I was thinking you were talking about how that word was kind of going parallel tracks in the Roman history.
how that word was kind of going parallel tracks in the Roman history.
It strikes me that in the Septuagint of Isaiah,
so we're somewhere in the 150s BC, yeah, 150s,
somewhere in the 100s of 200s BC,
down in Alexandria, there's Jewish scholars
translating Isaiah.
And the word that comes to their mind
when they're translating the Hebrew,
Bassar, Mivassar, is you on Gaelion?
Yes.
So I'm sure somebody's done a study on why that word seemed appropriate to them.
Yes, although it's tricky because of course the Septuagint of Isaiah is notoriously one of the most
odd bits of the Septuagint.
That's true.
That's right.
The translator often is floundering and often will choose what sometimes will choose a word
which just sounds like the Hebrew word. Even though in fact it doesn't mean the same.
It doesn't know what the Hebrew word means. So it finds a Greek word that sounds a bit
like it. And sometimes there is homo, often, genuine homo, often in between Greek and Hebrew,
but that's rare. So you have to be a bit careful. you can't probe too hard. But yes, I mean, because the word you've angoli on or you've angolids are my, is quite rare
in the septum, when it does occur in those passages, I said, 40 and 52, then it is very striking.
Yes.
So that was a little bit better on that.
And I mean, that's long before Augustus sent his scribes to use this word, because it is
a comparatively rare word in the Greek world anyway,
but I mean I would just focus particularly on, you know, we use the word news so casually,
and I grumble because our newspapers frequently, especially at this time of year, we're recording in August,
often what passes out as news is in fact just a magazine thing, because all the reporters are on holiday,
and nothing much is happening.
So they print on the front page of the newspaper something which hasn't just happened.
It's just a study that was done three months ago in some university now shows that this
isn't news guys.
The news is something that happens as a result of which everything is different.
That's right.
And that's why it's exciting.
Our English word announcement is actually a lot more appropriate.
Announcement in the olden days, proclamation. Sadly, I don't have a visual memory of it,
but I know that in 1952, I was taken by my mother to the town square in the little town in England
where we lived, to hear the town cry announced that the king was dead and long lived the queen. When George VI died and Queen Elizabeth became queen.
And there was a chap with a bell doing the old fashioned thing.
Here everybody, we have a queen.
Wow.
Wow, that's interesting to think about.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think you told us, John and I, in a previous conversation,
that's when you got one of your first Bibles.
That was when she was crowned. Oh, when she was crowned, okay, that's what it is.
It takes a year to organize a coronation.
Simply to invite everybody and to put all the stands into Westminster Abbey,
so that everyone can pack in, because they seat what, three or four thousand
Westminster Abbey normally only seats two thousand.
So, yeah, June, the second, 1953, was my first Bible.
It's excellent. Excellent.
Excellent. Okay, so we've talked about the opening sentence of Mark.
So this is interesting about the use of that word in the Gospels. Mark opens that it's the good news,
the beginning of the good news about Jesus Messiah, but then he, what you read on in the narrative,
immediately, is Jesus announcing the Eungalean of God. So Jesus' message of good news brings about
a whole storyline that then can be summarized as the good news about Jesus Messiah.
Yes, yes. An interesting double effect there. And of course some scholars have pounced on that and have said,
oh there you are, Jesus just talked about God, but then the church talked about Jesus, as though that sort of
falsifies it. And the obvious answer is, Jesus talked about God becoming king in order to explain what he himself was doing.
Correct.
Okay, all right, so that's a crucial thing, yeah.
That's right.
So Mark, you know, famously,
Jesus is announcing the time is fulfilled.
There's some story that he sees come into a culmination,
repent and believe in the good news.
Right.
So Matthew, interestingly,
he has a little summary notice at the end of chapter four
of Matthew, where he says,
Jesus went about announcing the good news of the kingdom
and teaching and healing and so on.
And then what you get after that is going to the high place
and the sermon on the mount about his disciples
living in the community of the kingdom.
So there's an important matrix there.
Jesus is announcing the goddess king.
He's the one bringing this reality into being.
And then Matthew neatly gives us a whole unpacking of what it looks like to live as if goddess
king.
As if God really is king.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Talk about that connection. Well, it is fascinating. And of course, in Matthew 4 there, when the bit you refer to,
I'm just finding it here, Matthew quotes an
earlier bit of Isaiah 8, the end of 8 and through into 9, which is the bit about the land
of Zebulan and afterly by the sea, the Galilee of the Nations, the people who walked
through our sword-grade light, those who dwell in the land of the shadow of death upon
them as the light shined, and then it says, from then on Jesus began to proclaim saying,
repent because the kingdom of God is arriving,
King of Heaven is arriving. And of course, what Matthew knows and wants his readers to remember is that the very next verse of Isaiah 9,
namely, Isaiah 9, 2, is about the coming king. And it's one of the classic bits in early Isaiah about the coming King, Isaiah 9 and 11, which then foreshadowed in a reading of Isaiah 42,
the first servant song, through to 53. So you've got this royal theme. Matthew is a very
clever writer, a very clever user of Scripture, and I'm sure that's exactly what's going on.
And then the idea of the Kingdom of God and the Seven on the Mount, I find that it is
fascinating because you're absolutely right. This is about what does it look like to live in God's kingdom. But for me, the most exciting
thing about that is in the Beatitudes at the beginning. When for years I used to read them as simply,
oh my goodness, here are all the different characteristics which are as a disciple of Jesus'
ought to be exhibiting. And Odeo, this is really
quite difficult and the pure in heart and the poor in spirit and the wondering thirsting for righteousness
and merciful. This is a huge moral agenda that I'm going to have to take on board. And that's
kind of makes me nervous and still makes me a bit nervous, but actually I've come to read it
not as here are the sort of people you need to be because you need to be,
but here are the sort of people through whom God's kingdom is exercised in the world.
Because this is the big thing which, and Jesus met the whole time when he said God is becoming king and people said,
oh we want some signs, where? Show me what's it look like. And he said, well, the blind received their sight, the
the lame are walking, etc, etc.
And blessed is the one who's not offended by me, but that wasn't what people wanted.
And today we face the equivalent objection. Oh, you say God became king with Jesus. Well,
look out on the street or read the newspaper. It's obvious, God's not in charge.
To which the answer is, when God takes charge, he doesn't, I've used this phrase again and again,
God doesn't send in the tanks. He sends in the meek and the poor and the hungry for justice people
and the merciful and the peacemakers, etc. And by the time the people with the tanks and the guns
have realized what's going on, the meek and the merciful and the poor and heart
have established schools and orphanages and hospitals and all sorts of projects
in order to show what it looks
like when God becomes King.
Against the day of Jesus' final return, when all those things will be part of God's
new world, because they were already beginning in Jesus' day.
So this is a whole new way of reading the sermon on the Mount.
Not just here we are retreating from the world into a private kingdom, but by our being this sort of, these sorts of people, that is how God's kingdom comes in the
wider world. You know, it's interesting. Yeah, so you're talking about the introduction to the,
obviously, famously called the Beatitudes. Yeah, yeah. But yeah, you're right. It's as if the Beatitudes
assume if a people are going to model the way of Jesus
and live as if this God really is the King of the world, they are going to look, it's
exactly the servant poem of Isaiah.
They're going to look like those who are despised, not using the conventional avenues or institutions
of influence and power.
But in reality, they are the fortunate ones.
Yes, yes.
They are the blessed ones.
Jesus is like the rhetorical purpose of what Jesus is saying
is something like that.
And the blessing which is invoked over them,
exactly as a Isaiah 40, 55,
is not simply a blessing for them,
but a blessing through them.
It is too light a thing that you should restore the tribes of Israel.
I will give you a light to the nations that my glory makes.
Yes. And to the Isaiah 49, one of Paul's favorite
passages. That's right. And for a long time thought, that's what Jesus is
getting at with right after the Beattitudes, you're the light of the world. And the
city on the hill. Of course. Of course. Of course.
That's New Jerusalem language. It precisely. It is precise. And that's why Matthew
5 is so subversive in its original context. You are the city on the hill.
You are the city.
So I have to get texts.
I was going to say you're from Oregon, you're not allowed to talk like that.
Yeah, but except when I'm translating Bible, I use the all.
Oh, do you?
Yes, sure.
That's true.
You plural.
And the danger with that is that the city on a hill language has been used by those who in a sort of separatist way.
We are just going to be this people and if anyone happens to be looking they will see how great we are.
Instead of which the point about Zion, since I've been working on this this last week because of Paul's allusion to Psalm 87 in Galatians 4.26 when he says Jerusalem which is above his free
and she is the mother of us all. He is plugging into a Jesus strand there and it's very interesting
because I mean you as a Septuagint reader will understand this. As far as I can see nobody
has spotted that at the end of Psalm 87 in the Septuagint, Richard 86, there is a line which doesn't occur in the Hebrew,
which is about your celebration because of the dwelling in you.
And the word for celebration is Euphrine Omnon,
that which is the same word that occurs at the beginning
of Isaiah 54, one, Euphrine Theta,
and rejoice, and rejoice.
Exactly.
And this is what Richard Hayes calls metalipsis.
Paul doesn't quote that line, but having alluded to the Psalm,
he's got that last line of Psalm 87 in the Septuagint,
in his head, which hooks in verbally to the beginning of Isaiah 54.
And Isaiah 54 is regularly read in Jewish circles
as about mother Zion, who having been barren is now going to be fruitful again
So here precisely in Matthew 5 we have the same thing
There is there's all sorts of things going on
Just underneath the text. All you have to do is scratch the surface and those stuff comes right?
Yeah, what we're talking about at this point is
Jesus' announcement of the kingdom
Created to people who in the Sermon on the Mount
he invites to live in this new way.
It doesn't look like they're the fortunate ones
according to people like the Emperor.
It's the whole inversion.
It doesn't look like they're the fortunate ones
to the Pharisees and Sadducees.
That's right, that's exactly right.
But in fact Jesus is saying they are the inheritors
of God's renewal of Jerusalem. And as a result, to say it again, they are the inheritors of God's renewal of Jerusalem.
And as a result to say it again, they are the ones through who the blessing of the kingdom will flow out into the world,
hence the light of the world, the soul of the earth, the city on the hill.
I think God trouble here as so often, is that then when it goes on into what we call ethics,
we read that in a post-Cantian way as, oh well here is some rules.
And there are the stringent rules because it's about your heart and not just your outward
behavior.
And so we're so fixated on that, rather than seeing that people who become people like
that, are people through whom God's blessing comes on the world.
And I've often said to people when looking at Paul's ethics, you know, say, the works
of the flesh and the fruit of the spirit,
if you move to a new neighborhood, would you rather that your neighbors on the street
exhibited these qualities, the works of the flesh, or those ones, the fruit of the spirit?
Love, joy, peace, I know who I'd rather have as my neighbors.
Yes.
And part of the point of early Christianity was that those people thought they were mad.
They were good people to have around.
People liked having them in the community because they rejoiced with those who rejoiced and
wept with those who wept. The good news becomes good news on the street because people didn't
know it was possible to live like that before. And part of the good news is the modelling of the
genuine humanness. Yes. Yes. You know, it strikes me thinking of the back to that section of Isaiah as being this condensation
of the themes of the Hebrew Bible.
One of the things in that section of Isaiah is because of what the servant does in 53,
right near the end of 53, he declares or makes righteous the many.
Yes, yes.
As far as his right through his vicarious death and exaltation.
It seems to me that ties into a major theme
that's mainly developed though in Jeremiah and Ezekiel
about the renewal of the heart
to create the new covenant,
obedient loving God, loving your neighbor.
Ty, I have wondered in reading the sermon on the Mount,
again, this is part of the deep structure
of what's going on here.
But yes, the Jesus would go from
Yala the city on the hill, the New Jerusalem, which means Yala the new covenant, new heart.
Absolutely. People. It makes perfect sense why he would move. Yeah, talk about the Torah and obedience at that point.
Because of course, when you get the great prophecies of restoration in Jeremiah and Ezekiel,
it's in a sense the same narrative as Isaiah 40 to 55,
but then you do get the focus on the renewal of the heart
in Jeremiah 31 or Ezekiel 34, 56, etc.
36 especially.
And it's as though all these strands which are out there
which different prophets and different Psalms
in their different ways.
And of course it goes back to Deuteronomy 30 as well.
They have seen that this strange vocation
that Israel has had, which seems to have run into the sand
because of Babylon and because of Persia
and everything else, Syria, that nevertheless,
if God is God sooner or later,
this must be how he's going to make it all happen.
That's where, again, the New Testament just plugs
into this very obvious. Yes. So's where, again, the New Testament just plugs into this
very obvious. Yes. So that's the sermon on the Mount, and then it lays out the program. Jesus will
go on in the narratives to be this kind of person as the pioneer as it were, primarily in the narratives
of healing and as he's going, you know, going about from town to town. The next step, of course,
in the narrative of the Gospels,
is if they're working on a, you on Galeon agenda,
as it were, then is Jesus going to Jerusalem
for Passover and he immediately moves towards
challenging the centers of power there.
He goes right to the temple,
begins the week of debating.
I think it was probably many, many years ago,
through your work and Richard Hayes as well,
the royal portrayal that's at work in the Passion narratives. Right, right. I mean, it's just right there. It's actually not very far under the surface.
No, exactly. It's explicitly on the surface. Exactly. So the Yuan-Ga-Li-Anne word isn't used, but if I have been prepared to see all of this as a royal enactment, the passion makes perfect sense.
Yes, yes, of course. And that's one of the ironies of you will know Richard Hayes' recent book,
Ekkah's Subscribure in the Gospels, which he wrote in haste while he was under basically
a sentence of death with pancreatic cancer five years, four years ago, and was astonishingly
brought through that and healed by a lot of prayer and a lot of very good medical work in Duke medical facility.
But Richard in that book concentrates on what we've called Christology or the person of Jesus,
and showing how the use of the Old Testament makes it clear that for all four gospels, Jesus is the embodiment of Israel's God.
It's not just John in other words that does that. But Richard doesn't in that book
move very far towards saying, and here's how the four gospels explain the death of Jesus.
That's kind of a whole lot of the project. And the book is already 400 pages or something.
So fair enough, it's not for criticism. But all I would say is there is masses more down
the same line, exactly what you just said. And it's as though, once you've said, this is the Yuvangelion
at the beginning of the book. It serves, it's rather like the book of Job. Here you have the prologue,
everything that follows has the prologue as a kind of what we would call a running head.
You have to imagine it's top of every page. By the way, this is this conversation with God and
Satan being played out. And so the gospels have, by the way, this is the Yuvangelion, this is what it looks like
being played out.
So all the pieces, especially the really turning, the gospel authors are turning up the volume
on it in the portrayal of the robe, the staff, the crown.
I mean, it's just very, very intentional.
And it fits hand in glove with something like the Beatitudes.
Yes, yes.
Where if these are the people through whom
the kingdom comes into being, Beatitude type people.
Jesus is the incarnation of that.
And I've tried to explore that here and there in terms of
Jesus being the light of the world,
Jesus being the soul of the earth,
Jesus being the city on the hill that cannot be hidden.
Jesus is the one who goes the second mile when he is forced to carry his cross. Jesus is the one who turns the other cheek.
You know, there are there are advanced statements of the passion built into Matthew 5.
That's good. That's a good way of framing that, I love that.
That's one of those things. It's almost a preacher's point and I'm never quite sure how much of that
Matthew intends, but granted that his gospel is very carefully structured, you know, that the five great discourses.
It wouldn't surprise me if Matthew was to say, yes, I'm glad you picked that up. 1 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 個 We've already been going some time, we haven't even talked about the Apostle Paul and
you on Gheleon and Paul.
Let's briefly transition.
So we've got the Gospel statement about this type of king, a Beatitudes type of king,
in a Beatitudes type of way, brings the kingdom, exalted.
If we're staying in the vein of Matthew, he becomes the son of man who has authority over heaven and earth.
And he goes out, he sends his disciples out to the nations.
So at that point, Jesus is registering that his Ewan Gaelion about the kingdom of God
is now for his followers, a Ewan Gaelion about him.
Is that Mark 1-1? Yes, yes.
It morphs into that because you could summarize both together by saying,
this is how God becomes king.
And then for the early church, God has become
King in a whole new way. It's funny, since I started to use this language, I get odd looks from
people when I lectured and so on, and it wasn't God always King. And the answer is, well, yes and no.
And it's the no bit, which really matters. That's right. There is a way in which God wants to run this world, which God has not
been doing for a very good reason that way back in Genesis, God creates this creature called
human through whom he wants to do stuff in his world. Having done that, God won't go
back on that modus operandi that way of operating. God doesn't say, okay, the humans have messed up, so we're just going to scrap that. I'm just going to act
solo from now on. God finds a way and the no-a story is about the
possibility that he might have gone back on it, but then he doesn't. And the
Abraham story is a way of saying, this is how God is going to do his work in the
world through a human family and ultimately through the
human being Jesus. It's about God becoming king through the obedient human. As soon as
you say that, the passage jumps out of the New Testament, is Romans 5, as in Adam, so
in the Messiah. And first Corinthians 15 the same, that the Messianic role of Jesus,
and first of all, it is 15, this is spelled out in terms of Psalms 8 and 110 and Daniel 7 and so on,
classic passages. The Messianic work of Jesus means that the creator God who always intended to work
in his world through the obedient human has now had last done the great thing he he wanted and now through
The rule of this Jesus
Exercise by the spirit is that work in a fresh way in the world
You know that is the basis of the church's mission
And when I say that I think how many sermons and lectures have I heard on the mission of the church
Which just haven't seen it like that at all?
And I think we urgently need to be grasped by this fresh vision.
Yes. So let's maybe as kind of a last thing to talk about, there's two times where Paul
explicitly defines, like as his purpose, the word you on Gellion.
Right.
Romans 1, 1 Corinthians 15.
Yeah.
So let's just kind of, I'll put them both for listeners, I'll read them out loud.
So 1st is Romans 1. He says, he's a servant of set apart by God for the Ewan Gaelian of God.
What is the Ewan Gaelian? Just read your Hebrew Bible. That's what he says.
He said, right, right, right, right.
Earth the Greek Bible, right. He promised beforehand through the prophets and in the scriptures,
concerning his son, born of the seed of David, according to the flesh,
declared to be the son of God with power
by the resurrection from the dead,
according to the spirit of holiness,
namely Jesus, Messiah, our Lord.
And we have now a commission to go summon
the nations to obedience to.
Through them, yeah, that's right.
That's right.
So that's a famous and very significant definition of gospel.
Right here, it's the beginning of Romans.
And it's just what you were saying.
The exaltation of a seat of David as the human one through whom God's kingdom is now being exercised over the nations.
That's Romans 1, 1 Corinthians 15, famously, you know, you know, the gospel that was handed on to me, I handed it on to you.
And it's the more interesting in that he says whether it was I or they, the other creatures.
This is what we all say. This is the message. This is not unique to Paul, another one.
That's right. Yes. And here he focuses on a different point.
Namely, the Messiah died for our sins according to the Scriptures.
He was buried and raised according to the Scriptures
and then the appearance.
And then he was seen, yes.
So what's interesting and would strike people
is he's focusing on two different types
of narrative moments in the gospel, in the good news,
which means that Paul can in different moments
in different times highlight
sometimes the resurrection and exaltation, sometimes the death and resurrection for different
audiences, but there's one underlying story. Maybe I'll throw it as a question as well.
It seems to me that the first Corinthians passage has become almost over dominant in our recent Western Protestant tradition, especially.
That's very interesting.
And if you were to put them both on a scale that seems first Corinthians 15 as outweighed Roman
1 in terms of what people think of when you hear the word gospel.
You're absolutely right. And this, curiously, I don't know if you know this, goes way back to the beginning of my doctoral research back in the 1970s.
When I was working on Romans and I had grown up in a tradition which said that Romans 116 and 17 was the Gospel, namely justification by faith.
Now of course, 116 and 17 doesn't actually say justification by faith but it talks about the revelation of the righteousness of God,
and according to some theories of justification, what Paul means by de Kazune, who the righteousness
of God, is the righteous status which God gives or grants to those who believe.
Now I think that's completely wrong, but I remember when I was first studying Romans
intensively in the Greek, being struck by the fact that in 15 and then 16 Paul says,
I'm not ashamed of the gospel because in it the righteousness of God is revealed.
And realizing that that sentence means that the revelation of the righteousness of God
is not itself the gospel, that's what is revealed in the gospel. So what is the gospel?
Answer Paul said it upfront in Romans 1, 3 and 4. So then I started reading commentaries
and articles and things on Romans 1, 3 and 4. So then I started reading commentaries and articles
and things on Romans 1, 3 and 4, and I discovered a very
interesting thing that particularly in the German tradition,
which has dominant in scholarship in the 19th and early 20th
century, people did not want to find the gospel in Romans 1,
3 and 4 because they wanted the gospel to be justification
by faith within a Lutheran framework,
whereas what you've got in Romans 1, 3 and 4
is very explicit messianic language,
seed of David, et cetera.
And so people would bring out all the big guns
and say, oh, Paul is here quoting an early Jewish Christian
formula just in order to say hello to the people in Rome.
Yeah, I know this formula as well,
but actually it's not an essential part of his theology. He knows part of the opening paragraph. You're off, but this has
been common and I agree. I agree. It ought to be funny. When you're writing your great big
carefully planned letter, what are you going to say up front? Something you don't really mean?
You know, give me a break. It's like the the wrong readings of Galatians 1, 4, which by the way
could serve as another summary. He doesn't say it's you van getting on, but he said the Messiah gave
himself for our sins to rescuers from the present evil age. That looks like another summary.
And at exactly the same point, Lou Martin, who is a pupil of Kaiserman, says he doesn't
really mean that gave himself for our sins a bit. that's in order to say hello to the opponents.
What he really means is to rescue us from the present evil age.
And I would say, no, those two belong absolutely together, they explain one another.
But in the same way, in the beginning of Romans, you've got this explicitly Messianic language,
which I think then contextualizes all the stuff about Christos later in the letter, because
Christos is not a proper name. Christos means Messiah. And whenever you find Enchristos,
etc, this is the Messiah and His people. And this was the beginning of my exploration of
Romans, which led me to say that Romans 9-11 is not simply an Aside, an odd bit about
the Jews, but is actually where the whole letter
is going. So once one grasps that Romans 1, 3 and 4 must not be marginalised in favour of
particular readings of 1 Corinthians 15, then this becomes clear. Now, within 1 Corinthians 15,
one should be able to get it from simply the fact that it uses the word Christos, because if this
is an early formula, then there's no way that Christos is a prominent
in the late 40s or early 50s, AD, it means Messiah.
How do we know Paul means that?
Because in 1 Corinthians 15, 20 to 28,
when he's spelling out how the gospel actually works,
he is drawing precisely on those Messianic Psalms,
said before, Psalm 2, Psalm 8, Psalm 110, Daniel 7,
in order to say that the Messiah is the one
through whom God is putting everything into order
and that the Messiah then is the one who must reign
until he's put everything under his feet, et cetera.
And so the Messianic exposition of,
firstly it's 15, three following,
in verses 20 following,
means that the two are not so far apart.
I am, so let me just clarify.
That's helpful.
So in other words, the opening sentence
as the first Corinthians 15,
he defines a gospel as Messiah,
Dijarzin, buried and was raised.
But the significance of that,
little micro story,
tying it into the exalted new human over the nations,
is what the rest of the chapter goes on to be about.
And oh, that's exactly what Romans 1.
And when he says catatastgraphos,
according to the scriptures,
you see what has happened in scholarship,
is that, and you can see this,
if you look at the Nestle Island Greek text which puts parallel passages in the margin.
Here you've got the Messiah, I'd for us, in Catastas,
Grafos, Corn to the Scriptures and it's put, Isaiah 53, 5, 8, 12,
and Hosea 6, 2, for raised on the third day,
Corn to the Scriptures in chapter 2, 1, and I'm thinking,
well, yeah, okay, but that misses the point. This is not just,
by the way, I can find a proof text and there's a little bit of Isaiah, a little bit of Jonah.
This is in accordance with the entire scriptural narrative, which comes to focus in various passages.
And I would say, if you want to know which scripture's Paul is referring to.
Look later in the passage. Read because the because the Holy Spirit is 15 turns out to be a massive
Christological exegesis of Genesis 1, 2, and 3 about Adam,
about the fall, about the Restoration, et cetera, within which
the Messianic Psalms and so on are nested.
And it's an extraordinary turn of force of scriptural exegesis, ending up with, as 25 and
Hosea 13, Death is swallowed up in victory, so that what have you got? As sometimes when Paul
is really summing things up, you have Torah, Navi'im and Kathubim, you have law, prophets
and writings. He does this in Romans 15, he does it I think, in Col. 4. And I think it's quite
deliberate. It's a Jewish way of saying, when you've got the whole scripture on site here.
Isn't that fun? Yes, that is fun. I want to follow up on Col. 4. So what we're saying is in both cases,
in the Romans 1 statement, in the whole of 1 Corinthians 15, it's not different in substance than the
narrative argument of the four gospels.
Exactly, exactly.
This is one of the extraordinary things when you really think Paul's gospel through to
its goal, its tell us.
You look back and you say, so how would you tell the story of Jesus to bring this out?
Guess what?
It's already been done.
Four times over.
Yeah, these four chapters are all have a stab at it. The thing about the
gospel for me is that they all quite explicitly hook into the Hebrew
scriptures read as an as yet unfinished narrative. They are saying in
effect, you know this great story. Malachi, Isaiah, Luke does it by echoing for Samuel, John does it
by echoing Genesis, but now this is where it was all going. And I think it's quite deliberate
and to try to read the gospels as though that's not the case is radically to me some to 1 tbc 1 tbc 1 tbc
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1 tbc 1 tbc 1 tbc So let's maybe land this conversation on, well, to me, all of this is immensely practical,
but it's also the lots of biblical theology and text and intertext and so on.
But I served in pastoral ministry for many years.
You have for many years too.
There is a neatness and a handiness to a definition of the gospel that rises above this very
detailed, multi-layered narrative to just say, humans are screwed up, God has to do something about it.
Jesus died for your sins.
We can't believe this goodness.
It actually is really handy.
Of course, you're short-selling the story
that we really have to offer the world when we do that.
So I guess you could ask a historical version
is how did we get to a place where that short version
has replaced the biblical version.
But maybe even more useful is, in practical ways,
in and through the ways that local churches operate,
how can we begin to talk about this big complicated narrative
in ways that are just as simple and handy?
Yeah, that's a great question.
And yes, I remember going to a lecture on the atonement in Oxford when I was an undergraduate
and the lecture set out all the different theories and all these wonderful bits and pieces and
bells and whistles. At the end of it, somebody said, how much of this does somebody have to
believe for the a Christian? An electro smile and said very little. Something about the love of God,
the death of Jesus, and discovering
that you're part of that story. And then once you've grasped that or been grasped by it,
everything else is yours to explore. But in other words, you don't need to understand
all the theory and order. It's like, I had a really good meal in a restaurant yesterday.
I know nothing about the science of how you cook, but I enjoyed the meal. Somebody else is doing this stuff. So that's fair enough.
So that yes, it's much better that people think, oh dear, I'm a sinner, bad things are going
to happen. A few, Jesus died, so I'm okay. Much better than they think that, than they think
life is just a meaningless bunch of trash, and I'm just going to go on the street and do drugs.
You know, there's no choice.
But the danger with saying God is really angry with me, fortunately, he's punished somebody
else and said to me, I'm okay, is that that distorts deeply who you think God is and it
truncates who I now am as a redeemed person in Christ in 12th-Pother spirit. And in order to get the whole picture,
you need the biggest story. And I think it went wrong, particularly in the Middle Ages,
in the Western Church. I don't know very much about Eastern Orthodoxy, but I do know they didn't
make the same mistakes as we made in the medieval period. They know how to make their own mistakes, etc. And that's why we all need constantly to have our visions corrected by
Frash reading's Scripture. This is not something which happens once and once only,
it's got to happen in every generation. But it seems to me that you can see
stages where the great teachers in the Middle Ages who were doing some great
things in some ways are in thrall to Greek philosophy either to play to Orastor or Aristotle or some
new mixtures of both. So that then by the time you get the reformers
protesting about purgatory and the mass which are the two big targets certainly in
the English Reformation. What they are doing is reinstating a platonic
vision of Christianity only with
a going straight to heaven rather than having to do time in pergatory thing. And with the
heavenly stuff is the important thing. So what we do down here doesn't count because that
will be works righteousness. So don't think that if you're a priest at the altar you can
do this magic with the bread and the wine. That's their polemical reason for doing what
they're doing. In other words, they're trying to give biblical answers to medieval questions.
The danger is they're actually giving biblical stroke platonic answers to those medieval questions.
And what's happened since then with the Enlightenment, this is cutting a very long story very short,
is that Plato takes over and the Bible falls back, so that the Bible just becomes,
oh, this odd old text, which by which we can prove our various doctrines, so that much
Western 19th century Christianity becomes de facto a Platonist. Now, I'm in debate with people
about this at the moment, because there's a lot of people who still claim into the teachers of the
church, really do explicitly prefer Plato to the Bible. And I think that is that saps the
life and energy from the gospel of Jesus. It means that instead of resurrection,
you have, oh well Jesus was taken up into heaven from where he appeared and from
time to time and then we're going to be taken up into heaven as well and that's
the real thing, seeing God in heaven. Instead of saying no, Jesus taught us to pray
for God's kingdom to come on earth as in heaven. By of saying no, Jesus taught us to pray for God's kingdom to come on earth as
in heaven. By what right are you stripping that out of the central prayer of our faith? And in terms
of mission, I think it's absolutely vital. If the name of the game is, and we have these souls which
are exiled from heaven, and we're looking forward to going back there. Their mission becomes
telling other people that they have souls that are exiled and that need to go to heaven.
That's never the mission of the church. The mission of the church is to be the light of the world and the salt of the earth. Yes, yes. So I mean I could go on about this all day, I sometimes do.
But so I think it goes back to the Middle Ages and to the fact that there are farmers who were determined to try to give biblical answers to the medieval
questions borrowed far too much Plato to do so because they assumed that the
Jewish context was not only irrelevant but misleading because it was about
works righteousness. So we don't want to go there. And see I've run into this
as well. If I quote cumran or Psalms of Solomon or
Fourth Ezra or whatever to explain what's going on in the Gospels or Paul, some people I could name
in America, throw up the hands of Horace. Oh, anti-right appeals to these Jewish texts, but we know
that Paul was opposed to the Judaism because that was works righteousness. So anti-right is drawing
on these naughty texts. So it's not surprising he's distorting the gospel.
Interesting.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I want to say sorry, we're into history here.
Yeah.
You want to know what the word righteousness of God means.
Look at other people who are using it at the time.
Paul has a new definition of it, but it's that that he's talking about.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's right.
It strikes me just as I was reflecting on what you were saying.
In many ways, the gospel narrative is about Jesus announcing the good news about the kingdom,
giving the sermon on them out, doing his healings.
I remember when I was a new Christian in my 20s.
I read those stories and it was awesome.
I thought that Jesus is amazing.
But there wasn't a sense of, and I am called to participate in a similar
looking and kind of announcement. That's like the thing that Jesus did. And then the thing
that I do now is some other thing, kind of what you're talking about, based on a certain
way of reading Paul. But if, in fact, the sermon on the Mount, and if the risen Jesus in the
last sentences of Matthew says, teach my disciples to do everything I commanded you and taught
you, where do I go find that? I go to the sermon on the Mount. So even within Matthew, Jesus
has a vision that how his followers will live and announce the kingdom will be the thing
that he was himself doing. What else is the
sermon on the mountain? So in a way to live and talk about the risen Jesus as
King and living as if it's true, sermon on the mountain, there it is. Like
that's like there's the agenda right there. Yes, yes, yes, I'm totally with you
and I think as I said before the danger with the way people have read the
sermon on the mountain is that it then just does become.
Here is a Christian ethic, but that is then put into this post-enlightenment frame where
here are the things you believe and here's how you're supposed to behave.
And if you find that's difficult, well, try harder or pray for the Spirit or something,
rather than seeing this, you know, it's the Israel narrative from Genesis 12 right on, which as obviously
caught me young, I ran into this, actually the person I ran into it through was Kassute's
commentary on Genesis. Do you know Kassute? I love that commentary. He's a pleasure to read.
He is right. Fortunately somebody recommended that to me when I was very young. And I think
it was the first commentary on Genesis,
I read right through.
Wow, that's amazing.
Oh, wow.
21,000.
That's cool.
But the way he draws out how the story actually works
makes so much sense.
Yes, I've never seen any read.
That's right.
In fact, I think he was the first one.
I remember making the observation that that promise
to Abraham is both a seven line poem
in Genesis 12 and occurs five occurrences of the word blessing.
Which he thinks correspond to the five occurrences
of the word curse in Genesis 1 through 11.
Oh, right, right, right, right.
Brilliant, anyway.
I love that.
I mean, it's like the beginning of Genesis 1,
as I'm sure you know, the first census.
All the seven.
First census, I said the word, et cetera, and then it goes,
a few years ago ago I was talking with
my oldest grandson who must then have been about ten or eleven something about the Bible came up
and I forget why but I said did you know the beginning of Genesis one and I got the Hebrew
Bible he doesn't read Hebrew of course I said look said, look, Parachute, Barat, and he's bouncing out some,
and he sat there silent, and then he said,
I need to think about that for a long time.
And I said, yes, you do.
You're actually right.
OK, I had a conversation with him.
He's going to play football or something, but just so
a seed there.
That's good.
That's good.
Well, we're venturing on.
But isn't it?
I love how this is why I've enjoyed doing
these word study projects.
Because in a way, it's about exploring the whole storyline
of the Bible.
That's right.
That's right. Different angles of vocabulary.
That's exactly right.
And I mean, this, to my mind, is the answer to James Bars' critique
of the Kittel Vertibouk.
He had this huge vast project to do very detailed study
of all the words.
And Barr is quite right to say that philology alone doesn't
get you there, that you need an narrative context.
But for me, studying the words has forced me
into the narrative context.
The problem with the Kittle thing, the word study,
the way he did it, is he...
Just for our listeners, you're referring to a famous dictionary of biblical words.
And it's in the post-war era.
No, no, no, it's actually in the 30s.
In the 30s.
In the first volume, his Boltman wrote the article on whatever it was, something in volume
on, in the 30s.
But it went on through the war and finished in the 1950s and it's
the word book for the Greek New Testament multi-volume. And I've still got to show myself, I still use it,
but it's very interesting. In word after word after word, say take Pistis faith. You have a section
which is on secular meanings and then you have the religious. Oh, that's right. And of course, what's happened since is that we now know,
and I mean know, that these uses are totally fluid,
that you can't separate pistis as in reliability,
trustworthiness, et cetera.
Those are the so-called secular uses from pistis
as in faith, or what Christians are meant by faith,
that those two completely go alongside.
You can say the same with you and Geliang.
Of course, the way that.
That's exactly the point.
That's exactly the point.
So it's one thing to tease out different contexts of meaning,
but then to say, well, because we are into religion or faith,
we are looking at these ones,
and those ones, those are nasty secular things,
we don't bother about that.
I mean, look what that then allowed in the 1930s.
Here's this religion over here and the secular world has to do its own thing. I agree then with
all sorts of critiques of that method, but I think that the answer is better word study is not
abandoning word studies. And the better word studies are the ones that say what is the story here,
what is the narrative, what's going on. Yes, yeah, yeah, it's good. Well, thank you. That was enjoyable conversation.
That's great. Good news. Good, yeah, indeed.
Thanks for listening to the Bible Project podcast. We are going to have a few more conversations on
how to read the genre of literature that we refer to as the Gospels. Matthew Mark Luke and John, so we'll dig in a lot more as to what this good news is and
why and how Jesus talked about it so much.
Yeah.
The Bio Project is a nonprofit animation studio in Portland, Oregon.
We make videos, study notes, other resources, and this podcast because of the generous support 그리고 이 프로그램에 대한 전혀 많은 안녕하세요 저희는 앤디입니다
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제가 처음에 봤을때,
제가 봤을때,
유튜브와
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유튜브와 유튜브와
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유튜브와
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유튜브와
유튜브와 유튜브와 유튜브와 유튜브와 유튜브와 of videos, it made a really clear understanding of what certain characters go through and
certain situations and ever since then I continued to watch and it was really great.
I first heard about the Bible project through a friend and she was just telling me how awesome
these videos were and how it helped her understand the Bible as it is a whole story. 그리고 바이벌은 전자리에 대한 이야기가 많습니다. 그래서 제가 사랑한 그 바이벌의 프로젝트는
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저는 비디오를 보면서 저 빨리 그 알 수가 있기 때문에 너무 좋습니다.
너무 아주... you