THE JESUS WE NEVER KNEW AND THE FOLLOWERS HE NEVER HAD
Why is it that we are hearing so many new things about Jesus and his earliest followers these days? Has someone struck the mother lode and found all kinds of new information about Jesus and first-century Christians? Have archaeologists dug up previously unknown documents that provide shocking new credible evidence that Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene, or his mother Mary was a supporter of revolutionaries in Galilee, or James was a hard-line Judaizer, or Paul was a renegade Zealot, or Peter went to Iraq (known then as Babylon) and wrote a letter from there? Are there really recently recovered first-century documents that tell a very unfamiliar tale about the life of Jesus and the origins of Christianity, providing evidence so compelling that it eclipses and corrects what we have long heard about these subjects?
Right from the beginning of this study I must say, Caveat emptor! Readers should beware of shocking new claims about Jesus or his earliest followers based on flimsy evidence. They need to read the fine print on the bottle of so-called truth serum before swallowing the contents in a single gulp. A perfect illustration of my point is the long-ballyhooed “secret” Gospel of Mark supposedly discovered by Morton Smith in 1958, which included a “value-added” story about Jesus having an encounter with a naked youth who ran off from the posse in the Garden of Gethsemane. It looks now as if we were being scammed by Professor Smith: his fraud has been thoroughly exposed to the light of day.1
But some people maintain that the major fraud was perpetrated in a more “orthodox” direction. They claim we’ve been snookered into thinking that earliest Christianity was far more uniform than it in fact was. Relying on “secret teachings” showing that Jesus was closer to later Gnostics than to earlier Jewish sages, they believe that there was at least one Jesus community that simply meditated on Jesus’s sayings (ignoring his death and resurrection). Are those folks right—are there really “lost Christianities” that can trace their pedigree all the way back to the first century, communities of faith that were suppressed by the church and only now are getting their proper due? Was earliest Christianity really like dueling banjos playing competing and discordant tunes?
The news media are all abuzz with these sorts of questions, and network after network is running specials that address such issues. Recently I did an interview with a major network for a Christmas show on Mary and the virginal conception, and the first question out of the chute was, Could Mary have been a temple prostitute in the Jerusalem Temple who was raped by someone there? It was suggested that this is why Luke, in his gospel, has Jesus say, “Didn’t you know I had to be in my Father’s house?” (2:41–52) when Jesus visited there as a twelve-year-old. Inquiring minds want to know: Have we been duped about Jesus and his earliest followers?
Perhaps a better set of questions might be, What is it about our culture that makes us prone to listen to sensational claims about Jesus and his earliest followers, even when there is little or no hard evidence to support such conjectures? Why are we especially prone to this when it comes to the origins of Christianity? Why would a poorly researched but readable thriller like The Da Vinci Code, which claims to reveal startling new truths about Jesus and his life, create such a sensation in our culture? Let’s pause and reflect for a moment on the religious character of our own culture.
TAKE A CULTURE, A RELIGIOUS CULTURE: GULLIBLE’S TRAVELS
In America we live in a Jesus-haunted culture that is biblically illiterate. Jesus is a household name, and yet only a distinct minority of Americans have studied an English translation of the original documents that tell us about Jesus, much less read them in the original Greek. In this sort of environment, almost any wild theory about Jesus or his earliest followers can pass for knowledge with some audiences, because so few people actually know the primary sources, the relevant texts, or the historical context with which we should be concerned. In our soap opera culture, perhaps it was inevitable that someone would turn the story of Jesus into a soap opera. The problem is, some people are naive enough to believe it. Maybe we need to heed the old saying of my grandmother: “Don’t be so open-minded that your brains fall out.” It’s still good advice. But there are other factors than just gullibility that are in play as well.
There are a large number of people in America whose spiritual birth certificate comes from the state of Missouri: they say, “Show me.” In other words, they’ve been burned enough by bad experiences in the church or by extravagant claims by preachers selling snake oil or simply promoting themselves that they position themselves resolutely at the other end of the spectrum from gullible—they’re profoundly skeptical, particularly of traditional answers. Strange as it may seem, while these skeptical folks won’t listen patiently to old answers they’ve heard before (maybe even heard in church), they will gladly listen to new theories, even when there is little or no solid evidence to support them.
Another characteristic of our culture is that we have bought into the essential sales pitch which drives our economy. All too often we get caught up in the myth that the latest is the greatest; we buy into the “new is true” phenomenon. But frankly, historical truth can as often, if not more often, be found in old sources and old traditions than in new ones. In fact, I would say that historical truths are far more likely to be found in older sources that have stood close critical scrutiny and the test of time.
It is one of the primary principles of good historical inquiry that, all other things being equal, the sources written closest to a particular event—that is, the sources most in touch with eyewitnesses—are more likely to give us clear insights into the origins of that particular historical phenomenon. This is not always the case, of course; but in general, historians agree that later sources require more critical scrutiny than earlier ones precisely because later ones lack the check and balance of being corrected by those who were present at the events recorded. It is especially crucial in the case of Jesus that we go back to the original inner circle of his followers—men and women who knew Jesus or, in the case of Paul, who had contact with an array of others who knew Jesus personally.
We need to understand that the documents we find in the New Testament—including the gospels, the book of Acts, and Paul’s letters, to mention a few—are our earliest and best sources for understanding the character of Jesus and the rise of Christianity. They are not products of revisionist history of a later, non-eyewitness generation, nor were they written in response to some other, even earlier “lost Christianity,” such that we could claim that early Christian history was written by the “winners.”2
To the contrary, our earliest documents were written by members of a tiny minority sect that was rather tightly knit ideologically and had good social networks among its communities in the eastern end of the Roman Empire. Insofar as it was engaged in a religious struggle, it was struggling in the main with the larger pagan culture and with its mother religion, Judaism, to survive. This is a very different matter than suggesting it was engaged largely in family feuds in the first century. We have no good evidence that the earliest Christians were in pitched battles with rival forms of early Christianity or that there were parallel streams of early Christianity all flowing out of the Christ event, streams that only occasionally crossed each other’s paths. As a careful study of the inner circle of Jesus will show, these folks all knew each other, worked with each other, and (when they disagreed, as they sometimes did vociferously) worked out concordats such as we see in Acts 15 so that they could continue to be a basically unified movement in the empire.
There is yet another reason why American culture is all abuzz about “lost” or alternate Christianities. It’s what I call the “flamin’ fundy factor.” What I mean by this is that a disproportionate number of fundamentalists manage to get on TV, and they don’t do Jesus or authentic Christianity any real service. Many scholars whose area is the Bible or early Christianity watch fundamentalists passing them in the fast lane, garnering way too much attention. This causes the scholars to see red, and they react by trying to present Christianity in a way that is as distant as possible from what they see fundamentalists teaching; they offer ideas and theories that they find more personally congenial. I do understand this reaction (or, better said, overreaction). Such scholars are correct that arrogance and ignorance are a lethal combination, especially when a person is dealing with an important historical subject, and these vices are paraded all too frequently on TV and elsewhere when the subject is Jesus or his earliest followers.
One such scholar who overreacted to the fundamentalist element in our culture, and in fact was one of the founders of the now famous (or infamous) Jesus Seminar, came right out and said that part of his mission was to deconstruct the “Sunday school Jesus.”3 This is hardly what one would call an objective historical agenda. But the story of Robert Funk is hardly an isolated one in our culture. In fact, there are numerous tales of scholars in America who came out of conservative churches like men and women fleeing burning buildings. Having lost some or all of their traditional Christian faith, they have set out to rewrite the history of Jesus and/or early Christianity. In some cases they have looked down the well of history and seen their own reflection in the face of Jesus or his earliest followers. I understand this narcissistic spiritual pilgrimage, though I can’t identify with it.
It is true, unfortunately, that the church is often the worst witness to Jesus and the early Christian movement. That’s because when you consistently do historical work out of your own personal experience, whatever that experience may be, you are bound to skew the historical data some. Revisionist history writing is often done with the goal of making that history more appealing and interesting to the writers as they try to reclaim fragments of the past they still find user-friendly.
The scholarly world also has to contend with what I call the “justification by doubt” factor. Some scholars think they must prove (to themselves and/or others) that they are good critical scholars by showing how much of the Jesus tradition or the New Testament in general they can discount, explain away, or discredit. This supposedly demonstrates that they are objective. At most, all it shows is that they are capable of critical thinking. Oddly, these same scholars often fail to apply the same critical rigor and skepticism to their own pet extracanonical texts or pet theories. If such scholars would reflect diligently on why the four canonical gospels have stood the test of time and other apocryphal gospels and texts have not, they might well conclude that it’s because the canonical gospels are our earliest gospels and have actual historical substance, while the later gospels have little or none. It’s not because of later political maneuvering in the church of the fourth or fifth century that the earliest gospels are our best historical sources; it’s because they were written by honest, believing persons who were themselves eyewitnesses or who heard direct eyewitness testimony about Jesus and his first followers. The later gospels of Mary or Philip or Judas or even Thomas were not written by such well-informed persons.
Finally, there are presuppositional issues that come into play in our American culture. Some modern scholars, including historians, simply assume that miracles cannot happen and therefore do not happen. This is a faith assumption actually, since no human being has exhaustive knowledge of present reality, never mind the past. Such folks seem to assume that the rest of human experience is identical to their own: if they themselves have not experienced a miracle, neither has anyone else. This is called solipsism, or making the mistake of generalizing from the part to the whole.
Even some contemporary Bible scholars assume that miracles must be left out of account if we are going to do “scholarly” work like “other critical historians.” This is a carryover from the anti-supernatural bias of many Enlightenment historians, but it seems a very odd presupposition today. Our postmodern world is experiencing a newfound openness to miracles, magic, the supernatural, the spiritual, or whatever you want to call it. Our culture is Harry Pottering around at this juncture, and is happy to do so. It’s a shame that the academy thinks it an unscholarly enterprise to ask whether there might be something remarkable and real generating this sea change in the culture. As a historian, I am ashamed to say that historical scholars are often the last ones to figure out what’s going on in their own culture, perhaps because they live in their minds and their minds are fixated on the past.
Perhaps current science is giving us a wake-up call. We hear one scientist after another professing Christian faith or Jewish faith and arguing that the empirical data we have about the space-time continuum cannot rule out the possibility of miracles, not least because it cannot declare the space-time continuum a fixed or a closed system, subject only to “known” natural laws.4
These then are just some of the factors in play in our culture, and in the scholarly subculture, which have led to the expositing of new theories about Jesus and his earliest followers, the widespread belief in some of these theories, and the press’s eagerness to publicize such theories. After all, it is only what’s “new” that’s news—right? But what would our intellectual world look like if we didn’t listen to the siren song of our own culture, the song claiming that the “latest is the greatest” or that “there is secret knowledge to be had about truths long suppressed”?
Right at Easter time, just as the dandelions are starting to appear in my yard, a new crop of theories about Jesus and the Gospels usually pops up as well, often rushed into the Easter market. Clearly the appropriate amount of fertilizer has been applied to these supposed “new revelations” to make such hothouse theories grow, seemingly overnight. This Easter is no different: we have (1) Bart Ehrman’s Misquoting Jesus climbing up the New York Times best seller list; (2) the National Geographic special on the “Gospel of Judas,” which is supposed to rock our worldviews when it comes to the relationship of Jesus and Judas; (3) Michael Baigent’s The Jesus Papers, which revives the “swoon theory” in regard to Jesus’s death, a theory thoroughly discredited when it first was noised about in the book The Passover Plot; and (4) James Tabor’s The Jesus Dynasty, which presents us once more with a Schweitzerian Jesus, Jesus the messianic prophet who got the timing of the end of the world wrong and failed to bring in the kingdom he promised would supplant the Romans.
In my judgment only the last of these “revelations” deserves extended critique as it really does present a theory about Jesus and the origins of Christianity that attempts to grapple with the hard historical, archaeological, and literary data from the first century that is of relevance to the discussion. Accordingly we will critique this work at length in an appendix to this study, but here we must say a few things about the other three works.
Baigent’s work is the easiest to deal with, as it requires that Baigent explain away all the evidence we have from Paul (our earliest New Testament writer), from the canonical gospels, from Josephus, and from Roman sources (such as Tacitus and later Suetonius) that Jesus suffered the extreme penalty and died from crucifixion under and at the hands of Pontius Pilate. Not many people are taking seriously Baigent’s attempts at revisionist history. It goes against every shred of first-century evidence, Christian or otherwise, that we have about Jesus’s demise.
Bart Ehrman’s work deserves more serious attention, but in my judgment he has done what the British call “over-egging the pudding.” By this I mean his conclusions far outstrip his evidence for them. Textual variants in manuscripts of New Testament books are many and varied to be sure, but it is simply a myth to take the variants Ehrman deals with in his books as evidence that some essential Christian belief was cooked up after the fact and retrojected into the text of New Testament documents by overzealous and less than scrupulous scribes. There is no hard evidence in any of the variants he treats either in The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture or his more recent Misquoting Jesus that in any way demonstrates that ideas like the virginal conception, crucifixion, bodily resurrection of Jesus, or even the Trinity were ideas later added to copies of New Testament documents to make them more “orthodox.” This is simply false.
What is the case is that we have evidence of such ideas being amplified or clarified by overzealous scribes in a text like 1 John 5:7b. That is the most that sober historical judgment will allow in regard to such variants. There is a reason that both Ehrman’s mentor in text criticism and mine, Bruce Metzger, has said that there is nothing in these variants that really challenges any essential Christian belief: they don’t. I would add that other experts in text criticism, such as Gordon Fee, have been equally emphatic about the flawed nature of Ehrman’s analysis of the significance of such textual variants.5
This brings us to the “Gospel of Judas,” now touted as a document that can shake the faith of Christians worldwide due to its revelation that Jesus put Judas up to betraying him. Unfortunately, this is hype, not history. The Gospel of Judas is a document carbon-dated to the beginning of the fourth century and bearing all the earmarks of a Gnostic theology that did not exist before the second half of the second century. Judas, for example, is quoted as telling Jesus he will help him slough off the flesh and so get into the spiritual realm and condition more quickly if Judas will just betray him to the authorities. This sort of flesh/spirit dualism certainly characterizes much of later Gnosticism, but it in no way comports with the historical Jesus’s view, for he was a proponent of a very different form of eternal life—life in a resurrection body.
The document is written in Coptic, not in Greek, and its relationship to a document of this name mentioned by Irenaeus about 180 needs to be established, not assumed, since the content that Irenaeus mentions for the document of this name does not match up very well with the content of this later and Coptic Gospel of Judas. It is possible that the Coptic Gospel of Judas is based on and expands upon the earlier Judas document, but since we don’t have the latter, we cannot be sure. We need hard evidence that there was a Greek Gospel of Judas. Thus far, this evidence is lacking. Even if it was to surface, such a document would only be of value for reconstructing the Gnostic theology of the second through fourth centuries, not for reconstructing what happened to the historical Jesus or Judas. In other words, it can illumine the church historical discussion of the period in which Gnosticism thrived, but it can’t tell us anything about the first century, since we have no evidence at all that this document can be traced back to a first-century author. To say otherwise is an argument entirely from silence, not from hard evidence.
When I asked my friend Dr. A. J. Levine, who was on the team of scholars involved with the unveiling of the Gospel of Judas, whether she thought anything in the Gospel of Judas tells us anything about the historical Jesus or historical Judas she was emphatic—it tells us nothing about them. She was equally clear that she didn’t see anything in these documents that could or should shake the faith of modern Christians, because of course this document is not a first-century document written by anyone who knew Jesus or Judas.
Furthermore, in the case of the Gospel of Judas we are dealing with a practice called “pseudonymity”—the false attribution of a document to a notable figure of an earlier era. The reason for this practice is simple: the actual author of the document does not have the authority of an apostolic or eyewitness, and so he attributes the document to someone who is known to have existed during the time of Jesus. It needs to be stressed that this practice, while not rare, was not an accepted literary practice of the era in question. Indeed it was considered morally reprehensible when detected.
I have demonstrated at length in another work that this practice was roundly condemned not only by church fathers in the second century, but also by various Greco-Roman writers who wrote between the second century B.C. and the second century A.D.6 The Gospel of Judas is such a document, and like all other such documents it is intended to deceive the reader into thinking it is authored by a person of an earlier historical period. Such practices do not comport with the high standards of truth and honesty that Jesus and his first followers upheld.
THE POINT OF DEPARTURE, THE RULES OF THE GAME
How does a new religion actually start? The traditional wisdom is that it requires a compelling and charismatic figure who impresses people by saying and doing things that are dramatic and noble and above all inspiring and memorable. That charismatic leader model doesn’t seem to adequately explain the Jesus movement, however. Jesus died an ignominious death by crucifixion, the “extreme punishment” of the overlords in that era, suggesting that he generated as many foes as friends, as many adversaries as advocates. His ministry was fraught with peril in the midst of perilous times in a land that was occupied territory—a Roman province, in fact.
Since Jesus did not leave us a written legacy (“the Jesus papers”), we must look for indirect evidence for how Christianity got started. As New Testament scholar James Dunn has stressed, what we have in the New Testament and elsewhere is Jesus remembered.7 But remembered by whom? Was there an inner circle of Jesus’s followers who were the bearers of the story of Jesus to all future generations? And if so, who were these persons, and what were their stories? These questions get at the heart of the matter.
It was New Testament scholar Alfred Loisy who said that Jesus preached the kingdom but it was the church that showed up. Yes, that’s part of the truth. Since it is so, perhaps it would be easier to understand the rise of Christianity if we focused on the impact crater that we do know about and have a record of. Taking that stance, this book looks at the impact Jesus made on his earliest followers, the so-called inner circle. We could quibble about who should be included in that inner circle, but I would urge that the following is a reasonable short list: Mary, James, and Jude from Jesus’s own physical family; Peter, the Beloved Disciple, Mary Magdalene, Joanna, and Paul from outside his immediate family.
There are other figures we might include in such a study, of course. For instance, we might include the sons of Zebedee, especially if his son John was also the Beloved Disciple. But this is far from clear from a historical point of view. In fact, it is very unlikely that the Beloved Disciple is that John, since the stories that mention the Zebedees—such as the story of the raising of Jairus’s daughter and the story of the transfiguration—are found in the synoptic gospels but not in the Fourth Gospel. We would expect these stories to be in the Fourth Gospel if it was written by a Zebedee.
We might even want to include the man we now call Doubting Thomas, in view of the great interest today in the so-called Gospel of Thomas, but unfortunately we know nothing substantive about Thomas after the Easter period, nor do we have any firm or clear evidence that this Thomas is the author of the Gospel of Thomas. The Gospel of John tells us that Thomas was of a rather fatalistic bent and that he was not present when Jesus first appeared to his male disciples on Easter. Hearing of that appearance, Thomas demanded tactile proof of Jesus’s return from death. Jesus is said to have appeared to the male disciples again a week after Easter, this time with Thomas present, and the disciple was exhorted to stop disbelieving (the Greek doesn’t say doubting) and instead do the opposite. He then offered the greatest confession of who Jesus is in the whole of the Fourth Gospel (“My Lord and my God,” John 20:28). It is interesting that the text does not say that he took Jesus up on his offer to put his fingers in Jesus’s wounds.
Later we find Thomas back in Galilee with six other disciples when Jesus appeared to them once more. After that the trail grows cold, however. Thomas is not mentioned in the book of Acts or in any other document of the first century, unless of course one believes that the Gospel of Thomas was written by this Thomas. Alas, this would be a decidedly minority opinion among scholars worldwide. Most scholars of whatever theological persuasion (or none) are convinced that the Gospel of Thomas is a second-century document based on earlier gospel (and Pauline) texts and that it certainly was not authored by one of the original inner circle of Jesus’s disciples. But I will say more about this matter in due course.
I have decided to stick with the very short list of eyewitnesses already mentioned, with Paul being the odd man out because he seems not to have had a personal relationship with the historical Jesus. Nonetheless, he is a very crucial link for the transition of the Jesus movement from Jewish sect to world religion. If it is true in any sense that Peter stands behind the Gospel of Mark (as is often argued) and that Paul was a sometime companion and mentor of the author of the Gospel of Luke, then my short list could be said to account for at least three of the gospels (that is, all but Matthew), the book of Acts, the Pauline corpus, the Johannine letters, the Petrine letters, and the sermons/letters of James and Jude. In short, it could be said to account for almost all of our earliest written witnesses about early Christianity.
In the following chapters I intend to draw a portrait of each of these people, based on a critical analysis of our earliest and best sources, commenting on their relationship with Jesus and other relevant topics. Even Paul—the ek troma, or “one born out of due season,” as he puts it himself in dramatic fashion (1 Cor. 15:8)—made bold to claim to be an eyewitness of the risen Lord, by no small miracle on the road to Damascus. And at the end of the day it is this fact, having seen the risen Lord, that binds all these persons together, cementing their place in the family of faith, centered on Jesus. Without that fact, none of these men and women would have been founding figures of early Christianity. But with that fact, even outsiders like Paul and disbelievers like James and Jude could become insiders almost overnight.
In other words, I am claiming that after the crucifixion, it took a miracle to generate the church—indeed, even to generate the inner circle of Jesus’s followers. Our earliest sources, by their own confession, are clear that almost the entire inner circle of male disciples denied, deserted, or betrayed Jesus, while the women watched him die and then went to lay a wreath, as it were, on the tomb. It is the historical event we call Easter that reversed this drastic trend, without which the story of Jesus would have been left in the dustbin of history.
But what do we know about these original witnesses of Jesus and his resurrection? What are their stories? What were their contributions to Christianity? We will explore these sorts of questions in the following chapters, in an effort to understand earliest Christianity better. I believe that this focus on specific historical persons is more likely to help us understand our subject than abstract analysis of social or anthropological or even historical factors could do, though we cannot ignore such factors. Nor do I think that a history-of-ideas approach to this subject in the end could do it full justice. Christianity was not in the first instance a movement generated by texts, but rather one generated by oral proclamation in a largely oral culture and by the making of personal contacts and the building of personal relationships—the creating of community, as historian Robert Wilkens has so rightly stressed (see this book’s epigraph).
To the reader I would urge the following at the outset: read all of these chapters together and evaluate the cumulative impact of the material. By learning about Jesus’s inner circle you will indirectly learn about Jesus, since you can discern a lot about a person by evaluating the company he keeps. The ordering of this book is simple. I will deal first with those who played an important role in the life or ministry of the historical Jesus as well as in the church, and then I will deal with those (James, Jude, Paul) whose main if not sole contribution to the Jesus movement came after the death and resurrection of Jesus. This amounts to studying these figures in chronological order of their contact with Jesus, roughly speaking.
There will, I promise, be some surprises along the way, but this investigation won’t entail resurrecting the ghosts of lost Christianities—movements that came into being as offshoots of mainstream Christianity in the second through fourth centuries, well after the apostolic era. No, as it turns out, there are quite enough surprises and interesting possibilities and permutations to be ferreted out of our earliest and best sources, which are found in the New Testament. We don’t need to look to later and more dubious material to learn something new about Jesus and his inner circle.