Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Book Review: Putting Jesus in His Place

The case for the deity of Christ does not rest on a few proof-texts. The popular notion that some fourth-century Christians decided to impose on the church a belief in Jesus as God and wrenched isolated Bible verses from their contexts to support their agenda is a gross misrepresentation of the facts. The framers of the orthodox doctrines of the Incarnation and the Trinity did have an agenda, but it was not to replace a merely human Jesus with a divine Christ. Their agenda was to safeguard the New Testament's clear teaching of the deity of the Lord Jesus Christ in a way that did equal justice to three other clear teachings of the Bible: there is only one God; Jesus is the Son and not the Father; Jesus is also a human being. In this book, we have touched at various places on the biblical evidence for these three teachings, while our focus throughout has remained on establishing the truth of the deity of Christ.

from the conclusion of Putting Jesus in His Place: The Case for the Deity of Christ
Authors: Robert Bowman and J. Ed Komoszewski
Format: Paperback, 392 pages
Publisher: Kregel Publications (August 31, 2007)
ISBN-10: 0825429838
ISBN-13: 978-0825429835

Before you begin reading this book review, I want to tell you that it's somewhat controversial. Questioning the deity of Jesus can be a very difficult thing for people to read about or talk about. I don't pull any punches in this review. That's one of the reasons I created this blog; to question assumptions and ask hard questions. I just thought you should know this before proceeding.

Bowman's and Komoszewski's book has exactly one purpose: to prove, from the New Testament text, that Jesus is God the Son, one part of the Trinity, and that his followers and disciples were aware of this during his earthly existence and especially very shortly afterward, as Peter, Paul, and the other disciples were spreading the Good News throughout the Greek-speaking nations.

Do they prove their case? In fact they do, but there are a couple of caveats:

The authors prove their case if you are already convinced of the deity of Christ without reservation, and are looking for an in-depth analysis of the proof-texts in the New Testament (the book is written so it could be used in a Bible class on this topic, as well as a reference).

The authors prove their case if you believe in the total inerrancy of the entire Bible as we have it today, and believe that the New Testament we can purchase in any bookstore and online, was indeed written by the individuals who are commonly attributed to be the authors (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul, Peter...).

If you have no doubts and particularly no serious doubts regarding the deity of Christ, and you believe the Bible and specifically the New Testament, contains no ambiguities, contradictions, inconsistencies, believe that all content in the NT is the original content, was not erroneously copied by later scribes and translators, and no content was added, removed, or changed in the decades or centuries subsequent to their original authorship, then I think Bowman and Komoszewski have a strong case.

But that's saying a lot.

The book was written with the assumptions I listed above. The authors are already convinced of their point and, as instructors at Fuller Theological Seminary and Dallas Theological Seminary respectively, support the basic tenets of those institutions relative to the inerrancy of the Bible. This is the first book addressing the New Testament and the deity of Jesus I've read that so strongly assumes these positions. My previous readings (though limited to only three other books so far) all provide supporting evidence that many of the NT texts were written later than their assumed dates, and not by the authors attributed to them. Further, the authors I've read, as well as a larger body of NT scholars, believe that the Gospel of John, may have been specifically written and/or edited by a group of Gentile Christians, popularly known as the Johannine Community, who may have developed the documents attributed to the Apostle John with a strong pro-deity bias that likely wasn't found among Christ's original Jewish disciples. This could have resulted in Gentiles supporting Christ's deity being removed from the Jewish/Christian synagogue, as well as being one of the issues that contributed to the larger Gentile/Jewish schism in the early church. There are also questions about the authenticity of some of Paul's letters as well as Peter's missives which further erodes documented support of the deity of Jesus.

Note: The books I've previously read on this topic are When Jesus Became God by Richard E. Rubenstein, Jesus, Interrupted by Bart D. Ehrman, and From Jewish Prophet to Gentile God by Maurice Casey.

I can't comment much further along this line, at least in a truly scholarly fashion, because I am merely a lay person without the educational background in theology and New Testament studies to be able to give a more educated opinion on the matter. But I have to consider some things.

According to Bowman and Komoszewski, John's Gospel is the only one that mentions that Jesus is God more than once and, if you factor out the Gospels and Epistles that NT scholars consider to be questionable, then a lot of this book's source material supporting Christ's deity goes away.

The trick is, it doesn't all go away, at least for that particular reason. However, all of the efforts the authors make at jiggling the translation of Greek to English in the Gospel of John for example, becomes perhaps more effort than it's worth.

Another area that I found difficult, was the book's proposal that either Jesus must be God or he had to be an ordinary human being. One of the book's assumptions was that, in order to be the Messiah, Jesus had to be God. This is really peculiar, since Judaism doesn't have that assumption and, as far as I know, it never did have that belief. While the authors extensively quote from the Old Testament as part of supporting their arguments, they don't make much of an attempt to see their position from the point of view of Christ's primary audience: 1st Century Jews, nor do they look at the Old Testament sources from a Hebraic perspective. The overall lens by which they view the Bible and by which they expect their readers to examine their book, is an Evangelical Christian lens. This isn't to say that they were completely unmindful of the affect of Jewish monotheism relative to declaring Jesus as God, but the authors state that the New Testament writers had to take care in how they documented Christ's deity in order not to offend Jewish monotheists!
Critics of the doctrine of deity of Jesus often ask why, if Jesus is God, the New Testament does not refer to him more often as God. The answer is twofold. First, the New Testament writers were generally very careful to avoid making statements that would have implied that Jesus was the Father. While affirming Jesus' divine status in many ways, they maintained a clear distinction between the persons of the Father and the Son. Since they commonly applied the name "God" to the Father, they tended not to use that name for Jesus except in ways that did not confuse the two persons.
I'll say more on this in a bit, but here's the critical part I want to present:
The second reason is that the theological and religious roots of the New Testament were deeply monotheistic, and its authors sought to affirm Jesus' deity in ways that people would not perceive as undermining their Jewish monotheistic heritage.
Bowman and Komoszewski refer to R.T. France's The Worship of Jesus: A Neglected Factor in Christological Debate in forming this opinion. France calls any mention of the deity of Jesus from a 1st century Jew's perspective "shocking language" and further states that the "wonder is not that the NT so seldom describes Jesus as God, but that in such a milieu it does so at all."

This is an extremely disturbing statement to me, but not for the reasons the authors might think. It seems like, if the deity of the Jewish Messiah is a natural and logical part of Jesus being the Jewish Messiah, first, there would be a much greater indication of this in Old Testament sources (as well as the Talmud, which the authors ignore), and that it would be more natural and likely for monotheistic Jews to understand and accept that the Messiah, in order to be the Messiah, must also be God. Additionally, from their first point, if the authors thought it would be confusing to try and distinguish between God the Father and God the Son (not much is mentioned about God the Holy Spirit in this book) for 1st and 2nd century Christians who were so much closer to the original people and events that surrounded Jesus, what about those of us living in the 21st century?

I mentioned before that the authors assume that Christ could only be either an ordinary man or that he had to be God, but they do not consider the possibility that the Messiah could be a unique and divine being, with many supernatural attributes, but still not literally be God. The authors cite (and dismiss) arguments based on how Wisdom is personified in the Tanakh (Old Testament), but they ignore the Jewish concept of a pre-existent and personified "Torah" that is the source of Creation (the "Word became flesh", if you'll forgive the Johannine quote), and yet Jews don't consider the Torah to be God, even though it was with Him and is thought of as the mechanism by which the universe was created.

Again, I lack the scholarly credentials to fully analyze and critique this book in more detail and further, space doesn't allow me to do a point-by-point review of each area where the authors cite support for Christ's Godhood, but I think the book's evidence is far from a "slam dunk" as far as unequivocally establishing Jesus as God.

I'm not saying that it's impossible and, as I previously stated, there are points in the book that I cannot speak to that are used to support Christ's deity. The very best and fairest statement I can make, based on my reading of Bowman and Komoszewski, as well as my previous ventures into NT material, is to say "the jury is still out".

I know this means that I must fly in the face of virtually all of Christianity as well as most of the Messianic world, and certainly the vast majority of reviewers on Amazon (as well as individual Christian reviewers) will disagree with me (though not 100% of them), but given the extreme biases presented by the authors, both in terms of their personal belief structure, their backgrounds, and their view of Biblical inerrancy, the credibility of their overall case is somewhat doubtful.

That said, every author who writes on this (or any) subject has a bias, a personal belief structure, and a background, so perhaps Bowman's and Komoszewski's book is also no less credible than some of the others I've read. In that case, how can I ever be convinced one way or the other on the deity issue? For that matter, how can anyone?

My only answer right now, is that I'll continue to read, to search, and to learn.


The road is long and often, we travel in the dark.

21 comments:

Gene Shlomovich said...

James, excellent review. I too think that the actual identity of Yeshua is not what post-Nicean Christianity came to creedaly uphold. The interaction between the human and divine aspects within Messiah is far more mysterious. Christianity's attempt to define Yeshua in precise terms or make the very salvation dependable on believing in precisely formulated creeds that describe origins and nature of his person [something that neither NT nor Yeshua himself demands as a condition for salvation] made him that much more indigestible to the Jewish mind.

Daniel said...

If I can make one more suggestion on christology it would be: Hurtado, How on earth did Jesus become a God? The title seems a little simplistic but its a very good book. The book you reviewed is obviously no match to Casey so if you want to see a scholarly case for high christology in the NT, this would be it.

James said...

Thanks for the comments, guys. I thought I'd wake up this morning to find a bunch of hate letters here. Gene, you've got a point that the traditional Christian understanding of the "deity proof texts" may be a retrofitting of the NT as Gentiles with a Greek understanding that men can be gods, came into ascendance. Daniel, there are a few books on my list ahead of Hurtado, but his name has come up more than once, so I intend to read his book.

Daniel said...

Perhaps a fitting quote:

"When I get a little money I buy books and if any is left I buy food and clothes"
-Desiderius Erasmus

James said...

I'm a married man, so it doesn't quite work that way with my paycheck, Daniel. :-D

benicho said...

hmmmm!

James said...

I'm sure you can do better than that, benicho. I realize I'm taking the minority position here and am likely to take a fair amount of criticism for my views. Speak up.

James said...

This is only sort of related to the topic at hand, but none the less fascinating. I'm reading a news story at the Christian Science Monitor about the Coptic Christians in Egypt. According to the article, "The Coptic Church is believed to be one of the oldest Christian groups in the Middle East, and dates its beginning to about 50 AD, when the Apostle Mark visited Egypt." We don't hear much about the "Copt" population, which is mostly in Cairo and has over 7 million members (about 9 percent of Egypt's population). They are "one of several churches in Oriental Orthodoxy, which is not to be confused with Eastern Orthodoxy. It shares many of the same beliefs of those churches, which also include the Syriac and Armenian church" and "split from the Western and Eastern Orthodox churches at the Council of Chalcedon in the 5th century over theological differences."

Thought I'd share.

benicho said...

I'm not being critical or anything, just an interesting topic.

I agree with Gene that the identity of Yeshua (the Messiah) is far more mysterious than what we have condensed it to be. Although I really don't know what post Nicean Christians all believed since it's such a wide range of time and viewpoints. I can see that the modern day church has turned it into a "if you believe in Jesus you go to heaven, if you don't then you go to hell". Even so, there's such a diverse population of Christians... Now that I've immersed myself in Judaism teachings and become quite close with many Jews (messianic and non-messianic) I can see that Judaism is far more cohesive than Christianity. Just a small example... I attended a church in Alabama a few years ago that did a sermon on how the Mormons weren't Christian. What an inspiration (sarcasm). But this seems logical considering the vast amounts of people that consider themselves Christian as opposed to those who consider themselves in Judaism. Naturally there is a far more diverse set of beliefs in Christianity than Judaism.

Anyways, they way I look at it, if you recognize the Messiah now, how much easier will it be to recognize the antimessiahs, whomever they may be? That's my theory at this point at least.

James said...

The question isn't so much that the Christian church believes Jesus is God, but *when* did the church adopt that belief? Some think that it didn't occur *at all* until about the 3rd or 4th century CE, but folks like Bowman and Komoszewski think this started among some of the Jewish disciples within the Messiah's earthly lifetime and expanded very quickly throughout the church within the 1st century.

From what I can tell so far, there probably were some Gentile churches that saw Jesus as God within less than 100 years after the ascension, but the primarily Jewish Messianic congregations did not. There were a number of Gospels, letters, and other documents floating around in those days (and only some of them made it into our modern Bible), each emphasizing a different view or understanding of the faith. Some depicted Jesus as more Prophet and Messiah and others elevated him to God. At least some of these documents were written to support the particular theologies and edicts of the churches of the authors.

The result is that, even way back then, there was a terrific dissimilarity between churches based on the deity issue and other topics, eventually resulting in deity-believing Gentiles exiting (or being forced out of) the Messianic synagogues, and driving a wedge between believing Jews and Gentiles.

While I can understand that there were churches that believed in the deity of Christ early on, Christianity as a whole didn't take on this belief until the Council of Nicea and perhaps as late as the Council of Chalcedon in the 5th century for some.

I don't think it was the neat, simple transition that Bowman and Komoszewski suggest. They do admit though, that the (Gentile) NT writers had to downplay or even "hide" the deity issue early on so as not offend monotheistic Jews, which seems at least odd if not outright dishonest. This supports the idea that many of the NT documents emphasizing Jesus as God and attributed to Jewish disciples were actually written by Gentile deists.

benicho said...

It's pretty evident the transition was slow and even sloppy at times. In fact the Vandals (Germanic tribe) captured Carthage from the Romans in 439 AD in a battle they considered a crusade. The Vandals were Arians (not to be confused with Aryanism). Odd to think the first crusades were Christians vs. Christians nearly 700 years before the Crusades in Israel. It's even more odd to think that the first crusades happened before Mohammed was a twinkle in anyone's eye.

benicho said...

By the way, I get these updates from a church here in the US (signed up for them a long time ago) and have lately just started actually reading them. They're called "Daily Devotionals" and they're put out by a large church in Kentucky. They show little blurbs written on certain passages in the NT (nearly always). Anyways since I began reading them a few weeks ago I noticed how anti Jewish they are in nature. I'll post this one for right now. This sort of speaks as to what the church has become. There are many more I have saved—very ill informed. By reading you'll get the picture.

The name of the church is Southland Christian.

Gene may want to cover his eyes :p

"Matthew 23:5-6

Phylacteries? Not a word you see a whole lot anymore -- for good reason. Phylacteries were wooden boxes the Pharisees would put scripture verses in. And you’re never going to believe this: they tied those wooden boxes to their foreheads.

That’s right. They walked around with wooden boxes tied to their heads. Very trendy! And as if walking around with a box tied to their skull wasn’t enough to communicate, “Hey, look at me! I’m spiritual!” these guys would make their boxes as big as they could. It was like, “Man, that guy must know LOTS of scripture because he had to make his phylactery so big to carry it all!” Ridiculous. And the tassels were the same way. The longer the tassels, the more spiritual you supposedly were. In many senses, fashion was the gauge for spirituality.

But, of course, nothing could be further from the truth. There is no amount of pruning on the outside that God values more than what’s happening on the inside. He doesn’t care what you wear to church or where you sit. He just wants you to follow after Him with your whole heart.

We have a tendency to want to show off, though. I once heard Beth Moore say, “Never let your zeal for God in public outdo your zeal for Him in private.” In other words, if you don’t talk passionately about Him when you’re at home eating dinner with your spouse, don’t talk that way about Him when you’re with your church friends. Don’t sing loud praises during church surrounded by Christians if you wouldn’t sing those songs in your head while you’re on your morning jog.

Take some time this today to rethink worship.

● How can you carry the passion you have for God out of the church building with you this weekend into your daily life?

● Is there anything you’re doing that might be considered “showing off” your spiritual life?"

Now you know that Gd commanded the Jews to wear phylacteries and tzit tzit as a fashion statement.

James said...

Unfortunately, much of the church still feels like it can make Jews their special target with impunity, even though Jesus and all of his original disciples were Jewish.

There's a popular misconception in Christianity that when Jesus was criticizing certain Pharisees for "showing off" as it were, he was also criticizing all Jews for obeying the command to wear tzitzit and tefillin. Go figure.

It's churches and Pastors like that who make me cringe at calling myself a "Christian".

benicho said...

I don't know if it was the pastor/minister who wrote that, but apparently whoever wrote it is unaware that those were commandments.

Here's another one from just the other day.

"Matthew 23:4 (NIV)

In high school, I had a gym coach who never stood up. He would literally bring out a chair from the cafeteria and sit in it for all of our activities. We’d be a hot mess of sweat and body odor as we climbed ropes and ran drills. He merely rested on his throne and watched us underlings pour our energy all over the shiny wood floor.

Needless to say, I wasn’t a big fan of gym. I was never much of an athlete to start with. And although we had the opportunity to call this guy a hypocrite, it didn’t help much. I remember saying, “Sure, he’s willing to shout at us and make us do all this hard work, but he couldn’t even do half the things he’s barking at us about.”

Honestly, I was right. He probably couldn’t have made it through one gym period a week, let alone seven. Maybe it wasn’t his job to exercise with us. But I’ll tell you one thing... his not participating didn’t help convince us that anything he told us to do was worth the effort.

Exercise is hard. It’s supposed to be. No one promises it to be easy. And anyone in their right mind is going to try to talk themselves out of having to do it. That’s why a leader should “use the product they’re selling.”

The Pharisees were like my gym teacher. They sat on thrones they created and tried to make everything harder for everyone else. That’s no way to lead people to God, for sure. Following God is like gym class. People are looking for an excuse not to follow.

We can’t promise it’s easy. We can just show people we’ll carry the load with them. We’ll get down in the ditches and get our hands dirty, too. That’s exactly what Christ did. He lived the life he was asking us to live. He proved that it’s possible.

● How many times have you talked Christianity to someone without actually climbing down into their situation to help them?

● Look for opportunities this week to get involved. Don’t give advice. Don’t preach. Actually get involved in someone’s situation. Share the load."

Aside from the overall message being completely odd, it eludes to the pharisees being compared to the villain in the story (shocker!).

Gene Shlomovich said...

"And you’re never going to believe this: they tied those wooden boxes to their foreheads. That’s right. They walked around with wooden boxes tied to their heads."

That shows how much they "know" before they speak - there's no such thing as a "wooden boxes" tefillin - they have always been made of nothing but leather and other animal products (hair), NEVER of wood, including the ones they found next to Dead Sea scrolls that date to the time of Yeshua. As Dr. Schiffman recently put on my blog in his comment, I too say that these guys are "cast adrift in a sea of arrogant ignorance."

benicho said...

yeah true Gene, i glanced over that, tefillin really arent made of wood LOL.

but you know the verse:

"And you shall bind them to the rear of your cars as a sign, 6 inches to the left and 3 inches down, and they shall be a silver fish upon which everyone associates Christians with bad driving."

as you can see Christian decals are more biblical than tefillin.

:p

Gene Shlomovich said...

benicho, that's truly quotable and funny! Bravo!

James said...

"And you shall bind them to the rear of your cars as a sign, 6 inches to the left and 3 inches down, and they shall be a silver fish upon which everyone associates Christians with bad driving."

LOL. Score one for benicho!

Rob Bowman said...

A few corrections: (1) Ed Komoszewski does not teach at Dallas Seminary, and I don't teach at Fuller Seminary (we received our Master's degrees from those institutions). (2) Our book does not presuppose the inerrancy of Scripture, though both of us affirm that doctrine. We do assume that the New Testament is the proper source of Christian doctrine. (3) Our arguments do not require one to accept that Matthew, Mark, or Luke wrote the books named for them, or any other positions regarding the authorship of the NT writings.

Your review amounts to saying that your real problem with our book is that you lack confidence in the reliability of the NT writings. That is really a different issue than the subject of the book.

James said...

Thanks for the corrections, Mr. Bowman. My information about your affiliations are only as good as your bios on Amazon, so I apologize for my errors.

Yes, a lot of my problem is with the reliability of the NT writings. If they are assumed to be 100% reliable but in fact aren't, wouldn't the conclusions based on the assumption be skewed?

I don't know if you can contain Christian doctrine to just the NT since the New Testament writers didn't produce their content in isolation from the Old Testament. For any of their writings to make sense to the Jewish disciples of Jesus, they would have to tie in to what was established scripture at the time, namely the Old Testament.

Frankly, I don't think anyone can address and understand Jesus the Jewish Messiah unless they access the entire Bible through the lens (as closely as we can as 21st century non-Jews) of the writers of the day and the larger Jewish lived experience. You're free to disagree with my opinion, but Christ wasn't an invention of Christianity, he was and is the lived expression of God's love for humanity, starting with the Children of Israel, who loved and cherished God for a very long time before it even occurred to most non-Jews that there was One God.

As far as the identity of the NT writers, if we have a document that assumes to have been written by Jewish eyewitness to the events surrounding the ministry of Jesus, let's say John's Gospel since it heavily references the deity of Christ, but was actually written by non-Jewish Christians who were not eyewitnesses to support their belief in the deity, it makes a difference.

I took it for granted that you and Mr. Komoszewski wouldn't be pleased with my review, though I admit that I'm surprised it even came to your attention. Believe me, nothing that I've said is personal. But like an umpire at a ball game, I have to call them as I see them.

ounbbl said...

To approach to the themes of 'Trinity' and 'Deity of Christ', I believe the first thing to be put in order is the language (or rather vocabulary): what it means when we say 'god (or God)' 'person' and 'being'. One thing is clear that 'Jesus=Jehovah' is a nonbiblical and also a corrupt Trinitarian formula.
The [true] God is not 'a person', nor 'a being' - can't be a countable noun. He graciously comes to us as 'a person' for us to relate (as Jesus revealed to us).

Jesus was a historical human being and as [the Logos of] God (=Son of God. He came to us as a human person (immanuel) for His earthly mission.
H.S. is God who, in spirit, radiates out and reaches us with power (that is the divine love). H.S. ain't a person. It is, just as the word means, spirit or breath of God, carrying God's power

Most of arguments and statements in Trinitarian doctrine as well as believers' praxis (prayer, liturgy) strangely smells very much like a polytheism (i.e. 'three gods' just as depicted by Rublev's Trinity icon. How this is different from 'three persons'?) A similar depiction of 'three gods' is seen in a now popular fiction 'The Shack'. These are all heretic.

As to JW, I wish they would wake up and get rid of a non-sense angel Christology and come up a decent doctrine towards the core of N.T. message of God, Son, and H.S. in dynamic relationship - worship God Father through the Son in H.S., nothing more and nothing less.