by jimwalton » Sun Apr 21, 2019 3:25 pm
> But one cannot say that Jesus was pro-Jewish societal norms -- otherwise he would have had no business reforming anything.
I'm not aware that Jesus expressed any issue with societal norms. Jesus addressed their religious norms. Just about everything He said pertained to the hypocrisy and misguidedness of their religious perspectives, which Jesus considered to be askew from God's intent. He rarely, if ever, addressed ANY of the social issues of the day. He didn't talk about slavery, homosexuality, infanticide (the Roman Empire's version of abortion), or education, and only spoke very briefly about marriage and divorce when asked. Jesus's beef was with the religious establishment.
In addition, Jesus was notably conformant to many practices of Jewish piety of His day: almsgiving, prayer, and fasting. He presupposed the validity of the Temple, the sacrifices, and Israel's holy days. He read and quoted the Scriptures and regarded them as authoritative. He attended synagogue services. And He accepted the authority of the Torah. It could be completely out of character, given all those things we KNOW, to perceive Jesus as anti-family and against Jewish social norms.
> Paul is pretty clear about the unimportance of starting a family,
We don't know too much about Paul's stance on starting a family. In 1 Corinthians 7 he is not writing a theology of marriage and family, but answering a specific question for a particular group (a very troubled group with many misunderstandings and distortions). It's very difficult, if not impossible, to take what Paul says to them as having any kind of
universal application, or to take this as a good rendition of Paul's perspective on things.
The ancient world generally took one of three positions pertaining to marriage and procreation: (1) Marriage and procreation are vital and necessary for all who are physically capable of it (the majority view). (2) Marriage is a distraction and should never be undertaken by the wise man except in the rare instances where one might find a spouse equally devoted to the philosophic lifestyle (the Cynic position). (3) Marriage is good for most people, but one must make exceptions for those too committed to other spiritual pursuits to take time for it (an early-2nd-century rabbi).
Paul combines elements of the second and third views without subscribing to either. He was not against marriage or children. What he was FOR is total dedication to God.
> The issue is whether or not we can trust any of the ancient claims we have about the man, and I don't think we can.
This is where we differ. With four different accounts from 4 different writers, two from the band of disciples, one Jew who was not one of the 12, and one Gentile, we have an abundance of material about Jesus. Despite being on the periphery of the Roman Empire in backwater Palestine, we have as many sources of Jesus as we have about Emperor Tiberius.
There's no credible reason to doubt the accuracy of the Gospels. They are full of material that agrees with other extrabibilcal sources. Their information agrees with the archaeological, geographical, and cultural knowledge we have from other sources. Their literary styles match other contemporaneous histories and biographies of the ancient world (Josephus, Herodotus, Thucydides, and Polybius). The authors were in a position to report accurate historical information (even if you disagree that they were Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John), since all 4 were written in the 1st century. We have every reason to trust the Gospel accounts.
> Can you expand on that? As a secularist who tries to deal in probabilities, this feels like a way to say 'my contextual reading, while not agreed on by all scholars, is based on true wisdom and therefore I am justified in my interpretation.' And what I see from the outside is yet another interpretation to pile on the heap.
We have to utilize research, every tool of analysis we have, and also use a whole lot of common sense. There are so many factors that play into accurate interpretation, and it's easy for bias to skew one's work. People who work merely to discredit the text or to justify it a priori don't do the rest of us any favors, though the Internet is full of such work. So often (far too often), I'm having these conversations, and people just link me to "X" Internet sites, as if that ends the discussion. Or they find a battery of scholars who agree with them, and, well, that says it all! It doesn't.
We have to use our heads. Our conversation here is a good example. Jesus was a fastidious Jew, conforming to their societal norms, affirming the Torah and living by it, very much a part of their culture, and yet He gets accused of being anti-family by the original poster. But such a perspective is WAY off to the side of (1) anybody who has done considerable reading and research in the life of Jesus, and (2) anybody who doesn't have an axe to grind.
I once was hosting a Russian tourist in America for the first time. She was simply astounded that our homes and places of business didn't have bars in all the windows, high walls, barbed wire, and strong gates around every building, as they do in Russia (and in many countries). The clearest and simplest explanation was, "We're Americans. We're not that kind of people." I've never had bars on my windows in my many different homes, nor have I ever had a break-in. Except in rare circumstances or the bad parts of the cities, we don't have to protect against that, because it rarely happens. In most places in America most of the time, a locked door is sufficient.
When you are familiar with the life of Jesus, the accusation that He was a family-hater and anti-Jewish social norms just doesn't wash. He wasn't "that kind of people." Years of reading and research, along with a measure of wisdom, gives the clear and easy answer to the question.