Jesus and the God of the Old Testament
The Joseph Story Ep. 7.
In lieu of a write-up of the class I’ll leave you with a couple of quotations. The first, from St. Maximus the Confessor, which framed our discussion. The second, from Chris Green’s Sanctifying Interpretation, which was the primary source for the entire class.
St. Maximus the Confessor:
“In consequence, it is necessary for him who seeks God piously not to latch on to a phrase, lest, instead of God, he unknowingly receive things about God; that is, because he is dangerously devoted to the words of Scripture instead of to the Word, the Word flees the mind which thought it had taken hold of the bodiless Word by his garments, indeed, much like the Egyptian woman who did not take hold of Joseph, but of his clothes instead…”
Chris Green:
“What are we to do with these [hard] passages? … One [approach] which is essentially Patristic, and which I think also fits with the best of Pentecostal interpretations. It insists that there is a spiritual sense to every text, and that we must press past the literal sense, ‘the letter,’ to grasp or be grasped by ‘the spirit.’ Read this way, the violence in the OT actually means something besides what it seems to mean at the literal level. Origen, for example, argues that the calls for Israel to wipe out the people of the land as described in Joshua are a parabolic way of calling for the churches to put to death their sinful appetites. In his own words, ‘a kingdom of sin was in every one of us before we believed. But afterwards, Jesus came and struck down all the kings who possessed kingdoms of sin in us, and he ordered us to destroy all those kings and to leave none of them.’ And he concludes: ‘Unless [Israel’s] physical wars bore the figure of spiritual wars, I do not think the books of Jewish history would ever have been handed down by the apostles to the disciples of Christ, who came to teach peace, so that they could be read in the churches’ (Origen, Homilies on Joshua 15).
“These passages] do, of course, put us as readers in a difficult place…The good news is that God means to put us in that difficult place.
“God uses the Scripture to overthrow our false conceptions of God. Paul was deeply committed to the Scriptures before he encountered Jesus on the road outside Damascus. But after that encounter, he was differently and more faithfully biblical, because he saw God differently—in the face of the resurrected crucified Jesus of Nazareth.
“For most of us…the most difficult are the ‘texts of terror’ that characterize God as vindictive, bloodthristly, malevolent. The God we think we find in the OT is difficult to stomach, never mind adore. What are we to do in the face of these difficulties? We cannot ignore them, or dismiss them by using Jesus’ ethic as a trump card, playing the NT off against the OT. And we cannot explain these difficulties away by saying the OT texts merely witness to an earlier phase of God’s self-revelation and the moral development of God’s people. According to Jesus’ own teaching, how we read the OT is itself God’s judgment of us. The OT is nothing other than Jesus’ testimony, the Spirit’s prophecy (Rev. 19:10); therefore, to refuse Moses’ witness is to turn away from Christ. But to receive that testimony faithfully is to be indwelt by the Word that glorifies us with God’s own glory (Jn 5:36-47)…
That is well and good, you might say, but how should it determine our reading of horrifying texts? We must begin, I believe, with a clarification, distinguishing the God who inspires and interprets the OT texts from the one described in the texts themselves. The inspiring, interpreting God is of course the Triune God revealed in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus the Nazarene. But the narrated God, the God who is a character in the biblical stories God has inspired, is sometimes an entirely or almost entirely false image of the true God. In the Scriptures, God humbly takes on the guise of a character, one character among others—sometimes even a bad, or at least conflicted, one. As Rowan Williams argues, one way of understanding Scripture is as ‘a parable or a whole series of parables’ in which God says of himself: ‘This is how people heard me, saw me, responded to me; this is the gift I gave them; this is the response they made,’ requiring us to respond in kind (Williams, Being Christian, p. 28).
I would say it just a bit differently than Williams does. In the ‘parables’ of the OT, God is not reporting to us how people understood and misunderstood his ways then and there. Instead, God is is here and now putting us to the test by describing himself at least somewhat misleadingly. ‘Everything written long ago was written to teach us’ (Rom. 15:4)…
“If what I have just been describing seems too strange to believe, take a moment to consider the way Jesus taught and how people responded to his teaching, The Evangelists show us that he spoke mostly in parables, riddles, and symbolic acts, and read the Scriptures subversively and troubled traditional practices. In response, some of his contemporaries think they have understood him when they in fact have not. Others, like the rich young ruler (Mt. 19.16-22), understand him just well enough to be enraged or saddened by what he has said. A few are intrigued enough to follow him in spite of their lack of understanding. Most are left in complete bafflement.
To make matters stranger, Jesus tells us that he intended such responses: ‘I speak in parables, so that ‘looking they may not perceive, and listening they may not understand’ (Lk. 8:10). Why would he do that? Rickie Moore offers what I take to be the pathbreaking insight: ‘Jesus told parables for one reason: in order to ‘throw’ people. Jesus threw people for one reason: in order that they might be broken. And Jesus became the wildest parable of all when He became broken. Everybody was thrown by that.’
Here, then, is the critical point. The same Jesus whom we find teaching in the Gospels is the Word who speaks in Scripture. And his pedagogy remains the same. He continues to tell parables, and for the same reason. He means to throw us, too.”
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