LECTURE NOTES
HUMANITIES CORE COURSE
FALL QUARTER, WEEK 4
18-19 OCTOBER 2010
“Christianity: The Covenant
Fulfilled and Extended:
Quote of the Day:
“Abraham was to be the ancestor of all believers who
are uncircumcised, so that they might be reckoned as upright; as well as the
ancestor of those of the circumcision who not only have their circumcision but
who also follow our ancestor Abraham along the path of faith that he trod
before he was circumcised.” --Romans
4:11-12
Preliminaries:
1. On your freedom to try on many hats for size.
Remember:
--you can take a hat off and put it back on again
--you can read scripture as a secular scholar, then as a
Christian
--you can read a Christian scripture as a Jew, then as a
Muslim, then as a scholar
--you can “revise” scripture as an experiment, as if you
had written it, then
respectfully correct it back to what it was
2. Within literature, myths are expressions of
ultimate truth in stories
--that are either told or alluded to
--that
may or may not be written down
--that
may but need not adorn remembered human events with miraculous
events
and fantastical language (imagine a city dressed like a bride!) so as to
underscore the importance of the truth they intend to convey (Revelations 21:2)
--that
are created and transmitted because they inspire moral engagement,
not because they entertain or because
evidence for them compels assent
--that
are commonly re-read, re-told, or re-enacted in rituals or other
practices of remembrance, renewal, or
celebration that root them in the life of
the
community where they originated or have the status of myth
--that
function as premises rather than conclusions for the host community; that
is,
one does not argue to them but from them. (Acceptance and functionality
of
this sort is commonly called faith in the
West. Validation is existential rather
than logical. Proof accrues through lives as
lived over time rather than by a
debate concluded on any single occasion.)
3. Historically, myths often migrate from a first to a
second or third community
--sometimes a later community is, in effect, a second
community
--often, a migrating or borrowed myth will be adapted to
new purposes
--often, such a myth will serve as context or background,
often alluded to,
rarely recited in its entirety because everyone
already knows it
--this process is crucial for our discussion
* key vocabulary and major myths of covenant were
in place by 900 BCE
* Christianity, considered today, inherits and
re-uses both
* Islam and Rabbinic Judaism, considered in next
two classes, do same
Two-Hat Interlude, Part I:
From the Tent at Mount Sinai to the Temple on Mount
Zion
Myth:
--Unbroken
string of victories in Sinai Peninsula and Transjordan (Numbers)
--Triumphant,
near-genocidal victory and territorial division in Cisjordan
followed by unanimous, enthusiastic covenant
ratification at Shechem (Joshua)
--Separate
tribal leaders for the twelve allied tribes; Israelites take up with
Canaanite gods (Judges)
--Tribes
seek to create a monarchy. God anoints David. David takes Jerusalem
--Solomon
succeeds David. Monarchy breaks into Israel (north) and Judah (south)
--prophets
warn: God will punish both, sending Assyria and Babylon against them
History:
--archaeological evidence of invasive entry into Canaanite
highlands in 11th C.
--gradually increasing Egyptian and Mesopotamian reference
to Israel (or
Samaria) and Judah (or Jerusalem)
Two-Hat Interlude, Part II:
From Mount Zion to Mount Calvary
History:
--Assyria conquers Israel, 722 BCE; some leaders flee
to Jerusalem
--Babylonia conquers Judah, 587 BCE; leaders carried into
exile
--Persia conquers Babylonia, establishes tiny province of
Judaea, 538 BCE
--Greeks conquer Persia, 333 BCE; Greek rule over Jews
grows oppressive
--Jewish rebellion; short-lived independent kingdom, 152-64
BCE
--Roman Empire takes control: most oppressive of all by
far, 64 BCE-385 CE
--Jewish population of Palestine rebellious; “apocalyptic”
readings of
the Tanakh predict a spectacular
coming divine intervention
--belief in an afterlife of reward or punishment takes hold
and spreads
--Jewish rebellions in 70 CE and 135 CE bring catastrophic
defeats and exile
--Jesus executed as a rebel in 30 CE; his disciples claim
he has come back to life
Myth:
How the Christian Story Emerges from Jewish Answers
to Jewish Questions
1. Three Jewish Questions and Three
Jewish Answers
Q-1. Has our covenant been ruptured for good? Is God still
with us? Our
oppression continues: one
oppressor after another
A-1. Look at II
Samuel 7:8-16. God decides to become a father, and fatherhood is
forever, he says. The Davidic
covenant, unlike its predecessors, is not
revocable. Whatever happens, there will
always be the hope of a new son of
David anointed by God (“messiah” means
anointed) and coming to rescue
us from peril.
Q-2. But we sinned and broke the
Mosaic covenant, didn’t we? The prophets
warned us we could be cut
off. Are we being punished? Is it too late?
A-2. Look at Jeremiah 31:31-34. God says he wants to start
over with
a new law written
straight into our hearts.
Q-3. Must we be fighting the Gentiles forever?
A-3. Look at Isaiah 49:6. God says
he will make the Gentiles our
students instead of our oppressor: a new world vocation
for our people.
2. Three Jewish
answers synthesized, fulfilled, and extended by Jews
who believed that Jesus is the real answer in person.
They
point out that Jesus:
A-1` …is Son of David as well as a Son of Abraham.
(Matthew 1:1)
A-2` …is to save his people from the consequences
of their sin (Matthew
1:21).
“Iesous” (“Jesus” in Latin and English) is Greek for “Joshua.”
His Jewish
father names him for the conqueror of Canaan, but…
A-3` …he will conquer
first as a teacher conquers. The wise of the world
recognize him
while he is still a newborn (Matthew 2:1-2, 9-11).
A star appearing
in the east signals that his birth is a world event.
He is the
“light to the nations” of Isaiah 49:6 in person.
3. An imagined,
first-century intra-Jewish argument over the adequacy
of this synthesis.
Objection:
How does all this help? The Romans are still killing
us.
Reply:
First, I agree with you. The Roman peril continues;
Jesus himself shares it
from the first breath (Matthew 2:16-23) to the last
breath of his life (John
19:30.)
Second, I must point out that Jesus defends against
his enemies only by
treating them
defiantly as his friends. He will treat all of us, plus even
Roman killers,
as friends, whatever price he has to pay (Luke 6:27-38).
Objection:
This may work for an individual willing to go that
far. How can it work
for a nation?
God obliterated the Egyptians when Pharaoh decided the
children of Abraham were too damned numerous. How can
a supposed
new Joshua possibly preserve the Abrahamic Covenant
against Caesar
when he caves in advance this way?
Reply:
You forget that the God of the Jews has now become
a Jew himself.
Abraham was with God
when this happened, and he rejoiced. What we
should do as true sons of Abraham is listen to
what Jesus, God’s word now audible with
human ears, has to say (John 8:56-59). When we hear
him,
we should trust him as Abraham trusted God.
Objection:
So you say, but where does all this leave our question
“Is God still with
us?”
Reply:
--God is still with us. Jesus, who is as Jewish as
we are, is thinking about
the Tanak and
what it promises down to his last breath. He dies when he
is ready and,
in a very Jewish way, to make a point. The point is: “Your
God is still
with you, all right, but now with you to share your suffering
rather than
prevent it (John19:28-30). If he cannot or will not prevent it
for himself,
how could he prevent it for you?”
Objection
repeated:
So, God is with us, but there is no relief for our
suffering. I’m sorry but to
me, this does not sound at all like Messiah, the Son
of David.
And, by the way, how
does your leadership feel about our hand in turning
the man over to the
Romans? I admit it, but does that pose no problem?
Reply:
Yes, there is no escaping suffering. But anyone,
including you, who
admits that s/he has
sinned and repents will rise in the “time of comfort”
(Acts of the Apostles 3:20) as Jesus did. Remember
that Peter, Jesus’ main
disciple, preached his
first sermon to us. He said, “Now I know, brothers,
that neither you nor
your leaders had any idea what you were doing, but
this was the way God carried out what he had foretold,
when he said
through the prophets that his Christ would suffer.”
(Acts
3:17).
Immortality
is the new Promised Land, but it is big enough for
Everyone, and we still
have a special place there. Peter said: “You are the
heirs of
the prophets, the heirs of the covenant God made with your
ancestors when he told
Abraham, ‘All the nations will be blessed in your
descendants.’ It was
for you in the first place that God raised up his
servant [Jesus] and sent him to bless you as every one
of you turns from
his wicked ways” (Acts 3:25-26). In sum, still for us
in the first place, but
for everybody by the end of time.
Conclusion: Mythic Truths of the Abrahamic,
Mosaic, Davidic and Christian Covenants
The
Abrahamic Fertility Covenant
Nature
God is above
nature and can use it for his purposes, benevolent as in
the Garden of Eden or malevolent
as in the despoliation of Egypt. His
relationship to nature is that
of the maker to the made, the owner to the
owned.
Society
God
can give life to or inflict death upon his human creatures at will. His
relationship to them
is covenantal: He wishes them to live rather than to
die, but only if they keep their
side of the covenant he made with them
after the Great Flood. That
covenant is, on his side, revocable and terminable.
God does not
covenant with all humans on the same terms. He has singled
out one line of human
descent—that leading from Abraham through Isaac
(but not Ishmael) to Jacob (but not
Esau)—for miraculous reproductive success,
which God will grant to no other
tribe. In Genesis, this difference occasions no
trouble because Abraham does not yet have
many descendants.
Divinity
The
question of whether God exists does not come up. His existence, yes, is
premise, not conclusion. The
existence of rival or false gods does not come
up either. If they exist, he
ignores them. The existence of other nations is
a neutral fact,
not yet a problem. It will become a problem in Exodus.
The
Mosaic Territorial Covenant (Exodus)
Society
Over
time, as God keeps his fertility covenant with Abraham, Abraham’s
descendants, the people Israel,
become so numerous that conflict with
other peoples becomes
unavoidable. Moreover, a territorial promise made
earlier, the promise of a safe
and rich land for God’s chosen people to live
in, now becomes a matter of urgency. God now
becomes a warrior
on behalf of Israel. The Egyptians become an
enemy people. After Egypt
come the Amalekites. Other enemies await.
The covenant given on Mt.
Sinai—torah--begins with God’s service to Israel in war and proceeds to
the rules (commandments and ordinances) that
Israel must follow in the
land that he has promised them and to which
he will now lead them if they are
to be safe from their enemies.
Divinity
Pharaoh (whom the Egyptians
did regard as divine) God now fights as if he
were a rival god. At Mt. Sinai, the existence of other gods and
their appeal
to his chosen people is
intensely on God’s mind. There are now not just
hostile human “others” but
hostile divine “others” as well.
Nature
While
promising Israel a land where divinely assisted fertility may
proceed unimpeded, God in effect
sterilizes Egypt. His creativity in Gen.
1-2 was directed at serving
fertility. In Egypt his power over and ownership of
nature is turned to destructive purposes.
God “weaponizes” nature and
turns it against his new enemy.
The Davidic Dynastic Covenant (Books of Samuel)
Nature
Because it is stated as “eternal,” the Davidic
covenant in effect turns the future into a kind of separate “place.” The future
becomes a potential second arena, alongside nature in the present, where God
can act and Israel can be either rewarded or punished. During the reigns of David’s successors, this
shift of attention stimulates early prophetic thinking about a new creation.
Only later, under the impact of seemingly endless imperial rule is the arena
further broadened to include personal life after death as distinct from the
afterlife of future progeny.
Society
As military commander, David becomes the
personification of the Israelite people in its battles with its enemies—most
famously in his hand-to-hand combat with Goliath, the lead warrior of the
Philistines. As king, David becomes the personification of the Israelite people
in their covenant relationship with God, which becomes a more personal relationship
as a result. Because Solomon, David’s son, is now God’s son, by God’s own word,
the Israelites begin to think (and gradually to speak) of themselves as
vicariously God’s children, too. Because this more personal relationship has
been declared an eternal covenant, the phrase “when Messiah comes” becomes a
permanently available vehicle for expressing the hope for victory over
oppression and a restoration of national sovereignty. Because David established
Israelite rule over a number of neighbors (a brief mini-empire), this new
conception of the covenant fosters thinking about God’s relationship with other
peoples. The place reserved for them for these neighbors is that of apprentice
Torah students under Israelite control.
Divinity
After David, Israelites begin to compare God now with
God then. In particular the era of David’s many battlefield victories and of
God’s first, familiar closeness with him combine to form an ideal of the
covenant at its best, a standard against which to measure later conditions, and
even divine behavior itselfr. God himself was at his best, so to speak, back
whehe was working with an anointed king of David’s charismatic caliber.
The Christian
Messianic Covenant (New Testament)
Nature
John Milton brilliantly captured the covenant story of
nature as the New Testament classically understood it. That story has two
parts: Paradise Lost. Paradise Regained. Nature,
surely no longer a paradise, is definitely going to pass away, replaced by a
“new heaven and a new earth” (Revelations 21:1) where God “will wipe away all
tears from their eyes; there will be no more death, and no more mourning or
sadness or pain. The world of the past has gone” (Revelations 21:4). The
miraculous resurrection of Jesus is a foretaste of this messianic
transformation. Until that final miraculous transformation of nature, God can
and may employ nature as it now is to demonstrate his power, as in the miracles
of Jesus, or to send destruction upon his enemies.
Society
The old Abrahamic covenant, reserved for his
genealogical descendants, is now expanded to include his spiritual descendants
as well. In Romans, Paul offers an elaborate argument that those who trust in
God as Abraham did (15:9) will be judged “righteous” just as he was and will deserve
to be brought into covenant with God as Abraham was. Circumcision still marks a
Jew as a Jew, and God wants the Jews as direct descendants of Abraham to
continue the practice, but it does not in itself mark them as “righteous,” he
says. Righteousness—worthiness for and actual membership in a covenant with
God—is something that, like Abraham, Jews and Gentiles alike can only win by
trust, or faith, in God’s promise. Blessedly, this faith is possible for
anyone, circumcised or not (Romans 4:8-9, see “Quote of the Day”).
This
covenant in faith is the law written in the heart that God spoke of to the
prophet Jeremiah. Jeremiah’s new covenant broadens the old so greatly as to
embrace, potentially, all of humankind. The more this happens, the more war will
disappear, because Christians, imitating Christ, will return love for hatred.
Because the new covenant is also a version of the Davidic covenant, it creates
a permanent, filial relationship between Christians and God. By being baptized
“into” Christ, Christians become his brothers and thereby Davidic children of
God themselves. No longer enemies, they are all now “brothers in Christ.”
Divinity
The God of the Jews becomes a Jew as Jesus without
ever ceasing to be God. He undergoes a martyrdom himself on Mount Calvary; he
sacrifices himself to himself as a priest might sacrifice a lamb, and once this
ultimate sacrifice has taken place and been followed by resurrection, no
further animal sacrifice need ever take place (Hebrews 8-9). All that is required
is the recollection of this climactic final sacrifice.
Like
the blood of the bulls at Mt. Sinai, the blood of Christ ratifies this newly
restored and extended covenant with God. The human parties to the covenant need
not be bound by language, territory, gender, social status (slave vs. free),
wealth, learning, or power. Their covenant with God supplants all such
considerations. God is now permanently with them (Revelations 21:3) in the
Davidic way and will remain with them until the end of time when the last tear
is wiped away and this world is replaced by the paradise of the world to come.