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The Historical Jesus and the Origins of Christianity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2009

Extract

The problems of Christian origins are many and varied. Even an incomplete bibliography of works devoted to the beginnings of Christianity, as M. Goguel remarked, would fill a volume of over five hundred pages. But the central and crucial problem, and certainly one of the liveliest issues in theology in our time, is the question of the relation of the historical Jesus to the Christ of the Church's faith. The twentieth century has been marked by a great shift away from the historical Jesus as the centre of theological interest to the Kerygma, the Church's proclamation, the Christ of faith, to Gemeindetheologie and existentialistische Exegese.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Scottish Journal of Theology Ltd 1960

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References

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page 116 note 2 Bultmann was a pupil of Wilhelm Herrmann. His theology has at several stragetic points come under the influence of his teacher, e.g. at the point we are discussing, and also in his understanding of the nature of faith as being its own ground and object. Kähler thought of the ‘historisch’ as the ‘past’ which comes under the scrutiny of the historian as observer. The ‘geschichtlich’ on the other hand is for Kähler the ‘historical’ in the sense of what really happened (Geschehen). Herrmann accentuated the distinction by viewing the ‘historisch’ in a more objective and positivistic way than Kähler as causal sequence of past events. The ministry of Jesus as ‘historisch’ in this sense was in Herrmann's view inaccessible to us. Herrmann then understood the ‘geschichtlich’ in a pyschological sense of the ‘inward consciousness’ of Jesus, of the impact of His personality upon us. Now Kähler wished to show that the Christ-event in its reality, in its ‘geschichtlich’ character, is Jesus clothed with or indwelt by His Gospel, Jesus imbued with His message. It is precisely here that Bultmann is indebted to Kähler, since for Bultmann too Jesus and His message are quite inseparable. But Bultmann has gone beyond Kähler and stands closer to Herrmann, except that the ‘geschichtlich’ is interpreted by him existentially rather than pyschologically. Bultmann would not speak like Herrmann of the ‘inward consciousness’ of Jesus, nor of the impact of His personality, since for Bultmann the Christ-event has objective reality only when and where it confronts me through the Church's proclamation of its message, and effects a change in my understanding of myself. For Bultmann the Christ-event is ‘geschichtlich’ or ‘escatologisch’ as happening here and now for me in and through the Church's preaching. On the other hand Bultmann has always insisted that he accepts the ‘having happenedness’ of the Christ-event. In its ‘pastness’ it is ‘historisch’, though for Bultman all we can know about what really happened is that Jesus preached a message about the impending event of the kingdom of God and died on the Cross. We see how Bultmann has rather radically revised Kähler's position, transferring to the ‘historisch’ much of what Kähler meant by the ‘geschichtlich’. But we do detect throughout Bultmann's work Kähler's notion of the inseparability of Jesus and His message.

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One of the principal charges levelled against Bultmann by his German critics, e.g. Helmut Thielicke, and others, is that his existentialist interpretation of the Christ-event makes the event no more than an act of the human consciousness, and that he has revived Schleiermacher's notion of Erlebnis (psychological consciousness), a catch-word of German theology before the First World War. Bultmann has tried to counter this criticism by affirming the actuality of the Christ-event as real past happening. We know and experience human love only in concrete encounter here and now with the beloved who loves us, and the encounter effects a change in our understanding of ourselves. Although this change in our self-understanding is the all-important thing, no one would care to deny that the beloved exists outside of ourselves. In the same way, to Bultmann's mind, the significant thing is the change in the self-understanding produced by encounter with the Word of the Cross in the Church's preaching, but this does not mean that the redemptive act of God in Christ is not an event outside of ourselves. Nevertheless Bultmann's understanding of the Christ-event is so contemporary, so anthropological, so experience-centred, that the event is really bereft of objective reality. Bultmann does seem to have removed the event from the locus of the historical existence of the Person of Jesus of Nazareth. Has he not thus deprived us of the mystery of the God-Man, and left us merely with the Church's message of the Word of the Cross as God's statement of grace and pardon? Many certainly would feel that Bultmann gives us a poor substitute for the ontological reality or for the spiritual presence of that Other One, who in the abiding mystery of His Person companies with us still. Bultmann's anthropological and experience-centred interpretation of the Christ-event stems of course from the understanding of human existence established by his Heideggerian brand of existentialist analytics. For Bultmann, Dasein, human being, is choice, free personal decision. Human being is a series of encounters and decisions in every concrete moment of the ‘here and now’ of existence. In this way Bultmann appears to deny to human existence temporal continuity and participation in all the relativities of history. It is Bultmann's view of encounter with the Word of the Cross in the Church's preaching that is being called in question in the following pages of this paper, as over against the Church's continuous experience of Jesus of Nazareth, the Christ, in the mystery of His Person.

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