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The Quest for the Lost Jesus [Part 2] : THE MINDSET OF THE MESSIAH
The Quest for the Lost Jesus
Part 2: The Mindset of the Messiah
© Andy Bannister, 2002
You are welcome to email the author at
andybannister@mac.com
A brief recap
Last time, we introduced the subject of Jesus by making the point that if
Muslims wish to say that they honour him then, given the lack of information
about him in the Qur’an, they need to invest some time searching for their lost
Jesus — by getting to grips with his life and ministry as reported in the
accounts contained in the New Testament.
We also looked at a key aspect of the self-understanding of Jesus — the fact
that he considered himself to be utterly unique; not just one in a line of
prophets, but indeed, in a category apart. We showed this by looking at just one
of the parables that Jesus told. To stress the point again; to understand Jesus,
it is not enough just to quote a verse here, a verse there, to try to prove your
point. Whatever and whoever you understand Jesus of Nazareth to have been, if
your understanding cannot deal with all of his teaching, actions, and ministry,
then you are building castles in the air. Quoting mere proof-texts to try to
show that “Jesus was a good Muslim” is not the way to study Jesus. And, indeed,
there is a very good reason why attempts to make Jesus out to be a good Muslim
do not work; it is because this was not what he understood himself to
be.
Who did Jesus think he was?
So if Jesus did not consider himself to be just another prophet, one in a
long line stretching from Adam to Muhammad, who did he understand himself to be?
What categories did he use to explain his actions, his teachings, and his
ministry? The answer is, at one level, simple. Jesus understood himself to be
Israel’s Messiah (in Arabic, ‘al-Masih’, the word that the Qur’an uses). That,
however is where the simplicity ends. For to call Jesus the Messiah simply leads
to another question; “what does 'Messiah' actually mean?” Sadly many Muslims
have not given this question the slightest consideration. Yet it is foundational
to understanding the identity of Jesus of Nazareth. Muslims are not helped in
that the Qur’an makes no attempts to define what ‘al-Masih’ means, to discuss
what it means for someone to be ‘al-Masih’, or what Jesus meant by the term.
To explore the answer to this central question concerning Jesus, you need to
do some digging. Because when Jesus used the word “Messiah”, he was tapping in
to a very ancient Jewish story; a story that informed, guided, and drove the
nation of Israel of which Jesus was a part. It is a story that speaks of the God
who created the world, who set mankind within it, who guided men and women
in order that his purposes might come about. In one sense, this Jewish story
recorded in the Old Testament is the oldest story of all! Hence to understand
Jesus, indeed, to understand creation itself, you need to understand that story
which Jesus, like any good first century Jew, would have been well versed in; it
was a story told in the Jewish Scriptures (what we call the Old Testament),
acted out at feasts and festivals, celebrated in Temple and Synagogue; it is a
story that starts at the very beginning of it all.
In the beginning ...
The Jewish story of God’s relationship with the world starts at the very
beginning of the Bible, in the book of Genesis. Shadows of this story can be
found in the Qur’an, but as with the story of Jesus himself, fundamental aspects
are missing from the Qur’an’s account — this may well be why Muslims have often
struggled to recover their lost Jesus, because the key pieces of the jigsaw
cannot be found in the Qur’an. Rather you need to turn to the Old Testament,
specifically to Genesis 1-3, to start to lay the framework for what Jesus meant
when he spoke of being the Messiah.
We read in Genesis 1-2 of how God created the heavens and the earth, and
everything that can be found in the created order. What is also significant is
what we read after God has completed this creative process:
And God saw everything that he had made, and
behold, it was very good. And there was evening and there was morning, a sixth
day. (Genesis 1:31)
Right at the beginning of the Bible, we read that God’s creation was good —
he was pleased with that with which he was made. This is a vital aspect of the
Jewish-Christian story of beginnings; God does not divide things into ‘spiritual
and good’ and ‘earthly and bad’, a way of thinking found in some religions
today. Some religious people think that life is all about doing one’s best to
please God, so that you can escape to a ‘better place’ (paradise or heaven).
However, this is not what Genesis says. Created things are not bad, indeed the
whole of the universe is very good indeed — creation as God first made it,
was a very good thing.
But it is what follows next that is of primary importance for understanding
the Jewish story and, in our case, understanding what Jesus saw his Messianic
role as being all about. For once he has completed the rest of creation, God
then creates man and woman:
Then God said, “Let us make mankind in our
image, after our likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of the
sea, and over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the
earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps upon the earth.”
So God
created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and
female he created them. (Genesis 1:26-27)
God creates man and woman, the very pinnacle of his creation, according to
the Bible; but the vital part of the narrative is that mankind was created in
the image of God. The result of missing this has massive consequences — it
will cause you to misunderstand God, misunderstand humanity, and misunderstand
Jesus. Some Muslims have occasionally asked questions like “how can humans be in
God’s image — God is utterly different from his creation?” But mixing up
creation and the creator is not what this story is about. I know of no Jewish or
Christian scholar writing today who would say that this verse
suggests humans are in any way divine. Rather, the image of God tells us about
the role of human beings in God’s creation. Just as an ancient king would place
statues or images of himself throughout his empire, to pronounce to his subjects
that it was his power that was supreme, so human beings are in the image of God:
‘Adam was meant to represent God within his
creation’ [1]
When God makes men and women in his image, ‘he
does not mean them to look like him, or to be made of the same stuff. Rather
he intends them to be a kind of extension of his own personality, and a
fundamental part of his own activity in the world. They are his
representatives.’ [2]
The idea that human beings are God’s image or representatives runs through
the whole of the Bible like a golden thread. Why does God forbid human beings to
murder? Because humans are made in God’s image (Genesis 9:6). Why is God so
concerned that human beings live sinless, righteous lives? In order that they
may accurately represent him within creation; God is perfect and thus expects
his representatives to accurately reflect that perfection (e.g. Matt 5:48).
However, the next part of the Genesis story tells of how Adam and Eve
disobeyed God and broke the relationship between humankind and God. Once again,
the Qur’an (Surah 2:30-39) has borrowed the biblical story, but misses many of
the most important points. The result of the sin of the first human couple is
not only that human beings are separated from God but that creation itself was
damaged when they rebelled; we have seen how Adam and Eve were the high point of
creation, God’s representatives within it. They not only failed God in sinning,
but failed their responsibility to creation as well:
Cursed is the ground because of you; in toil
you shall eat of it all the days of your life; thorns and thistles it shall
bring forth to you; and you shall eat the plants of the field. (Genesis
3:17-18).
And with sin also came, for the first time, human death, as God had warned
(Genesis 2:17):
... until you return to the ground, since from
it you were taken, and to it you will return. (Genesis 3:19)
Central to the whole Bible is the idea that mankind and creation are
inseparably linked. Unlike the Qur’an’s account of creation, God did not set
Adam and Eve in some heavenly paradise from which they sinned and were cast down
to earth (Surah 7:24). Rather, he created human beings to be responsible for and
look after the rest of creation, to be his representatives within it. And,
unlike the Qur’an, the Bible does not present paradise as an otherworldly place
disconnected from reality, but speaks of God restoring the whole of creation
to the way it was intended to be.
Adam, Israel, and God’s true humanity
The creation and the sin of Adam is just the beginning of the Jewish story
which we need to understand if we are to grasp the mindset of Jesus. God had
intended humankind as a whole to be his representatives, but they had failed in
this task. So the story of the Old Testament moves on to the person of Abraham
(or Abram as he was called before he met God). God had a very special plan for
Abraham, when he called him to leave his homeland and travel to a new country:
God said to Abraham ... “I will make you a
great nation and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will
be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will
curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.”
(Genesis 12:1-3)
This promise to Abraham is foundational to the rest of the Old Testament and
to the understanding that Jesus had of what it meant to be the Messiah. Indeed,
one could trace the Muslim loss of Jesus right back to Abraham himself.
Understand what God promised to Abraham and how that was fulfilled, the purposes
of God behind that promise that the Old Testament reveals, and you are well on
the way to correctly approaching Jesus. So important is this promise to Abraham
that we find that God repeats it to him on a number of occasions where more of
the details are fleshed out:
God said to Abraham, “know for certain that
your descendants will be strangers in a country not their own, and they will
be enslaved and ill-treated for 400 years. But I will punish the nation they
serve as slaves, and afterwards they will come out with great possessions.”
(Genesis 15:13-14)
God promises to turn Abraham into a great nation through the
long-hoped-for son, Isaac. A nation who will indeed be enslaved; the story of
Israel’s ill-treatment by the Egyptians and their rescue by God is one of the
most important themes in the Old Testament. But a key question to ask here is
why? Why did God choose to raise Abraham up into a nation, to miraculously
provide him and his wife with a child, Isaac, to do so. What does it mean that
all nations on earth will be blessed through Israel? These are important
questions, and have to do with the role of Israel in God’s plans and purposes as
revealed in the Old Testament [3]. The Bible answers this question for us very
clearly in a number of places. Here are just a few of the key verses:
When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out
of Egypt I called my son. (Hosea 11:1)
God has declared this day concerning you that you are a people for his
own possession, as he has promised you, and that you are to keep all his
commandments, that he will set you high above all nations that he has made, in
praise and in fame and in honour, and that you shall be a people holy to the
Lord your God, as he has spoken. (Deuteronomy 26:18-19)
And God said, “You are my servant, Israel, in whom I will be
glorified.’
‘It is too light a thing that you should be my servant to raise
up the tribes of Jacob and to restore the preserved of Israel; I will give you
as a light to the nations, that my salvation may reach to the end of the
earth.” (Isaiah 49:3,6)
What, then, do we see in these verses and
throughout the whole Old Testament? We see that God has chosen Israel to be his
special people, that they will be holy and set apart, and, crucially, that they
shall be a light to the other nations of the earth. Think back to what we saw
concerning Adam and Eve, how God had created them to be his representatives. The
Old Testament teaches that this role had now passed through Abraham to Israel.
As leading biblical scholar Tom Wright has expressed it:
‘Abraham and his family inherit, in a measure,
the role of Adam and Eve ...we could sum up this aspect of Genesis by saying:
Israel are God’s true humanity.’ [4]
‘Jewish covenant theology claims that God has not
been thwarted irrevocably by the rebellion of his creation, but has called
into being a people through whom he will work to restore his creation ...
Israel is to be the people through whom the creator will bless his creation
once more.’ [5]
The hope of a nation
Yet just as Adam and Eve rebelled against God, so too did Israel. The people
that God had called as his special men and women, those through whom the rest of
the world would see his glory fell into sin and rebellion. The prophetic books
in the Old Testament recount time and time again how God called his people
Israel, through the prophets, back into the kind of relationship with him that
would mean they might fulfil their purpose and that the rest of the world might
see God revealed through them. In the words of the prophet Jeremiah:
Return, faithless Israel, says the Lord God, I
will not look on you in anger, for I am merciful, I will not be angry for
ever. Only acknowledge your guilt, that you rebelled against the Lord your God
and scattered your favours among strangers under every green tree, and that
you have not obeyed my voice, says the Lord God.
Return, O faithless
children, says the Lord God; for I am your master; I will take you, one from a
city and two from a family, and I will bring you to Zion. And I will give you
shepherds after my own heart, who will feed you with knowledge and
understanding.
And when you have multiplied and increased in the land, in
those days, says the LORD, they shall no more say, “The ark of the covenant of
the Lord God.” It shall not come to mind, or be remembered, or missed; it
shall not be made again.
At that time Jerusalem shall be called the
throne of the Lord God, and all nations shall gather to it, to the presence of
the Lord God in Jerusalem, and they shall no more stubbornly follow their own
evil heart. (Jeremiah 3:12-17)
Note the examples here of all the themes we have been discussing. Israel
rebelled and disobeyed God, and in the process one of their most sacred
religious objects — the ark of the covenant had been lost. Now the nation of
Israel are in exile, yet God has not forgotten them. The promise is clear — if
they cease their rebellion and return to God, then he will carry out his
promises and prosper them. All nations will gather to Israel because through her
they will experience the power of the Lord God himself. It was this kind of
promise that kept God’s people hoping and praying during the long years of
oppression, exile, and persecution.
This is what the Lord God Almighty says: “Many
peoples and the inhabitants of many cities will yet come, and the inhabitants
of one city will go to another and say, ‘Let us go at once to pray to the
Lord, to seek the Lord God Almighty. I myself am going.’ And many peoples
and powerful nations will come to Jerusalem to seek the Lord Almighty and to
pray to him.”
(Zechariah 8:20-22)
By the time of the first century, the time period in which Jesus lived,
Israel had already lived through one exile, when God carried out what he had
promised above and used the Babylonians to punish his people. But now Israel was
living under a new oppressor — the Romans ruled Palestine and to those Jews who
were still loyal to God, it seemed like they were living in exile once again.
But the Old Testament was very clear — God would not abandon his people to their
fate but would one day, soon, intervene dramatically in history to vindicate and
rescue Israel just like he had done when he had rescued them from Egypt in the
time of Moses, over a thousand years before. See how in this passage from the
prophet Isaiah, God reminds his people of their time in Egypt, and promises a
new rescue plan — a new kind of Exodus. When God acted to rescue his people
Israel, all the nations of the earth would see God’s salvation plan in action
...
For this is what the Sovereign Lord God says,
“At first my people went down to Egypt to live; lately, Assyria has
oppressed them. And now what do I have here?” declares the Lord God. “For
my people have been taken away for nothing, and those who rule them mock,”
declares the Lord God. “All day long my name is constantly blasphemed.
Therefore my people will know my name; therefore in that day they will know
that it is I who foretold it. Yes, it is I.”
How beautiful on the
mountains are the feet of those who bring good news, who proclaim peace, who
bring good tidings, who proclaim salvation, who say to Zion, “Your God
reigns!”. Listen! Your watchmen lift up their voices; together they shout for
joy. When the Lord God returns to Zion, they will see it with their own eyes.
Burst into songs of joy together, you ruins of Jerusalem, for the Lord has
comforted his people, he has redeemed Jerusalem. The Lord will lay bare his
holy arm in the sight of all the nations, and all the ends of the earth
will see the salvation of our God.” (Isaiah 52:4-10)
Passages like those from Zechariah, Jeremiah and Isaiah formed the backbone
of a passionate hope that was a central feature of Judaism of the first century.
And to understand Jesus you need to understand this key idea. The Jews of his
day were living in tremendous hope. They knew God had promised to act to
rescue them once again, to restore them to kind of people he intended Israel to
be. He would restore the fortunes of Israel so that the rest of the world would
see God’s power and sovereignty demonstrated through his chosen people. This was
a tremendous hope and it was all focussed in the person of the Messiah. The
Messiah would be the one who God would use to restore Israel, to defeat the
Romans, and to bring his all powerful rule to bear on all the earth:
‘This, then, was the hope of Israel. And it was a
strong one. Its roots went far back into their national and religious
identity. It was fed by the belief that one day the Lord God would restore the
fortunes of Israel. Such an event would take place through the nation in
general and through the agency of his chosen leader, the anointed one, the
Messiah, in particular.
Their God, then, would rescue them, restore them, make good the desolation,
despair and depression they had long experienced. Ruling nation after ruling
nation oppressed them, but still the hope remained. A national and collective
hope that was located in one particular figure. This figure would be their
saviour. The evidence would be seen in what was done. And what was
achieved would happen by virtue of being empowered by the very Spirit of God.
There had to be the Spirit’s anointing. As such, this individual would be the
“Anointed One”: in Hebrew, the word "Messiah", in Greek, the word "Christ".
[6]
Note the words in bold above. A key thing one must always remember about the
word ‘Messiah’ is that to a first century Jew, such as Jesus, it was a very
practical word. Being the Messiah was something one was by virtue of what one
did. This is why we have spent so much time establishing the Jewish story in the
Bible up to the point of Jesus. Because, from a biblical point of view, it is
very clear what the Messiah had to do:
- Restore Israel so that God’s glory was reflected by his chosen people.
- A properly restored Israel would function as Adam should have done, as
God’s representative.
- Thus a properly restored Israel would be, in effect, a properly restored
humanity; the mistake made by Adam and Eve that wrecked the relationship
between humankind and God, that spoiled the perfect creation that God had
made, would be reversed when God acted through his Messiah.
So what did Jesus make of this concept of Messiah, a word on which were
pinned the hopes of over a thousand years of Old Testament history? The answer
is a very great deal indeed.
Jesus and the role of “Messiah”
Both Christians and Muslims agree that Jesus understood himself to be the
Messiah. But what we have done so far in this paper is to examine what “Messiah”
meant to a first century Jew. The Qur’an does Muslims a great disservice in not
explaining what Messiah (or ‘al-Masih’) means, because without this background,
you will not understand the significance or the uniqueness of Jesus. Here is one
of the most famous passages in the Bible where Jesus talks about being the
Messiah:
Jesus and his disciples were on the way to the
villages around Caesarea Philippi. On the way he asked them, “Who do people
say that I am?”
His disciples replied, “Some say John the Baptist; others
say Elijah; and still others, one of the prophets.”
“But what about you?”
he asked. “Who do you say that I am?”
Peter answered “You are the Christ.”
Jesus warned them not to tell anyone about him. He then began to teach
them that the Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the
elders, chief priests, and teachers of the law, and that he must be killed and
after three days rise again. He spoke plainly about this, and Peter took him
aside and began to rebuke him.
But when Jesus turned and looked at his
disciples, he rebuked Peter. “Get behind me, Satan!” he said. “You do not have
in mind the things of God, but the things of men.” (Mark 8:27-33)
The passage is extremely interesting for a number of reasons. Firstly, the
disciples answer to the question of Jesus (“who do people say that I am?”)
revealed the wide range of opinions that people had about Jesus. Differing
opinions about who Jesus was (as Muslims and Christians disagree today) is not
new, but had begun during the ministry of Jesus himself. The popular view seems
to have been that Jesus was a famous prophet risen from the dead, perhaps John
the Baptist (recently executed by King Herod), or Elijah. But Jesus rejects
those answers, pressing the disciples further — “Who do you say that I am?” Peter
answers clearly, that Jesus is the Messiah. So far, so good. But look what comes
next. Jesus begins to outline some of the things that must happen to the
Messiah, as far as he is concerned. Jesus states clearly that the religious
establishment of the day will reject him, kill him, but that he will then be
raised from the dead. This is all too much for Peter. In Peter’s mind, being
killed is not what should happen to the Messiah. Quite what Peter exactly
believed about the Messiah is unclear, but it seems very likely that, along with
many first century Jews, he would have believed that the Messiah should be a
powerful military leader, through whom the Romans would be overthrown and God’s
people vindicated. This was perhaps the most popular idea of what the Messiah
would be like in the first century, yet is was one that Jesus went to lengths to
separate himself from. His understanding of what it meant to be the Messiah did
not include leading a military campaign against the Romans:
Then Jesus said to them, “Give to Caesar what
is Caesar’s, and to God what is God’s”. (Matthew 22:21)
Then the men stepped forward, seized Jesus and arrested him. With that,
one of Jesus’ companions reached for his sword, drew it out and struck the
servant of the high priest, cutting off his ear. “Put your sword back in its
place,” Jesus said to him, “for all who draw the sword will die by the
sword.” (Matthew 26:50-52)
Jesus said to Pilate, “My kingdom is not of this world. If it were, my
servants would fight to prevent my arrest by the Jews. But now my kingdom is
from another place.”
“You are a king, then!” said Pilate.
Jesus
answered, “You are right in saying I am a king ...” (John 18:36-37)
So if Jesus rejected a highly political interpretation of what being the
Messiah meant (the popular interpretation, that which would seek to overthrow
the Romans by force and bring God’s Kingdom about by violence) what did he
understand by the term “Messiah”. How did he interpret “Messiah” in the light of
all of the Hebrew story that we have studied? This is the crucial point that
Muslims need to grasp. When you speak of Jesus, whatever understanding you have
of him needs to make sense of creation and Adam, of Israel and God’s true
humanity, and of God’s promises to his people to save them and vindicate them,
to use them as a light to draw all the nations to himself. What did Jesus say
about his understanding of Messiahship? To answer that question, we need to look
at the first public occasion where Jesus announces, for those who are aware and
are listening, that he is Israel’s promised Messiah:
Jesus went to Nazareth, where he had been
brought up, and on the Sabbath day he went into the synagogue, as was his
custom. And he stood up to read. The scroll of the prophet Isaiah was handed
to him. Unrolling it, he found the place where it is written:
“The Spirit
of the Lord God is upon me,
because he has anointed me to preach good news
to the poor,
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and
recovery of sight for the blind,
to release the oppressed,
to proclaim
the year of the Lord’s favour.”
Then Jesus rolled up the scroll, gave it
back to the attendant and sat down. The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were
fastened on him, and he began saying to them, “Today this scripture is
fulfilled in your hearing.” (Luke 4:16-21)
Jesus’ words must have shocked the first hearers, but two thousand years on
we have lost something of the impact. “Today this scripture is fulfilled in
your hearing.” Jesus was not quoting any old section of the Old Testament,
but was reading from Isaiah 61:1-2. The passage is a crucial one because it
speaks of many of the key themes that we have already seen in our study of the
Hebrew Old Testament story. Here is the entire of the passage that Jesus read
bits from that day in the synagogue in Nazareth:
The Spirit of the Lord God is upon
me,
because God has anointed me to preach good news to the poor,
He has
sent me to bind up the broken-hearted,
to proclaim freedom for the captives
and release from darkness for the prisoners,
to proclaim the year of the
Lord’s favour and the day of vengeance of our God,
to comfort all
who mourn and provide for those who grieve in Zion -
to bestow on them
a crown of beauty instead of ashes,
the oil of gladness instead of
mourning,
and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair.
They
will be called oaks of righteousness,
a planting of the Lord God for the
display of his splendour.
They will rebuild the ancient ruins and
restore the places long devastated;
they will renew the ancient cities that
have been devastated for generations.
Aliens will shepherd your flocks;
foreigners will work your fields and vineyards.
And you will be called
priests of the Lord God,
you will be named ministers of our God.
You
will feed on the wealth of nations, and in their riches you will
boast.
Instead of their shame my people will receive a double
portion,
and instead of disgrace they will rejoice in their
inheritance;
and so they will inherit a double portion in the land,
and
everlasting joy will be theirs.
For, I, the Lord God, love justice, I hate
robbery and sin.
In my faithfulness I will reward them, and make an
everlasting covenant with them.
Their descendants will be known among
the nations and their offspring among the peoples.
All who see them
will acknowledge that they are a people the Lord God has
blessed.
(Isaiah 61:1-9)
Like all of the Old Testament passages we examined before,
Isaiah 61:1-9 speaks of God acting dramatically to vindicate and save his
people, causing all the nations to look to them to see what God has done. When
Jesus quoted this passage, and said “today this scripture is fulfilled in
your hearing” what he was saying was this — that the promises of God that
you have been hoping, longing, and praying for are coming true. Jesus was not
proposing a political Messiahship, one that saw the overthrow of the Romans as
an end in itself. He was interested in something else entirely; bringing to pass
those age old promises of God concerning his people. God intended that Israel
would represent his true, normal humanity, as Adam was supposed to have done,
and God promised that he would act to bring that about. Jesus was saying that
the waiting was over, that this was happening now. And as we shall see in a
later part in this series, what was so radical about Jesus was that he said that
these promises of God were coming true in and through his own life and
ministry. His understanding of what it meant that he was the Messiah can be
summed up thus:
'Jesus’ whole announcement of the kingdom of God
indicates that he believed that kingdom to be present where he was, and
operative through him personally. He believed that Israel’s destiny was
reaching its fulfilment in his life, that he was to fight Israel’s
battles, and that he should summon Israel to regroup, and find new identity
around him ... Jesus, then, believed himself to the focal point of the people
of God, the returned-from-exile people, the people of the renewed covenant,
the people whose sins were now to be forgiven.' [7]
In the first part of “The Quest for the Lost Jesus”, we showed why Muhammad
cannot possibly have been a prophet after Jesus, unless one is to reject
everything that Jesus believed and stood for. Having begun to examine what
Messiahship is all about, what Jesus was thinking and doing in claiming to be
the Messiah, we see this point even more clearly. If Jesus was right, and he was
indeed Israel’s Messiah, then there would be no more prophets. There would be no
need. The Parable of the Vineyard that Jesus told (which was quoted in full last
time) falls perfectly into place. Jesus understood that his job as the Messiah
was to complete the history of Israel, to conclude the story of God that began
with creation and God’s desire to have a humanity who accurately represented him
within that creation. The job of the Messiah was to restore Israel to be the
true humanity she was called to be, and then through Israel the world would know
who God was and would come to be saved. There is no room in such a scheme for
later prophets, because that was never God’s plan. Jesus was the climax of God’s
dealing with the world, his restoring the true Israel to be his people, that all
the nations of the world might see him represented by those true people. And
what did Jesus consider the badge of membership of God’s true people to be? It
depended upon how you reacted personally to him:
Jesus answered, “If you want to be perfect,
go, sell your possessions and give to the poor and you will have treasure in
heaven. Then come, follow me”. (Matthew 19:21)
“For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but
to save the world through him. Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but
whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed
in the name of God’s one and only Son.” (John 3:17-18)
If Jesus was the true Messiah, if he achieved what he set out to do, then God
has acted dramatically in the world — and whether or not one is part of God’s
true humanity, a “normal human being” as opposed to a broken human being,
still trapped in rebellion and sin, all hangs on how one responds to God’s
Messiah, Jesus. An invitation to respond that God throws open to all the
world.
After Part I of this series appeared last month, I had emails from Muslims
asking how best to go about studying more about the historical Jesus of
Nazareth. To answer this question, I suggest the following:
- Read the New Testament and get to grips with Jesus. In terms of
readability, I would usually recommend that you start with Luke, move on to
Matthew, and then read Mark and John. As you read, constantly ask the question
“why is Jesus saying this or doing that?” In other words, try to engage with
and respond to the text. The gospels were not written to be read in a dry
academic way; they are designed to bring the story of Jesus vividly to life.
If you do not have access to a Bible, you can read one online at http://bible.gospelcom.net/.
- For practical information on how to study the Bible and the message of the
prophets, have a look at http://injil.org/TWOR/. This helpful web
site is written particularly with Muslims in mind, aware that they may never
have tried to read the Bible for themselves before.
- A good introduction to the historical Jesus of Nazareth can be found in N
T Wright, The Challenge of Jesus (SPCK, 2000). Although reasonably
academic, the book is much simpler than the other 1,200 pages Wright has
written on Jesus. He is presently one of the world’s leading scholars when it
comes to studying Jesus and this series has drawn upon his work. You can
obtain a copy from any good bookstore, including Amazon.co.uk
(or, for US readers, Amazon.com.)
“The Quest for the Lost Jesus” is a new, regular
series at Answering Islam. The author will attempt to produce new papers in the
series on average once every 8 weeks. In the meantime, if you have any questions
or comments, please do feel free to email me at andybannister@mac.com. Although I am
very busy and may not be able to reply immediately, I will always respond to any
emails as soon as possible. Thanks for reading, and I pray that God may guide
you as you seek to study and discover more of who Jesus really was.
Footnotes and references
To return to the the main body of the text, click on the
footnote number you have just followed.
| 1 |
Graham McFarlane, Why do you believe what you believe
about Jesus? (Carlisle: Paternoster Press, 2000) p77. |
| 2 |
John Drane, Introducing the Old Testament (Oxford:
Lynx, 1987) p250. |
| 3 |
When I speak in this paper of “Israel” be careful not to
confuse the word with the political nation-state of Israel today. They are
two utterly different concepts. In the Bible, “Israel” refers to the
nation that God raised up through Abraham, whom God called to be his
special people, revealing him to the other nations of the world. As we
shall in a later part in this series, Jesus radically redefined the term
“Israel”. But in many Muslim minds “Israel” has all kinds of connotations
in the 21st century world; this mental baggage should be left behind when
we turn back to examine the first century. |
| 4 |
N T Wright, The Climax of the Covenant (Edinburgh: T
& T Clark, 1998) 22-23. |
| 5 |
N T Wright, The New Testament and the People of God
(London: SPCK, 1992) 260-262. |
| 6 |
McFarlane, 44. |
| 7 |
N T Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (London:
SPCK, 1999) 530-539. |
Articles by Andy Bannister
Who is Jesus?
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