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FASCINATING
BUT FUNDAMENTALLY AND FATALLY FLAWED
A review of David Klinghoffer’s Why
the Jews Rejected Jesus:
The Turning Point of Western History (New York: Doubleday,
2005), viii, 247 pp.
(This review was published in the Israeli journal Mishkan, September
2005)
by Michael L. Brown
In this slender but wide-ranging volume, David
Klinghoffer, a highly literate, Orthodox Jewish journalist, puts
forth a bold, pioneering thesis: People should be thankful that
the Jews rejected Jesus, otherwise, there would have been no Christianity,
in which case the world today would be a far worse place. Simply
stated, “The Jewish rejection of Christ made possible the
sublime culture of Europe in which Felix Mendelssohn flourished,
as well as the sublime politics of America whose blessings we
enjoy. … For this, thank the Jews” (220).
And what would have happened if the Jews had, in fact,
embraced Jesus as Messiah? “Had the Jews embraced Jesus
… in every key respect, the Jesus movement might have remained
a Jewish sect” – by which he clearly means an Orthodox
Jewish sect, as if later rabbinic halakha was extant in the first
century (7). As a result, “Christianity would not have spread
wildly across the Roman Empire and later across Europe, as it
did. … A ‘Jewish’ Christianity would have stood
as much chance of taking hold of huge numbers of people as a church
nowadays that asks all members to earn a master’s degree
in theology. … Because the Jews rejected Paul, there is
such a thing as Christian civilization” (8, 99).
After a brief Introduction (“Thank the Jews,” 1-10),
Klinghoffer argues that “Judaism in the Year 27” was
predominantly Pharisaical – note that he consistently and
anachronistically refers to the Pharisees as “the rabbis”
– with a pronounced (and also anachronistic) emphasis on
the centrality of the oral law (11-38). The person of Jesus is
then introduced in a non-hostile fashion, typical of the tone
of the entire volume. (That is to say, where Klinghoffer disagrees,
he does so graciously.) Unfortunately, in a discussion that could
have easily occupied scores of full-length monographs, covering
aspects of Jesus’ life, message, and self-awareness, Klinghoffer,
like an investigative reporter, lets us know what is and is not
believable about the Gospel accounts, but with no hint of any
guiding methodological principles (39-71; see, e.g., 43, “I
present neither an ethical nor an apocalyptic but instead a foxy,
ambiguous Jesus”). In similar fashion, the reader is left
to guess just how the author knows exactly how “any biblically
literate Jew” would have responded to Jesus or the claims
made about him by his followers, a concept raised repeatedly (see,
e.g., 65).
The chapters that follow deal with the death and resurrection
of Jesus (72-89, acknowledging some Jewish complicity in Jesus’
death, as per the Talmud and Maimonides); the apostle Paul, presented
as not Jewish by birth and ignorant of Hebrew, and as someone
who distorted the teachings of Jesus – indeed, he presented
a non-Jewish Jesus! – and made the new faith acceptable
to the gentile world (90-118); Jewish-“Christian”
interaction before Constantine (119-149); medieval Jewish-Christian
debates (150-181); the modern debate (182-212); and a concluding
chapter on the priesthood of the Jews (213-222) claiming that,
“It would seem the Christian church now plays the role of
congregation, as the Muslim ummah also does, with the
Jews serving in the ministerial position” (219).
How should we respond to this thesis? Since space precludes a
fuller analysis, the following critique of his most salient points
will have to suffice. But first, the positive:
- Although the survey is, at times, anachronistic, Klinghoffer
does provide a useful, cogent summary of why so many Jews have
rejected and continue to reject Jesus as Messiah.
- He accurately points out Judaism’s love for the commandments
of the Torah, contrasting this with his reading of Paul’s
aversion to the commandments. This again provides a useful perspective.
- He paves the way for further dialogue by being irenic in tone
as well as transparent, admitting a valid point when he sees
one. Indeed, he invites further dialog and disputation.
- He brings to light the primary Talmudic texts that seem to
speak of Jesus (with great disparagement, of course), recognizing
that these texts are readily available to “Jew haters”
and scholars.
- He paints a broad historical picture in roughly 200 pages,
bringing the reader up to the present day and showing the contemporary
relevance of an ancient controversy. His summary of the medieval
debates, although naturally biased, makes for good reading.
- He appreciates Christianity’s contributions to Western
society.
The book’s weaknesses, however, outweigh its strengths:
- His overall analysis of history is superficial, making broad
assumptions. For example, he asks whether Islam’s “armies
would have confronted a Europe that was a spiritual vacuum,
which Muhammad’s teachings would likely have filled”
(218). But how do we know that, without Christianity, there
even would have been an Islam that arose in the seventh century?
And how do we know what would have happened if many more Jews
actually accepted the Messiahship of Jesus while recognizing
that the Gentiles were not required to come under the full yoke
of the Torah? What would have happened if the Church had not
lost sight of its Jewish roots?
- Klinghoffer notes that a more accurate – albeit less
felicitous – title of the book might have been, Why
the Jews Who Rejected Jesus Did So (90). This is correct.
However, as will be seen shortly, the real key to the
“turning point of Western history” was the Jewish
acceptance of Jesus, since it was only through that Jewish acceptance
that the good news of the Messiah made a worldwide impact.
- Klinghoffer’s presentation of pre-70 CE Judaism in strongly
Pharisaic terms is too monolithic, with later rabbinic concepts
of “oral Torah” also painted back into that earlier
setting. Not only does this minimize the opposition Jesus had
from the Sadducees during his lifetime (see Matt 3:7; 16:1,
6, 11-12; 22:23, 34; see further Acts 4:1; 5:17 for later developments),
but it overly simplifies the conflict between Jesus and the
Pharisees, a conflict that many scholars understand to be an
in-house conflict.1 As for
the concept of oral law, while there is no doubt that Jesus
differed with some (or many) of the traditions of the
Pharisees, there is not a hint in the Gospels – or in
most early rabbinic literature – of the concept of a binding,
authoritative, oral law passed on from Sinai.2
In truth, there was a conflict between Jesus and the Pharisees,
but passages such as John 5:1-18, the Sabbath healing of lame
man who is then instructed to carry his mat, deal more with
Jesus’ exposing how the traditions had blinded the leaders
to the spirit of the Torah rather than presenting a complete
rejection of all traditions. (See, e.g., 56: “The rabbis
took such matters [speaking of the prohibition against carrying
on the Sabbath] seriously. Jesus didn’t.”)
- Klinghoffer fails to grasp the depth of Matthew’s hermeneutic
(along with the hermeneutic of other NT authors), noting, “Pointing
out the imprecision of proof texts like these, one feels almost
unsporting. It’s too easy” (66). To the contrary,
as top Matthew scholars have observed, “Matthew was not
above scattering items in his Greek text whose deeper meaning
could only be appreciated by those with a knowledge of Hebrew.
Indeed, it might even be that Matthew found authorial delight
in hiding ‘bonus points’ for those willing and able
to look a little beneath the gospel’s surface.”3
At times it is clear that Klinghoffer simply failed to get the
NT author’s point (see again 66, citing Matt 2:23 and
Isa 11:1).
- In treating Paul, Klinghoffer is greatly influenced by Hyam
Maccobby’s The Mythmaker, one of the more marginal
works in Pauline scholarship in the last twenty years.4
(Ironically, Maccobby also wrote a volume entitled Jesus
the Pharisee, which undermines one of the major premises
of Klinghoffer’s study.5
) First, Klinghoffer rejects the increasing scholarly consensus
that sees Paul as thoroughly Jewish in thought, not even interacting
with Jewish scholarship about Paul. Cf., e.g., Joseph Klausner:
“It would be difficult to find more typically Talmudic
expositions of Scripture than those in the Epistles of Paul.”6
More recently, cf. Alan Segal, “Without knowing about
first century Judaism, modern readers – even those committed
by faith to reading him – are bound to misconstrue Paul’s
writing. … Paul is a trained Pharisee who became the apostle
to the Gentiles.”7 See
also Daniel Boyarin, “Paul has left us an extremely precious
document for Jewish studies, the spiritual autobiography of
a first-century Jew. … Moreover, if we take Paul at his
word – and I see no a priori reason not to – he
was a member of the Pharisaic wing of first-century Judaism…”8
How, one must ask, did this ignorant deceiver manage to debate
in the synagogues for weeks on end? Second – and this
is one of the most fatal flaws to the entire volume –
he does not believe that Paul refused to reject the Torah for
Jews; the book of Acts goes out of its way to remove this false
accusation (see Acts 21:17-26; note also 18:18!). Rather, Paul
preached that for all people, salvation came through repentance
towards God and faith in Jesus (see Acts 20:21), but God did
not require the Gentiles to follow all the Torah’s
obligations. And Paul understood his mission to the Gentiles
because he understood the priestly calling of the Jews! See
Romans 15:16 where he speaks of his “priestly duty”
to proclaim the gospel of God to the Gentiles. (For more on
this, see the concluding remarks.) Third, as Romans 9-11 makes
clear, Paul did not give up on Israel. Rather, he continued
to see Israel’s ultimate salvation as the key to world
redemption (Rom 11:11-27). Fourth, as other scholars have demonstrated,
the teachings of Jesus and Paul are in complete and fundamental
harmony, with the latter rightly building on the former.9
- Klinghoffer delineates the prophetic requirements for the
Messiah’s mission in Maimonidean clarity. (In reality,
the clear and systematic understanding put forth by Klinghoffer
is hardly found in any rabbinic texts prior to Maimonides in
the 12th century.) Thus, he claims that the Jewish contemporaries
of Jesus, based on the messianic prophecies of Jeremiah, Ezekiel,
Daniel, and others, would have understood that, among other
things, all the exiles would have to be regathered and the present
temple replaced by a messianic temple (34, 71). Not only does
this present an overly simplistic interpretation of first-century
Jewish thought,10 it also fails
to place those prophecies in their historical context, one in
which the first temple had just been destroyed by the Babylonians
and many Jews had been exiled. By the first century, many of
those exiles had long since returned and the temple had already
been rebuilt, giving a context to the messianic expectation
that was extant at that time.11
Klinghoffer does note that a contemporary apologetic work proves
“it is possible to construe the Hebrew prophets
as pointing to Jesus” – albeit, according to Klinghoffer,
in a highly strained and unlikely manner (210) – yet at
times he fails to grasp the force of the arguments he refutes
(see, e.g., 204).12
- Because Klinghoffer is neither a biblical nor rabbinic scholar
– he makes no claims to this at all – the work is
marred by highly unlikely interpretations, misreading of sources,
and even wrong citations. This undercuts the book’s credibility
as a whole. For just a sampling see 94, which claims, quite
remarkably, that during Paul’s final visit to Jerusalem
(see Acts 21) he was seized and almost murdered by “Certain
Jewish believers in Jesus [sic!], apparently taking a different
view of Judaism from Paul’s”; 97, where it is claimed
that Acts admits that “the Jews regarded Paul as ‘uneducated,’”
citing Acts 4:13 (which, of course is the charge against Peter
and John, long before Paul was on the scene; for a statement
in Acts on Paul’s learning, see Acts 26:24b); 230, n.
19, where E. P. Sanders is cited “For a telling example
of how Paul’s Hebrew illiteracy shaped his understanding
of the Bible,” whereas in reality Sanders was simply treating
Paul’s use of the LXX in Gal 3:10. Given the very serious
nature of Klinghoffer’s proposal, more careful, scholarly
editing would have allowed for more serious discussion of his
ideas.
To Klinghoffer’s credit, his well-received volume has stimulated
fresh dialogue and debate, which is always healthy, and the spirit
in which he has written certainly causes one to put down his or
her defenses. Yet it is only by standing his thesis on its head
– thus, Because Jews Accepted Jesus: The Turning Point
of Western History – that truth emerges. Once this
is understood, especially with regard to Paul’s role, Klinghoffer’s
volume actually serves as an apologetic for the opposite
of what he was trying to prove. For this, I, as a Jewish follower
of Jesus, thank this fellow Jewish author.
1For
a convenient summary, see William E. Phipps, The
Wisdom and Wit of Rabbi Jesus (Louisville: John Knox/Westminster,
1993), 8-30, where Jesus is presented as a "Prophetic Pharisee,"
with reference to other scholarly literature.
2Cf.
Jacob Neusner, What, Exactly, Did the Rabbinic Sages
Mean by "the Oral Torah": An Inductive Answer to the Question
of Rabbinic Judaism (South Florida Studies in the
History of Judaism, 196; Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1998).
3W.
D. Davies and Dale C. Allison, Jr., The Gospel According
to Saint Matthew, Vol. 1 (ICC; Edinburgh: T & T Clark,
1988), 279, with reference to R. T. France.
4The
Mythmaker: Paul and the Invention of Christianity
(New York: Harper & Row, 1986); note that Maccobby's views are
normally not even treated in comprehensive, multi-faceted reviews
of Pauline interpretation and scholarship, such as surveys by
Stephen Westerholm, Perspectives Old and New on Paul:
The "Lutheran" Paul and His Critics (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 2004); idem, Israel's Law and the Church's
Faith: Paul and His Recent Interpreters (repr., Eugene,
Oregon: Wipf & Stock, 1998).
5Hyam
Maccobby, Jesus the Pharisee (London:
SCM Press, 2003).
6From
Jesus to Paul (Eng. trans., New York: MacMillian,),
453-454.
7Alan
F. Segal, Paul the Convert: The Apostolate and Apostasy
of Saul the Pharisee (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1990), xi-xii.
8Daniel
Boyarin, A Radical Jew: Paul and the Politics of
Identity (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1994),
2.
9See,
e.g., David Wenham, Paul: Follower of Jesus or Founder
of Christianity (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995).
10Cf.
Jacob Neusner, William S. Green, and Ernest Frerichs, eds., Judaisms
and Their Messiahs at the Turn of the Christian Era
(Cambridge: Cambridge, 1987); James H. Charlesworth, ed., The
Messiah: Developments in Earliest Judaism and Christianity
(Minneapolis: Fortress, 1992); John J. Collins, The
Scepter and the Star: The Messiahs of the Dead Sea Scrolls and
Other Ancient Literature (New York: Doubleday, 1995);
Craig A. Evans and Peter W. Flint, eds., Eschatology,
Messianism and the Dead Sea Scrolls (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1997); see also the important collection of older material
in Leo Landmann, ed., Messianism in the Talmudic
Era (New York: Ktav, 1979).
11For
further discussion of this, see my commentary on Jeremiah, forthcoming
in the new edition of the Expositor’s Bible
Commentary (Zondervan).
12He
is referring to the first three volumes of my four-volume work,
Answering Jewish Objections to Jesus
(Grand Rapids: Baker, 2000-2006); I do, of course, appreciate
the effort he has taken to interact with my writing (see 203-210),
and that in the most gracious, complimentary terms.
Dr. Michael L. Brown
ICN Ministries
PO Box 1446
Harrisburg, NC 28075
704-782-3760
e-mail: ministry@icnministries.org
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