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The purpose of this book is to deal with the New Testament (and other early
Christian literature as reflecting the historical life of the early Christian
Church.
This literature was produced in this Church,
by members of this Church,
for the use of this Church.
The Church is the primary historical reality,
which stands behind the literature, and without the hypothesis of the Church
the literature does not make sense.
The New Testament consists of twenty-seven
heterogeneous books which were written at various times and under various
circumstances;
some of them were accepted and used by Christians almost at
once,
but as a whole the collection was not universally,
or almost universally
accepted until the fourth or fifth century.
It was the mind of the Church
that finally recognized the significance of all twenty-seven books as setting
forth the basic statement of what the earliest Christianity was.
No other
literature has anything of value to say about Christian origins and the earliest
Christian movement.
To be sure there are a few traditions recorded in apocryphal
writings or in the works of the Church Fathers,
but their historical or theological
importance is practically nil.
In so far as they can be checked, they have
to be checked in relation to the primary documents that the Church recognized.
At the same time, the primary documents are not self-explanatory, as Christians
have recognized since very early times.
In our present collection we find
four gospels, a book of Acts, fourteen letters ascribed (with varying degrees
of plausibility) to the apostle Paul, seven general or catholic letters,
and a book of Revelation.
This scheme of arrangement does little to indicate
the meaning and significance of the various writings.
In order to understand
them, we must look for the history that stands behind the books.
This is
to say that we are trying to deal historically with the New Testament writings.
The central historical problems in relation to the New Testament can be
defined in several ways,
but before they can be approached we need to consider
the periods into which early Church history can be divided.
The question
of periodization arose in the second century and has been examined by church
historians ever since.
Generally speaking, historians have differentiated
three periods in the life of the early Church:
The real significance of this periodization is to be found not in the periods
of time involved but in the characteristics of the Churchs life in the various
periods and in the key events that mark the transitions from one age to another.
In dealing with the characteristics and the events we must recognize that
there were continuities and discontinuities;
there was sameness and change.
We must be on our guard against assuming too readily that either sameness
or change was dominant.
At the same time, we must remember that the community,
usually conscious of its self-identity, was likely to lay more emphasis on
continuity than can always be justified by the extant texts.
The simple chronological
periodization mentioned above may obscure significant changes related to
the basic directions which the Christian movement took.
First we should say something about the primary elements that provided continuity.
These were to be found in
Without these elements there would have been no Church and there would have
been no New Testament.
But, second, these elements were expressed in different
ways because of the different historical circumstances in which Christians
lived and in which they carried on the mission.
Several of these historical circumstances can easily be identified.
Our purpose in discussing the history of the New Testament is to see how
the Church came into existence, what its life was like, and how it expressed
its mission in relation to the various environments in which it lived.
Our
starting point and our ending point will be the same:
the Church as the congregation
of believers brought into existence in response to the event of Christ.
This
event includes his ministry in Galilee and Jerusalem and his crucifixion,
but it finds its climax in his resurrection, which can be defined as the
creation of the new community.
Even though Luke, like the later Gnostics,
set an interval between the resurrection and the origin of the Church,
such an interval is nowhere reflected in the Pauline epistles.
And we may
suppose that it is due to an attempt to provide historical periodization
at a point where it is not really useful.
The Church is the resurrection
community; the apostles were apostles of the risen Lord.
Our purpose in dealing with the materials provided by the New Testament
and other early Christian literature is not, however, simply to make affirmations
or pronouncements about them.
It is to deal with these materials in a sober
and cautious manner in order to show what is actually known, what is actually
not known, and how we can perhaps proceed from the known to the unknown.
This is not to suggest that the documents or their contents will somehow
miraculously arrange themselves in order to prove our points.
There is a
kind of dialogue between ourselves and the materials;
a dialogue in which
we do not lose our own subjectivity although we may hope that it will be
modified by what the materials say.
We do not necessarily or entirely become
objective;
but we check our own subjectivity in the light of the subjectivities
of those who created and transmitted the materials and (it may be) in the
light of others farther back in the chain of tradition.
This kind of checking
is what one can hope to acquire by means of critical methods.
But before we can turn to the conclusions we hope to reach, we must look
at the materials themselves;
and before we can look at the materials we must
consider the various methods that can be used in looking at them.
At this
point we therefore turn to the methods used in analysing the New Testament
and early Christian literature as a whole, examining these methods in order
to make sure that they will bear all the weight that has often been placed
on them.
To a considerable extent our analysis will seem negative.
This negative
aspect is certainly present, but it is present for a purpose.
We hope that
by criticizing criticism we can make it a more useful and effective instrument
for proceeding to positive conclusions about the early Christian writings,
as reflections of the life of the early Church.
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Perhaps it may seem odd to begin an introduction to the New Testament with
a discussion of the principles to be employed.
Are they not either self-evident
or so abstruse as to defy explanation?
Doesnt everyone employ the historical
method, based on enlightened common sense, while some scholars employ it better
than others because they are so acute?
The answers to these questions must
be negative.
What characterizes a great deal of modern New Testament study is
These characteristics are no substitute for a carefully thought out method which bears a closer relation both to common sense and to historical experience.
The principles will be discussed in the following sequence.
It is obvious that in setting up this method of analysis we have laid great emphasis on what may perhaps be regarded as a phenomenological approach.
We are concerned with
This kind of understanding tends to minimize the importance of two other possible approaches.
Our major emphasis, therefore, will be laid upon the interpretation of the New Testament books themselves, more or less as they stand, and the method (in theory, at least) primarily involves literary and historical analysis of them.
I do not claim that there is anything unique about this method.
On the contrary,
I have come to believe that it would be positively wrong to apply a special
method of interpretation to the New Testament.
This is to say that in my view a direct and immediate understanding of the
New Testament as either spiritual or existential (in so far as either term
is understood as atemporal) is analogous to the Docetic understanding of
Christ as a purely spiritual being.
Just as the Incarnation involves acceptance
of the categories of time and space, so the New Testament is a collection
of books created in time and in space, and it therefore needs to be considered
by means of a method which takes these categories seriously.
The uniqueness
of the New Testament, then, becomes clear if, and only if, we use a method
that is not unique.
At the same time, we should probably point out that not everything in the
New Testament is unique.
There are words, phrases, forms and ideas that are also to be found in Judaism
or in Grco-Roman culture.
Our method must pay some attention to these features
of the New Testament;
it need not, and indeed must not, neglect them.
We
have already intimated why this is so.
The revelation of God in the New Testament
is not confined to the unique items.
The Christian claim about Jesus Christ
is not that his message was absolutely novel but that it was true.
Indeed,
the notion that the unique is the revealing was advocated in ancient times
not by orthodox Christians but by the dualist New Testament critic Marcion.
We are trying to deal with our subject matter by use of a method at least
relatively logical, for in our view such exegesis of time New Testament has
suffered from its lack not of theological but of logical method.
This is
the reason for which we begin with the canon.
If we are going to study certain
literary phenomena, it is well to have some idea of the basis on which we
regard these phenomena as belonging to much the same class.
For instance,
one might think of the New Testament books as Christian classics;
but to
classify them as classics would not quite adequately differentiate them from
Augustines Confessions, the Summa Theologica, or Concluding
Unscientific Postscript.
If we are going to consider something called
the New Testament, we need to know what the New Testament is.
Now in order
to answer this question we can do one of at least two things.
We can immediately
appeal to authority and say that the New Testament is what the Church, or
our particular church, says it is.
In the modern world, however, as Hannah
Arendt has pointed out, such direct appeals to traditional authority are
not as convincing as they once were.
People are all too likely to ask why
the Church regards these books, and not others, as belonging to the approved
list or canon.
We are therefore driven, as we so often are, towards a second
methodto examine the evidence concerning the canon.
But before we turn to this evidence we should have a few questions in mind.
What are we going to look at the evidence for?
What do we think we are going to find?
Are we going to find that original authentic something, which can serve as
a norm for our own conclusion, on the view that the earliest is time best?
Are we going to say that the history will help us see how the present situation
came into existence and therefore, in a way, justify it?
Or are we going to examine a process in the course of which the Church reached
certain conclusions, which though possessing great weight, are not necessarily
infallible?
Perhaps we should simply raise these questions without attempting to answer
them at this point.
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