Jesus Remembered: Christianity in the Making, Volume 1James Dunn is regarded worldwide as one of today's foremost biblical scholars. Having written groundbreaking studies of the New Testament and a standard work on Paul's theology, Dunn here turns his pen to the rise of Christianity itself. Jesus Remembered is the first installment in what will be a monumental three-volume history of the first 120 years of the faith. Focusing on Jesus, this first volume has several distinct features. It garners the lessons to be learned from the "quest for the historical Jesus" and meets the hermeneutical challenges to a historical and theological assessment of the Jesus tradition. It provides a fresh perspective both on the impact made by Jesus and on the traditions about Jesus as oral tradition -- hence the title "Jesus Remembered." And it offers a fresh analysis of the details of that tradition, emphasizing its characteristic (rather than dissimilar) features. Noteworthy too are Dunn's treatments of the source question (particularly Q and the noncanonical Gospels) and of Jesus the Jew in his Galilean context. In his detailed analysis of the Baptist tradition, the kingdom motif, the call to and character of discipleship, what Jesus' audiences thought of him, what he thought of himself, why he was crucified, and how and why belief in Jesus' resurrection began, Dunn engages wholeheartedly in the contemporary debate, providing many important insights and offering a thoroughly convincing account of how Jesus was remembered from the first, and why. Written with peerless scholarly acumen yet accessible to a wide range of readers, Dunn's Jesus Remembered, together with its successor volumes, will be a sine qua non for all students of Christianity's beginnings. |
Contents
Christianity in the Making | 1 |
FAITH AND THE HISTORICAL JESUS | 9 |
Introduction | 11 |
The ReAwakening of Historical Awareness | 17 |
32 The Reformation | 20 |
33 Perceptions of Jesus | 23 |
The Flight from Dogma | 25 |
42 Exit Revelation and Miracle | 29 |
116 The Death of John | 377 |
117 Jesus Tempted | 379 |
The Kingdom of God | 383 |
122 How Should the Kingdom of God Be Understood? | 387 |
123 Three Key Questions | 396 |
124 The Kingdom to Come | 406 |
125 The Kingdom Has Come | 437 |
126 Solving the Riddle | 465 |
43 The Liberal Jesus | 34 |
44 The Sources for Critical Reconstruction of the Life of Jesus | 39 |
45 The Collapse of the Liberal Quest | 45 |
46 Jesus in Sociological Perspective | 52 |
47 ReEnter the NeoLiberal Jesus | 58 |
48 Conclusion | 65 |
The Flight from History | 67 |
51 The HistoricalCritical Method | 68 |
52 The Search for an Invulnerable Area for Faith | 71 |
53 Rudolf Bultmann 18841976 | 73 |
54 The Second Quest | 78 |
55 A Third Quest? | 85 |
56 Postmodernism | 92 |
History Hermeneutics and Faith | 99 |
62 The Necessity of Historical Inquiry | 100 |
63 What Can History Deliver? | 101 |
64 Hermeneutical Principles | 111 |
65 When Did a Faith Perspective First Influence the Jesus Tradition? | 125 |
66 Two Corollaries | 135 |
FROM THE GOSPELS TO JESUS | 137 |
The Sources | 139 |
71 External Sources | 141 |
72 The Earliest References to Jesus | 142 |
73 Mark | 143 |
74 Q | 147 |
75 Matthew and Luke | 160 |
76 The Gospel of Thomas | 161 |
77 The Gospel of John | 165 |
78 Other Gospels | 167 |
79 Knowledge of Jesus Teaching and Agrapha | 172 |
The Tradition | 173 |
81 Jesus the Founder of Christianity | 174 |
82 The Influence of Prophecy | 186 |
83 Oral Tradition | 192 |
Narratives | 210 |
Teachings | 224 |
86 Oral Transmission | 238 |
87 In Summary | 253 |
The Historical Context | 255 |
92 Defining Judaism | 260 |
93 The Diversity of Judaism Judaism from Without | 265 |
94 Jewish Factionalism Judaism from Within | 281 |
95 The Unity of FirstCentury Judaism | 286 |
96 Galilean Judaism | 293 |
97 Synagogues and Pharisees in Galilee? | 302 |
98 The Political Context | 308 |
99 An Outline of the Life and Mission of Jesus | 312 |
Through the Gospels to Jesus | 327 |
102 How to Proceed? | 330 |
103 Thesis and Method | 335 |
THE MISSION OF JESUS | 337 |
Beginning from the Baptism of John | 339 |
111 Why Not Beginning from Bethlehem? | 340 |
112 John the Baptizer | 348 |
113 Johns Baptism | 355 |
114 Johns Message | 362 |
115 Jesus Anointing at Jordan | 371 |
For Whom Did Jesus Intend His Message? | 489 |
131 Hearing Jesus | 490 |
132 The Call | 498 |
133 To Israel | 506 |
134 To the Poor | 516 |
135 To Sinners | 526 |
136 Women | 534 |
137 Gentiles | 537 |
138 Circles of Discipleship | 539 |
The Character of Discipleship | 543 |
141 Subjects of the King | 544 |
142 Children of the Father | 548 |
143 Disciples of Jesus | 555 |
144 Hungering for What Is Right | 563 |
145 Love as Motivation | 583 |
146 Forgiving as Forgiven | 589 |
147 A New Family? | 592 |
148 Open Fellowship | 599 |
149 Living in the Light of the Coming Kingdom | 607 |
THE QUESTION OF JESUS SELFUNDERSTANDING | 613 |
Who Did They Think Jesus Was? | 615 |
152 Royal Messiah | 617 |
153 An Issue during Jesus Mission | 627 |
154 A Role Declined | 647 |
155 Priestly Messiah | 654 |
156 The Prophet | 655 |
157 A Doer of Extraordinary Deeds | 667 |
158 Teacher | 696 |
How Did Jesus See His Own Role? | 705 |
162 Gods Son | 708 |
The Issues | 724 |
The Evidence | 737 |
A Hypothesis | 759 |
166 Conclusion | 761 |
THE CLIMAX OF JESUS MISSION | 763 |
Crucifixus sub Pontio Pilato | 765 |
172 Why Was Jesus Executed? | 784 |
173 Why Did Jesus Go Up to Jerusalem? | 790 |
174 Did Jesus Anticipate His Death? | 796 |
175 Did Jesus Give Meaning to His Anticipated Death? | 805 |
176 Did Jesus Hope for Vindication after Death? | 818 |
Et Resurrexit | 825 |
182 The Empty Tomb Tradition | 828 |
183 Appearance Traditions | 841 |
184 The Tradition within the Traditions | 857 |
185 Why Resurrection? | 866 |
186 The Final Metaphor | 876 |
Jesus Remembered | 881 |
192 What Can We Say about Jesus Aims? | 884 |
193 The Lasting Impact of Jesus Mission | 890 |
Abbreviations | 895 |
Bibliography | 901 |
949 | |
970 | |
977 | |
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