Wise words from James Dunn
- Unity & Diversity in the New Testament, SCM
Press Ltd, 1977, page 53:
“Should we then say that Jesus was confessed
as God from the earliest days in Hellenistic Christianity?
That would be to claim too much.
(1) The
emergence of a confession of Jesus in terms of divinity was largely
facilitated by the emergence of Psalm 110:1 from very early on (most
clearly in Mark 12:36; Acts 2:34f.; I Cor. 15:25; Heb. 1:13).
The Lord
says to my lord:
‘Sit at my right hand,
till I make your enemies your footstool.’
Its importance here lies
in the double use of kyrios [lord]. The one is clearly Yahweh,
but who is the other?
Clearly
not Yahweh, but an exalted being whom the Psalmist calls
kyrios.
(2) Paul calls Jesus kyrios,
but he seems to have marked reservations about actually calling him
‘God.’ ... Similarly he refrains from praying to
Jesus. More typical of his attitude is that he prays to God through Christ
(Rom. 1:8;
7:25; II Cor. 1:20; Col. 3:17).
(3) ‘Jesus is Lord’ is only part of a
fuller confession for Paul. For at the same time as he affirms ‘Jesus is
Lord’, he also affirms ‘God is one’ (I Cor. 8:5-6; Eph. 4:5-6). Here
Christianity shows itself as a developed form of Judaism, with its
monotheistic confession as one of the most important parts of its
Jewish inheritance; for in Judaism the most fundamental confession is
‘God is one.’ ‘There is only one God’
(Deut. 6:4). Hence also
Rom. 3:30; Gal. 3:20, I Tim. 2:5 (cf. James 2:19). Within Palestine and the
Jewish mission such an affirmation would have been unnecessary — Jews and
Christians shared a belief in God’s oneness. But in the Gentile mission this
Jewish presupposition within Christianity would have emerged into prominence,
in face of the wider belief in ‘gods many.’
The point for us to
note is that Paul can hail Jesus as Lord not in order
to identify him with God, but rather, if anything, to distinguish him from
the One God
(cf. particularly I Cor. 15:24-28;
...).”
- Page
221:
“Jesus was not himself preexistent; he was the man that
preexistent Wisdom became.”
Page 226:
“Paul does not yet understand the
risen Christ as the object of worship; he is the theme of worship, the
one for whom praise is given ... the one through whom the pray-er
prays to God (Rom 1:18; 7:25; II Cor 1:20; Col 3:17), but not the
object of worship or prayer. So too his reticence about calling Jesus
‘God’. Even the title ‘Lord’ becomes a way of
distinguishing Jesus from God rather than identifying him with God
(Rom. 15:6; I Cor. 8:6; 15:24-28; II Cor. 1:3; 11:31; Eph. 1:3, 17; Phil.
2:11; Col 1:3).”
- The quotes that follow are all taken from
James Dunn's Christology in the Making,
Second Edition, SCM Press
Ltd, 1996:
- Concerning John 1:1-14 and
the Logos [Word], page 243:
“The conclusion which seems to
emerge from our analysis thus far is that it is only with verse 14
that we can begin to speak of the personal Logos. ... Prior
to verse 14 we are in the same realm as pre-Christian talk of Wisdom and
Logos, the same language and ideas that we find in the Wisdom tradition and in
Philo, where, as we have seen, we are dealing with personifications
rather than persons, personified actions of God rather than an individual
divine being as such. The point is obscured by the fact that we have
to translate the masculine Logos as ‘he’ throughout the poem. But if
we translated logos as ‘God's utterance’ instead, it would
become clearer that the poem did not necessarily intend the
Logos in verses 1-13 to be thought of as a personal divine
being. In other words, the revolutionary significance of v. 14 may
well be that it marks ...
the transition
from impersonal personification to actual person.
This indeed is
the astounding nature of the poem's claim. If it had asserted simply that an
individual divine being had become man, that would have raised fewer eyebrows.
It is the fact that the Logos poet has taken language which any thoughtful Jew
would recognize to be the language of personification and has
identified it with a particular person, as a particular
person, that would be so astonishing: the
manifestation of God become a man! God's utterance not merely come through a
particular individual, but actually become that one person,
Jesus of
Nazareth!”
- Concerning
the Spirit, Wisdom and Word of God; pages
219,244:
“Our
conclusion here is borne out by what we learned above concerning the
Spirit of God and the Wisdom of God in pre-Christian Judaism. As they
were ways of speaking about Yahweh acting toward and in his creation,
so too with the word of God. As they
enabled the Jewish writers to speak of the immanence of God without
threatening his transcendence, so with the Word. ...
Wisdom. 9:1-2,17
O God of my fathers and Lord of
mercy,
who has made all things by your word,
and by your
wisdom has formed man ...
Who has learned your
counsel,
unless you have given wisdom
and sent your holy
Spirit from on high?
In short, all three expressions
are simply alternative ways of speaking about the effective power of God in
his active relationship with his world and its inhabitants. ...
John ... used Wisdom and Logos language
of Christ, identifying Christ as Wisdom, as the man that the Logos
became, but did not seem to think of pre-existent Wisdom-Logos
as a personal being or of Christ as one who had been pre-existent as
such.”
- Concerning
the fact that Luke has no knowledge of a literal preexistence of
Jesus Christ, pages 50-51:
“In his
birth narrative however Luke is more explicit than Matthew in his assertion of
Jesus’ divine sonship from birth (1:32, 35; ...). Here again it is
sufficiently clear that a virginal conception by divine power without
the participation of any man is in view (1:34). But here too it is
sufficiently clear that it is a begetting, a becoming, which is in
view, the coming into existence of one who will be called,
and will in fact be the Son of God,
not the transition of a pre-existent being to become the
soul of a human baby, or the metamorphosis of a divine being into a human
foetus… Luke’s intention is clearly to describe the creative process of
begetting … Similarly in Acts there is no sign of any christology of
preexistence.”
- Concerning the literal preexistence of the Messiah in Jewish
literature, page 294 note 37:
“That
the Messiah himself existed before creation is nowhere stated in Tannaitic
literature …
“the
name of the Messiah” is the idea of the Messiah, or,
more exactly, the idea of redemption through the Messiah.
This idea did precede creation.”
(Klausner, Messianic
Idea, p. 460; see also Strack-Billerbeck II, pp. 334ff.,
Mowinckel,
He That Cometh, p. 334; ... Vermes, Jesus, pp.
138f.)”
- Concerning the literal preexistence of the Messiah by the writer
of Hebrews, pages 55-56:
“It would certainly go beyond our evidence to
conclude that the author has attained to the understanding of God's Son as
having had a real pre-existence. In short, a concept of
pre-existent sonship, yes; but the pre-existence perhaps more of an
idea and purpose in the mind of God than a personal divine
being.”