1F Two views of Jesus Flashcards
What is a worldview?
• The lens through which a culture looks at the world
What does N.T. Wright say about how our worldview has been affected?
• We have all been affected by an enlightenment worldview
- Naive realism: only sense perceptions give us certain + knowledge about the world
- History + faith = split from each other: H = public discussion about evi.; faith = private realm of spiritual beliefs
• Forces ppl to either live in:
- the “attic” of faith that is divorced from history (faith becomes highly personal + less attached to pub. life)
- the “dungeon” of history (a sterile activity in which we find no meaning)
• Too many C.tians accept an enlightenment worldview: keep faith to themselves
Explain Wright’s view of the worldview behind the New Testament.
- An enlightenment wv = completely diff. from a wv in NT
- A NT wv allows us to see a G who cares passionately about the world in general and Israel in particular, who established a covenant w/ his ppl
- History, faith, politics, spirituality ≠ separated
- J was born into the NT wv and speaks from it ∴ when C.tians turn J into a spiritual, inspirational figure who speaks only privately to human hearts, they will be distorting his message
What is critical realism?
• Idea that there are real objects beyond ourselves, and we know them through our own p.o.v, which biases our exp. of them
What is phenomenalism?
• The view that what we think are material objects are really our perceptions of sense data (pessimistic side to modern narrative about knowledge)
According to Wright, what is an important insight about our worldview?
• Our Postmodern wv has allows us to realise that ‘certain knowledge’ is coloured by biases
According to Wright, what is the optimistic aspect of our worldview?
• Positivism + naive realism - the view that you can make judgements on ‘raw data’
How does Wright combine the insights from the pessimistic and optimistic views?
• Critical realism…
i) Accepts that things can be known as something different from ourselves (realism)
ii) Recognises that we can only know things from our own p.o.v. We bring our own biases to anything we know ∴ must be critical about the objectivity of our p.o.v
According to Wright, how do we know the truth?
• 1st step = recognising that a worldview precedes facts
- Instead of dismissing other p.o.v.s (e.g. in NT), we must accept that there might be truth beyond our viewpoint
- There is no such thing as a completely neutral, detached observer
• 2nd step = be willing to enter into dialogue btwn our p.o.v and the object we are encountering. Three things can happen to our worldview
- My story might need to be confirmed, modified, or abandoned
• History involves a hypothesis-verification process where, over time, stories are confirmed, modified, or abandoned
- We need to be willing to enter into this process as we study Jesus
What does Wright say is necessary when studying Jesus?
- Realising that entering into his process of dialogue means that one’s faith in J must meet the facts of history: C.tians cannot build images of J that are divorced from info gleaned from historical sources
- But, we must not assume that history will disprove C.tian claims
When Wright enters into a historical study of Jesus, what four points does he find significant?
- J was a Jewish prophet announcing the KoG
- Eschatological expectation plays a key role
- He was the Messiah
- He a Messiah who gave his life
Elaborate on Wright’s view that Jesus was a prophet announcing the Kingdom of God.
- This should be the starting point for any historical study of J
- Jewish context + perception of those around him that he was a prophet + political declaration of the coming of KoG
- J should not be seen as a “wandering preacher giving sermons” but as someone who was initiating a movement
Elaborate on Wright’s view of eschatological expectation.
• J’s agenda for society came out of his sense that the kingdom was about to come
Elaborate on Wright’s view that Jesus was the Messiah.
• Many other Jewish figures announced KoG (e.g. Simeon ben Kosiba) and were considered to be messiahs - J showed that he was the true Messiah through his res.
Elaborate on Wright’s view that Jesus was a Messiah who gave his life.
• The Jewish Messiah = popularly thought of as a victorious figure
• Two imp details in J’s life that reveal he was re-interpreting the meaning of Messiah:
i) Rejected violent revolutionary behaviour
ii) Drew upon Jewish traditions about G using the suffering of his ppl to bring about redemption. He began to think of his death as a part of the messianic task
• All of the other movements around ‘messiahs’ of J’s era ended w/ their death but not w/ J
• J’s reinterpretation of messiahship to include the idea of dying for sins caught on