Moving this blog

    Hi everyone! After some deliberation I’ve decided to move my blog over to a new address, https://thechristianuniversalist.blogspot.com/, and change the name to The Christian Universalist. I came to this decision for a few reasons:
  • When I began this blog, I was heavily influenced by the thought of A. E. Knoch and his followers, who loosely identify as “Concordant”. The beliefs that I held at that time included dogmatic hyper-dispensationalism and anti-trinitarianism, and a lot of my past posts on this blog reflect that. I no longer hold dogmatically to any of these beliefs (although I still hold loosely to some form of dispensationalism and unitarianism, just not anti-trinitarianism).
  • In the interest of ecumenical engagement with the wider Christian tradition, I would prefer not to emphasize the dogmatic aspects of my former beliefs. However, out of love for my former fellow “Concordants” and dogmatic unitarians, I also don’t want to delete all those posts, since some of them have used and continue to use these posts to better understand and defend their own beliefs. Therefore I think it would be better for me to leave those posts up on this blog while moving my new posts to a different site.
  • I also don’t really like the name The Universalist Heretic anymore. Originally, I used this name somewhat ironically because other Christians called me a heretic, and also in order to distinguish my own beliefs from ‘orthodox’ Christian tradition (of course, I never truly believed I was a heretic, and I still don’t, since tautologically I agree with my own beliefs).
  • However, I now realize that referring to myself as “heretic” may be a stumbling block to Christians who would otherwise be interested in the universalist beliefs I write about. (This was brought to my attention by a Catholic universalist on the Christian universalism subreddit.) Furthermore, for the reasons mentioned above, I no longer want to distinguish myself sharply from wider Christian tradition, which the “heretic” title does.
For these reasons, I’ll no longer be writing new blog posts at this site, and I’ll instead be posting them to The Christian Universalist. I’ll also be moving some of my old posts, specifically the ones dealing with Christian universalism (and a few miscellaneous other topics), to that site. Please visit me there! I promise I have a lot more to write about.

The coming wrath: Son of Man's vindication (part 3 of 3)

Part 3: Jesus’ warnings

    In this series of posts, we’ve been looking at the coming judgment that Jesus warned about throughout his ministry. First, we looked at Jesus’ overall ministry in its historical context, and saw he was preaching that the climax of Israel’s story, the “kingdom of God,” was arriving in and through his actions, in a way different than most second-Temple Jews were expecting. Next, we looked at his warnings of judgment, and saw that he believed Israel would face death at the hands of her enemies, with the destruction of Jerusalem and any other city that failed to listen, if she didn’t change her ways — specifically, if she didn’t return to her vocation of being a light to the gentiles (Gen. 12:3; 22:18). In this post, we’ll see how Jesus was vindicated in his predictions when Jerusalem fell in AD 70.

    The coming of the son of man

    In his ministry, Jesus made several predictions about the ‘coming of the son of man’ (Matt. 10:23; Mk. 8:38/Matt. 16:27-28/Lk. 9:26-27; Lk. 12:40; 17:30; 18:8; Mk. 13:26/Matt. 24:30/Lk. 21:27; Matt. 24:37, 44; 25:31; Mk. 14:62/Matt. 26:64/Lk. 22:67-69). Specifically, he said that it would happen before some of his disciples died, before their generation passed away, and that the Sanhedrin would see it happen. But what exactly is the ‘coming of the son of man’?

    To understand this, we have to go back to Daniel’s vision of the four beasts and “one like a son of man” (Dan. 7:2-27). He sees four beasts rise out of the sea, the fourth of which is executed by the heavenly court, after which

[there was] one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven, and he came to the Ancient of Days and was brought before him. To him was given dominion and glory and a kingdom, and all peoples, nations, and languages were serving him. His dominion is perpetual and will not pass away, and his kingdom will not be destroyed. (7:13-14)

When the vision is interpreted for Daniel, he’s told that the four beasts represent “four kings,” while the one like a son of man is the “saints of the Most High” who will “receive the kingdom” forever (7:17-18). “Son of man” is an idiom that refers to a human being. [1] Thus, in this vision, God’s people are represented as a human, as opposed to the wicked kingdoms which are represented as beasts. Daniel asks about the fourth beast, and is told that this will be a “fourth kingdom” which will severely oppress God’s people. But after its dominion is taken away,

the kingdom, dominion, and greatness of all the kingdoms under the whole heaven will be given to the people, the saints of the Most High; their kingdom will be a perpetual kingdom, and all dominions will serve and obey them. (7:27) [2]

    Thus, in Daniel, the ‘coming of the son of man’ doesn’t refer to a human being actually descending from heaven to earth. The “one like a son of man” is no more an actual human being than the “four beasts” are actually animals; moreover, the direction of his “coming” is to God in heaven, rather than from heaven to earth. This is symbolic language for the vindication of God’s people over their enemy, and the arrival of God’s kingdom.

    Some scholars propose that in the second-Temple period, the “son of man” began to be seen as an actual heavenly being who would come to earth. This is based on a single text that refers to the Messiah as “that son of man” (1 Enoch 46:1). However, the same text uses “son of man” simply to mean ‘human being,’ not as a specific title (1 En. 39:1, 5; 42:2). After an extensive study of “son of man” in second-Temple literature, Bauckham concludes, “no Messianic figure, even those whose portrayal relied most heavily on Daniel 7:13-14, was ever called ‘the Son of Man’ [as a title]”. [3]

    Jesus used the phrase “son of man” to refer to himself in the synoptic gospels, but most likely as a self-referential term rather than an actual title (such as in Ezekiel). We should only see an allusion to Daniel when he speaks of the ‘coming of the son of man,’ such as in his declaration to the Sanhedrin:

Again the high priest asked him, “Are you the Messiah, the son of the Blessed One?” Jesus said, “I am, and you will see the son of man sitting at the right hand of the Power and coming with the clouds of heaven.” (Mk. 14:61-62)

This is a clear allusion to both Dan. 7:13 and Ps. 110:1 (“YHWH said to my lord, ‘Sit at my right hand’”). Jesus is identifying himself, the true representative of God’s people, with the “son of man.” Implicitly, he’s also identifying the high priest and Sanhedrin, who are prosecuting him, with the “fourth beast,” the eschatological enemy of God’s people. [4] With this implication in mind, the Sanhedrin’s extreme reaction and immediate decision to execute him is unsurprising (Mk. 14:63-64/Matt. 26:65-66). He’s saying that they must be destroyed for God’s kingdom to arrive.

    The Olivet discourse

    Jesus’ longest judgment warning is the Olivet discourse (Mk. 13/Matt. 24-25/Lk. 21), which comes after his proclamation of destruction over Jerusalem (Matt. 23:37-39/Lk. 13:34-35). He tells his disciples that the entire second Temple complex will be destroyed, and not one stone will be left on another (Mk. 13:1-2/Matt. 24:1-2/Lk. 21:5-6). This prompts his disciples to ask, “When will these things happen, and what is the sign when they are about to happen? [Matt: ‘the sign of your coming and the end of the age?’]” (Mk. 13:3-4/Matt. 24:3/Lk. 21:7)

    Because in Matthew’s account, the disciples ask about “your coming and the end of the age,” it’s often taken as a question about the (yet unfulfilled) end of the world and Jesus’ return to earth. However, in the other synoptic accounts, the disciples only ask about the destruction of the Temple. This means that, for Matthew, “your coming and the end of the age” must be the same as the Temple’s destruction. Indeed, the disciples didn’t understand that Jesus would die, be raised, and ascend to heaven until it happened (Matt. 16:21-22; Lk. 24:18-27). What they meant by “your coming,” therefore, must not be Jesus’ return from heaven (which they didn’t yet know about), but the same as the ‘coming of the son of man.’

    Likewise, the “end of the age” refers to Israel’s judgment in Matthew’s gospel. [5] The “end of the age” is when a judgment will take place, when those who appear to be God’s children (but are not) will be taken out of his kingdom (13:24-30, 36-43, 47-50). This can only refer to the judgment on false Israel, when the kingdom would be taken away from them (8:11-12; 21:43). The “furnace of fire” (13:42, 50) is a symbol in the Hebrew prophets for Israel’s judgment and exile (Deut. 4:20; 1 Kgs. 8:51; Isa. 48:10; Jer. 11:4; Ezek. 22:19-22).

    Jesus starts by answering the disciples’ second question about the sign that would precede the Temple’s destruction. There will be false messiahs, wars and insurrections, famines, earthquakes, and various signs, but none of these are the sign of the end (Mk. 13:5-8/Matt. 24:4-8/Lk. 21:8-11). At the same time, the disciples will themselves be persecuted, but may endure, and will spread the good news of God’s kingdom through the whole world (Mk. 13:9-13/Matt. 24:9-14/Lk. 21:12-19). But the sign that will precede the end is the “desolating sacrilege,” when Jerusalem is surrounded by armies; then those in Judea must flee, and Jerusalem will be destroyed (Mk. 13:14-23/Matt. 24:15-28/Lk. 21:20-24). [6]

     When this happens, there will be great signs in the heavens (Mk. 13:24-25/Matt. 24:29/Lk. 21:25-26), which in the Hebrew prophets always symbolize the fall of a nation, especially apostate Israel. [7] Then the ‘coming of the son of man,’ the vindication of God’s true people, will take place, and their exile will be over (Mk. 13:26-27/Matt. 24:30-31/Lk. 21:27-28).

    These events are often equated with Jesus’ future return to earth, but there’s no indication that the topic has changed away from Jerusalem’s fall and the Temple’s destruction. His response to the disciples’ first question, about when these things will take place, removes all doubt: these things will happen before their generation passes away (Mk. 13:28-31/Matt. 24:32-35/Lk. 21:29-33). But the exact day and hour can’t be known, not even by Jesus himself, so they must be ready lest they be caught unaware (Mk. 13:32-37/Matt. 24:36-44/Lk. 21:34-36).

    Matthew’s account continues with several parables about remaining alert. Those who don’t stay alert will be punished with “the hypocrites” (24:45-51), who are Israel’s false religious leaders (6:2, 5, 16; 15:7; 23:13, 14, 15, 23, 25, 27, 29). The door will be shut to them (25:1-13), and they’ll be thrown into “outer darkness” (25:14-30). The same will happen to those Israelites who seek to lord over the gentiles and don’t recognize that many gentiles will enter God’s kingdom (Matt. 8:10-12; cf. Lk. 13:23-30). This still deals with the judgment about to come upon apostate Israel for her failure to be the light of the world.

    Matthew ends his version of the Olivet discourse with a narrative (not a ‘parable’) about judgment. The subject hasn’t changed; it’s still about the ‘coming of the son of man’ (25:31). Jesus uses the analogy of a shepherd separating his flock in order to cull the male baby goats (25:32-33); a similar analogy was used in the Hebrew prophets to describe the judgment of Israel and its apostate leaders (Ezek. 34:11-22; Zech. 10:2-3). Those who treated his family well, that is, God’s true people (Matt. 12:46-50), will enter God’s kingdom and the “life of the age” (25:34-40, 46); those who mistreated his family will enter the “fire of the age” and “punishment of the age” (25:41-46).

    The judgment in view at the end of the Olivet discourse, in Matt. 25:31-46, is still a concrete, historical one. The word aiōnios here doesn’t mean “eternal,” as it’s so often mistranslated, but refers to the coming aiōn, the messianic age. [8] When that age came, God’s true people would find life in it, but those who mistreated them would find only punishment.

    The vindication of Jesus the Messiah

    As we’ve seen, all of Jesus’ warnings about judgment, including his teachings about the ‘coming of the son of man,’ had a very concrete meaning. He was warning about what would happen to Israel if she failed to recognize that God’s kingdom had come and to finally fulfill her vocation as the light of the world. He also saw himself as being especially this ‘son of man,’ as the true representative of God’s true people; when the time came for his “fourth beast,” Israel’s apostate leaders, to be destroyed, he would be glorified and receive his kingdom.

    In fact, within forty years of his death, all this happened just as he’d predicted. Because most in Israel continued to see the gentiles as enemies, failing to fulfill their vocation as the light to the gentiles, they remained on a collision course with Rome. Josephus, the Jewish historian of the late first century AD, tells us that false prophets leading Israel into insurrection multiplied over the next few decades (Antiquities 18.4.1; 20.5.1; 8.5-6). They became especially a problem during the war of AD 66-70 itself (Wars 4.9.3ff; 6.5.2) — just as Jesus had warned (Mk. 13:5-7, 21-23/Matt. 24:4-6, 23-28/Lk. 21:8-9).

    When the Roman armies surrounded Jerusalem in November AD 66, and left just as suddenly and unexpectedly (Josephus, Wars 2.19.4-6), this gave the believers living there a short window to escape (Wars 2.20.1; Eusebius, EcclHist. 3.5.3; Epiphanius, Pan. 29.7.8) in accordance with Jesus’ command (Mk. 13:14-18/Matt. 24:15-20/Lk. 20:20-21). The war that followed was certainly deserving of Jesus’ hyperbolic language (Mk. 13:19-20/Matt. 24:21-22/Lk. 21:22-24). Indeed, Josephus used similar language (Wars 5.10.5; 13.6).

    Most importantly, though, the destruction of Jerusalem showed that Jesus’ message was indeed true. The war and defeat of Jerusalem proved that their view of God’s kingdom was the wrong one, which led to destruction — it put them on an inevitable collision course with Rome, which they would just as inevitably lose. Jesus’ view of God’s kingdom was the correct one, and his way would have led to life for Israel, and did for those in Israel who believed in him and escaped destruction. This effectively reversed the Sanhedrin’s verdict of Jesus, showing him to be a true prophet and the Messiah.

    The early Christians saw Jerusalem’s fall as significant in a second way. They viewed the earthly Jerusalem and the Temple as symbols of the old covenant, and believed that while the new covenant had already been inaugurated, it would not come in full until those earthly shadows (which had already been rendered obsolete) were destroyed (Gal. 4:21-31; Heb. 8:13; 9:8-10; 10:8-9). Once they had been set aside, then the heavenly Jerusalem, the new covenant, could come in full (Heb. 12:18-24; Rev. 18:20-19:8; 21-22). After Jerusalem’s fall, early Christians saw this climactic event as proof of their correctness over ‘Judaism’ (Ep. Barn. 16:1-10; Justin Martyr, 1 Apol. 53).

    In summary, the siege and fall of Jerusalem in AD 70 was a very significant event for early Christianity in light of Jesus’ ministry. This event proved that God’s kingdom had indeed come as Jesus had said, and not as Israel had been expecting; it also proved that the old covenant had been rendered obsolete, and the new covenant had come in full. The significance of AD 70 still resounds today, vindicating Jesus over the many other false messiahs and prophets who have claimed to bring God’s kingdom.

______________________________

[1] Num. 23:19; Job 16:21; 25:6; 35:8; Ps. 8:4; 80:17; 144:3; 146:3; Isa. 51:12; 56:2; Jer. 49:18, 33; 50:40; 51:43; Ezek., too many refs to cite; Dan. 8:17.

[2] The pronoun at the end of 7:27 is masculine singular (leh), and is often taken to refer to the Most High himself (“all dominions will serve and obey him”). However, in light of the interpretation found in 7:18, the pronoun is most naturally taken to refer back to “the people” (am), which is also masculine singular. See John J. Collins, Daniel (Minneapolis, MI: Fortress Press, 1994), 322.

[3] Richard Bauckham, “Son of Man” vol. 1: Early Jewish Literature (Grand Rapids, MI: 2023), 375.

[4] N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God, 261.

[5] Other New Testament writers appear to have held the same view of the “end of the age.” Paul said that it was “the rulers of this age” who crucified Jesus, and they were already passing away (1 Cor. 2:6-8); in fact, he was living already at “the ends of the ages” (1 Cor. 10:11). The Hebraist also said that Jesus was sacrificed once-for-all at “the end of the ages” (Heb. 9:26).

[6] Many scholars argue that this ‘prediction’ must be dependent on historical accounts of Jerusalem’s fall, and must not have actually been spoken by Jesus. However, there are at least two specific textual allusions to Antiochus IV and the Maccabean revolt — the “desolating sacrilege” and the command to “flee to the hills” and leave everything behind (Mk. 13:14/Matt. 24:15-16/Lk. 21:21; cf. 1 Macc. 1:54; 2:27-28) — which don’t precisely match the historical events of AD 70. This indicates that Jesus’ predictions are being deliberately modeled on Israel’s past, rather than being force-fit by the evangelists to fit the historical reality of AD 70. See N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God, 176-179.

[7] Isa. 13:9-19; 24:4-21; 34:1-5; Jer. 4:16-26; Ezek. 32:2-8; Joel 2:10, 30-32; cf. 2 Sam. 22:8-18/Ps. 18:7-17; 4 Ezra 5:1-10.

[8] Ilaria Ramelli and David Konstan, Terms for Eternity: Aiônios and Aïdios in Classical and Christian Texts, (Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias Press, 2013).

The coming wrath: Jesus' warnings (part 2 of 3)

Part 1: God’s kingdom at hand

    In the last post, we looked at Jesus’ ministry in its historical context. Other second-Temple Jews were expecting God’s kingdom to be accompanied by the destruction of the gentiles, and perhaps purification of the Temple cult. Instead, Jesus preached that Israel had failed her vocation as a light to the gentiles, and must learn to make peace with her enemies. This was the only way that led to life, and the path that many in Israel were following would lead to “destruction” (Matt. 7:13-14). But what was the “destruction” that Jesus said would come on them if they failed to change their ways?

    “Unless you repent, you all will likewise perish”

    The nature of this destruction is hinted at in one of Jesus’ sayings recorded in the gospel of Luke (13:1-5). Here, he speaks to some people who bring news of a monstrous act at the hands of the Roman governor:

At that time, some people there were telling him about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mixed with their sacrifices. He answered them, “Do you think these Galileans were worse sinners than all other Galileans because they suffered these things? No, I tell you! Unless you repent, you all will likewise perish. Or those eighteen who were killed when the tower in Siloam fell and killed them, do you think they were worse offenders than all the others living in Jerusalem? No, I tell you! Unless you repent, you all will likewise perish.”

Jesus says that the people of Israel, unless they repent, will face the same destruction as those who were recently killed in Galilee and Jerusalem — killed by Roman leaders, crushed by falling buildings. The “repentance” and “destruction” that he speaks of here aren’t individual acts, as the verbs (metanoēte and apoleisthe) are both plural; unless Israel collectively changes her ways, she will face this destruction.

    In the Hebrew prophets, the collective “repentance” or “returning” of Israel was associated with her return from exile. [1] The same is true of the “forgiveness of sins,” which was a collective act associated with the end of exile. [2] When Peter said that Jesus was exalted “to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins” (Ac. 5:31), this is precisely what the people listening would have been thinking of. When Jesus said that people would “perish” if they failed to “repent,” he was saying that it was time for Israel to change her ways to receive her promised restoration; those who failed to do so wouldn’t be restored with God’s people.

    This saying comes toward the end of a long discourse about judgment. [3] Jesus says “this generation” will be condemned “at the judgment” by the queen of the South and the people of Nineveh (11:29-32). He condemns the Pharisees for their hypocrisy, and says that “this generation” will be held responsible for the blood of all the prophets (11:37-52). They should fear the one who can cast them into Gehenna, if they deny him or blaspheme the holy spirit (12:4-10). They shouldn’t worry about land or any other earthly possessions — even though the Land was a central part of first-century belief about God’s kingdom! — but should trust that God will take care of everything (12:13-34).

    They should stay ready for the ‘coming of the son of man’ (12:35-48). Hypocrites fail to recognize the signs of the time; they must reconcile with their accusers, lest they be thrown into prison (12:54-59). If they don’t change their ways, they will be destroyed by Roman governors and falling buildings (13:1-5). If their fig tree fails to bear fruit this year, it will be cut down (13:6-9). If they desire to be “first,” and fail to recognize that many gentiles will enter God’s kingdom, they will be “last” (13:22-30). Finally, Jesus tells them outright: if Jerusalem fails to recognize that he is “the one who comes in the name of the Lord,” the city and its Temple will be destroyed (13:33-35).

    Another Lukan passage (19:41-44) also gives details about this destruction:

Now as he drew near and saw the city [of Jerusalem], he wept over it, saying, “If only you, even you, had known on this day the things that make for peace! But now they are hidden from your eyes. For days will come on you when your enemies cast up ramparts around you, and surround you and close you in on every side. They will demolish you, and your children within you, and will not leave within you one stone on top of another, because you did not recognize the time of your visitation.”

Once again, we see that Jesus believed Jerusalem would be destroyed by its enemies because they failed to know “the things that make for peace.” Because many of the people of Israel didn’t listen to him — they focused on earthly things (Lk. 12:13-34), failed to reconcile with their gentile accusers (12:57-59), failed to realize that many gentiles would enter God’s kingdom (13:6-9, 22-30), and failed to recognize him as the Messiah (13:34-35) — their beloved city would fall.

    But this judgment wouldn’t only affect Jerusalem. Jesus told his disciples that any city which rejected them, and failed to listen to his message, would be worse off even than the land of Sodom “on the day of judgment” (Matt. 10:14-15/Lk. 10:10-12). This was true of Chorazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum, which “because they did not repent” would be worse off than Tyre, Sidon, and Sodom (Matt. 11:20-24). [4] We shouldn’t imagine that Jesus is talking about a post-mortem ‘day of judgment’ to decide which people go to ‘heaven’ or ‘hell.’ He has in mind a very concrete, historical danger, which will come upon cities rather than individuals — Jerusalem and any other city that fails to heed his message of peace.

    The end of the Temple cult

    The synoptic gospels record several sayings of Jesus about the destruction of the Temple (Mk. 13:1-2/Matt. 24:1-2/Lk. 21:5-6; Mk. 14:58/Matt. 26:61). These sayings are often rejected as ahistorical by scholars, thought to have been retroactively placed in Jesus’ mouth after the actual destruction of the Temple in AD 70. However, as we saw earlier, it wasn’t unusual for second-Temple Jews to believe that the Temple cult had to be overthrown and cleansed (CD 5.6-7; 7.9-21; 19.33-20.13; 1 Enoch 89:65-77). Jesus just took this one step further, since he believed that forgiveness of sins and righteousness were available outside of the Temple cult altogether (Mk. 2:3-12/Matt. 9:2-8/Lk. 5:18-26; Mk. 12:28-34).

    One of Jesus’ actions which is widely accepted by scholars as historical is the cleansing of the Temple when he entered Jerusalem (Mk. 11:15-18/Matt. 21:12-15/Lk. 19:45-47). Let’s look at this event:

When they entered Jerusalem, he came into the Temple and began to drive out those who were selling and buying in the Temple. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the chairs of those selling doves, and would not allow anyone to carry anything through the Temple. He began teaching and saying, “Is it not written, ‘My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations?’ But you have made it ‘a den of robbers’!” (Mk. 11:15-17)

    There are a few details here that may be lost on modern readers. First, by not allowing anyone to carry anything unclean through the Temple, Jesus was fulfilling a prophetic condition for the coming of God’s kingdom (according to Zech. 14:9, 21). [5] Second, the term “robbers” (lestai), in first-century Judaism, referred not to swindlers but to nationalistic revolutionaries like the Zealots (as can be seen throughout the writings of Josephus). These nationalists exclude the gentiles from worshipping in the Temple, thus preventing it from becoming “a house of prayer for all nations” as God desires (Isa. 56:6-7). Third, when Jeremiah referred to the Temple as “a den of robbers,” he wasn’t saying that it merely needed to be cleansed, but that it had to be destroyed (Jer. 7:11-14).

    Thus, Jesus’ critique of the Temple is similar to his critique of the rest of Israel — they’ve excluded the gentiles from the promises, thus failing their vocation to be the light of the world. For this reason, the whole Temple cult is fit to be destroyed again, just as it was in Jeremiah’s day. There’s no reason why the historical Jesus couldn’t have predicted the destruction of the Temple, since it fits very well with the rest of his ministry and his other judgment warnings.

    Cast into the Valley of Hinnom

    Several times in his ministry, Jesus is said to have warned his audience about being “cast into Gehenna” (Matt. 5:22, 29-30; 10:28/Lk. 12:4-5; Mk. 9:43-48/Matt. 18:8-9; 23:33). “Gehenna” is typically translated as “hell,” as though Jesus were warning about something that might happen to someone after death. This ignores the contextual implications of his warnings.

    “Gehenna” technically refers to a physical location, the Valley of Hinnom near Jerusalem, where child sacrifices took place in ancient times (Josh. 15:8; 18:16; 2 Kgs. 23:10; 2 Chron. 28:3; 33:6; Neh. 11:30; Jer. 32:35). Jeremiah associated this valley with the siege of Jerusalem, saying that Jerusalem would become as defiled as the valley (Jer. 7:30-34; 19:2-15). Jesus made the same association, when he said that “the judgment of Gehenna” would come upon “this generation,” and Jerusalem and its Temple would be desolated (Matt. 23:33-38).

    Gehenna was associated with post-mortem punishment in later texts (4 Ezra 7.26-36; Sybilline Oracles 4.176-191), and perhaps some pre-70 texts as well (1 Enoch 27:1-2; 53:1-6). However, prior to AD 70, the name “Gehenna” wasn’t used to denote the valley of judgment, and it’s unclear how widespread this tradition was. It’s much more likely that Jesus intended to refer to the more deeply-rooted tradition, from Jeremiah, in which Gehenna was associated with the siege and fall of Jerusalem — especially since he appears to have made this connection himself (Matt. 23:33-38).

    Jesus also used an Isaianic text about undying worms and unquenched fire (Isa. 66:24) to talk about the judgment of Gehenna (Mk. 9:43-48; cf. Matt. 3:12; 18:8-9; 25:41). Elsewhere in the Hebrew prophets, unquenched fire was used not to denote individual post-mortem punishment, but the corporate judgment of nations (Jer. 4:4; 7:20; 17:27; 21:10-12; Ezek. 20:47-48; Amos 5:5-6); this association continued into the second-Temple period (Jud. 16:17; but cf. Sir. 7:17 Gk). Therefore, Jesus wasn’t referring to a punishment of ‘hell’ for individuals, but the corporate punishment of Israel if she failed to heed his warnings. Israel would be destroyed “body and soul” in Gehenna, as Isaiah had predicted long ago for Assyria (Matt. 10:28/Lk. 12:4-5; cf. Isa. 10:18; 30:31-33).

    In summary, Jesus’ judgment warnings in the synoptic gospels aren’t about what happens to people after they die (whether they go to ‘heaven’ or ‘hell’), nor are they about a far-off future judgment (at the Second Coming or afterward). His warnings had a concrete, historical importance for first-century Israel. Jesus was bringing the true kingdom of God, and if Israel failed to change her ways and fulfill her vocation as the light of the world, she would die at the hands of her enemies. In the next post, we’ll see how Jesus was vindicated in his predictions.

Part 3 (next week): son of man’s vindication

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[1] Deut. 30:2, 8; Isa. 44:22; 45:22; 46:8; 55:7; Jer. 3:10, 12, 14, 22; 4:1; 15:19; 24:7; Ezek. 14:6; 18:30, 32; Hos. 3:5; 14:1-2; Joel 2:12-13; cf. Bar. 2:32-34; Tob. 13:5-6; PsSol. 18:4-7; Jub. 1:14-22; 23:26; Philo, Praem. 162-172.

[2] Isa. 40:1-2; 43:25-44:2; 53:11-54:10; Jer. 31:31-34; 33:4-11; Lam. 4:22; Ezek. 36:24-26, 33; 37:21-23; Dan. 9:16-19; Ez. 9:6-15; Neh. 9:6-37; cf. Bar. 1:15-3:8; 1QS 11.11-14.

[3] Luke draws together several disparate ‘judgment’ sayings of Jesus here into a single discourse (cf. Matt. 5:25-26; 6:19-23, 25-34; 7:13-14, 21-23; 8:11-12; 10:28-36; 12:22-45; 13:31-33; 16:1-6; 23:13-39; 24:42-51). His purpose isn’t to give a historically precise account of how and when Jesus said these things, but to thematically bring together most of his warnings to his contemporary generation.

[4] From a critical perspective, these sayings are almost certainly true to the historical Jesus, because these three cities weren’t especially destroyed by the Romans. In fact, we only have a record of Bethsaida being destroyed (Josephus, Wars 4.7.6). There would be no reason for the early church to ‘invent’ an apparently unfulfilled judgment saying.

[5] Cecil Roth, “The Cleansing of the Temple and Zechariah XIV 21,” Novum Testamentum 4, no. 3 (Oct 1960): 174-181.

The coming wrath: God's kingdom at hand (part 1 of 3)

Now when he saw many Pharisees and Sadducees coming to his baptism, [John the baptist] said, “You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?” (Matt. 3:7/Lk. 3:7)

    When Jesus began his ministry, his cousin John had already started preaching about a coming judgment, saying that it would be brought about by the one coming after him (Matt. 3:7-12/Lk. 3:7-17). The theme of judgment continued to resonate throughout Jesus’ teachings, as recorded in the synoptic gospels, well after John’s death. But what exactly is the “day of judgment” that Jesus spoke of (Matt. 10:15; 11:22, 24; 12:36)? Does it, as many Christians assume, refer to what happens when people die and go either to ‘hell’ or ‘heaven’? Does it refer to a historical event? Is it something that will happen when Jesus returns to earth? In this series of posts, we’ll look at Jesus’ ministry in its historical context to see what he and his listeners, as second-Temple Jews, would have understood by this.

    The hope of Israel

    What did second-Temple Jews in Jesus’ day expect to happen? Their hope could be summed up in a single phrase: “the kingdom of God.” From the earliest period of Israel’s history, the Jewish prophets looked forward to a future when Jerusalem would become the foremost city, a light to the many nations who would come there to follow God (Isa. 2:2-4; Joel 3:16-21; Mic. 4:1-4; Zeph. 3:12-20; cf. Hab. 2:14).

    When the Israelites were exiled from their land, they maintained this expectation (Isa. 42:1-4; 49:5-6; 60:8-16; 62:1-7; 65:18-25; 66:10-23; Jer. 3:14-18; Ezek. 17:22-24; Zech. 8:11-23; 14:8-21), and added to it a new one. God’s covenant with David wouldn’t be forsaken; he would set as king over Israel a descendant of David to rule forever (Ps. 89:19-51; Isa. 42:6; 49:8; 55:3-5; Jer. 23:5-6; 30:8-9; 33:14-16; Ezek. 21:25-27; 34:20-31; 37:24-28; Amos 9:11-15; cf. Hos. 3:4-5). This would, in other words, be a restoration of “the kingdom of YHWH in the hands of the descendants of David” (2 Chron. 13:4-8; cf. Exod. 19:5; Ps. 114:2; 1 Chron. 17:7-14; 28:5; 29:23).

    This expectation, in the passages cited above, is usually associated with the coming of the gentiles to worship God. It’s also frequently couched in ‘kingdom of God’ language. “In that day,” says Zechariah, “YHWH will become king over the whole earth” (14:9). YHWH is his people’s king, therefore he will reign and save them (Isa. 33:22; 43:14-15; 44:2-6; 52:7; Ezek. 20:33-44; Obad. 21; Mic. 2:12-13; Zeph. 3:14-15).

    But even after Israel returned from exile, the problem remained — many of God’s people continued to be rebellious, the gentiles failed to recognize YHWH’s supremacy, and Israel was ruled by pagans rather than her Davidic king! For these reasons, most Israelites continued to see the exile as ongoing and the ‘kingdom of God’ as still future. [1] Daniel demonstrates this re-framing of the issue: Israel would be ruled by a succession of pagan empires before she would be vindicated in her God’s kingdom (Dan. 2:37-45; 7:17-27), and her exile would be extended from seventy years to seventy times seven! (9:24-27) God’s people would also go through a period of severe tribulation before vindication (11:29-12:4).

    Later Jewish writings take various positions on the issue of ‘God’s kingdom.’ The Wisdom of Jesus ben Sirach took the position that God’s kingdom had come, exemplified in the wise reign of his high priest Simon ben Onias (50:1-24). This was quickly disproven when the succession of high priests was ended by Antiochus IV’s oppression of the Jews in 167-4 BC. 1 Maccabees claimed that it came with the rise of the Hasmonean dynasty of priest-kings (14:4-14), which was also disproven when Rome conquered them in 63 BC and the Herodians took their place.

    The view that God’s kingdom had already come was mostly confined to the priestly elite which later became the Sadducees; the common people of Israel knew the situation was much worse than it may have seemed to their rulers. The Essenes, whose writings are preserved in the Dead Sea Scrolls, undertook a serious critique of Jerusalem’s present rulers which presented them as Israel’s true enemy. They looked forward to the future establishment of God’s kingdom and the restoration of the Davidic monarchy (e.g., 4Q174 1.10-19). They, with other second-Temple Jews, thought that the current priestly-Temple system was utterly corrupt and would be overthrown (CD 5.6-7; 7.9-21; 19.33-20.13; 1 Enoch 89:65-77).

    Among those Jews who believed in a future kingdom (the Pharisees, Essenes, and ‘people of the land’ or commoners), the biblical hope of salvation for the gentiles was replaced by the expectation that God would utterly destroy the gentiles (e.g., Ps. Sol. 17:21-32; 1QSb 5.23-293; Wis. 3:7-8; 5:17-6:5; 4 Ezra 13:3-11, 25-38). This was unfortunate, but understandable in light of their persecution by several pagan empires. According to Josephus, it was this expectation that led them to revolt against Rome in AD 66 (Wars 6.5.4).

    First-century Jews, therefore, looked forward to the establishment of the ‘kingdom of God,’ the restoration of God’s people, which would be marked by: (1) the defeat of Israel’s enemies (seen as the gentiles); (2) the purification of the Temple cult (if it was corrupt); (3) the restoration of the Davidic monarchy; and (4) the establishment of Jerusalem as the foremost city in the world.

    The focus of Jesus’ ministry

    Onto this scene of fervent Jewish expectation bursts Jesus, proclaiming from the very beginning of his ministry, “The time has been fulfilled! God’s kingdom is at hand!” (Mk. 1:15/Matt. 4:17) The message that he preached was said to be “the good news of God’s kingdom” (Matt. 4:23; 9:35; 10:7; 24:14; Mk. 1:15; Lk. 4:43; 8:1; 16:16; cf. Ac. 8:12). God’s kingdom would come soon, even before some of Jesus’ disciples died (Mk. 9:1/Matt. 16:28/Lk. 9:27). Indeed, it was already coming through his work in healing people and defeating demons (Matt. 12:28/Lk. 11:20).

    Any second-Temple Jew would have known what this meant, whether or not they agreed: God was about to bring about the promised restoration of his people. To the common people of Israel, it was a message of hope; to the Pharisees, who expected a very different kind of kingdom, a challenge; to the complacent priestly elite, a dangerous threat.

    But the kingdom that Jesus preached was different from what most second-Temple Jews, especially the Pharisees, were expecting. They thought that Israel’s true enemy was the gentiles, thus rejecting their role, which went all the way back to Abraham (Gen. 12:3; 22:18), to act as a light to the gentiles — the very reason that Israel was chosen was to restore the whole world to God! Jesus returned to this vocation; he said that “many” gentiles would enter God’s kingdom, and those Jews who rejected this would themselves be thrown out! (Matt. 8:11-12/Lk. 13:23-30) They sought to be first in God’s kingdom, so they would instead become last (Mk. 9:33-35; 10:30/Matt. 19:30; 20:1-16; Lk. 13:23-30).

    Jesus himself healed several gentiles during his ministry, even helping a Roman centurion (Matt. 8:5-13/Lk. 7:2-10; Mk. 7:24-30/Matt. 15:21-28; cf. 15:29-31). This would have been strange and threatening to many first-century Jews, especially the hard-line Shammaite Pharisees who taught that gentiles must be resisted at all costs. But Jesus diagnosed the problem differently from them: Israel’s enemy was “the evil one” and his forces, who had already infiltrated Israel and sowed bad seeds, including the Pharisees themselves! (Mk. 3:22-30/Matt. 12:24-45/Lk. 11:15-26; Matt. 13:24-30, 36-43; cf. Lk. 13:16) The true enemy, therefore, was Israel’s corrupt leaders, who (rather than the pagans) had become the “fourth beast” to Jesus’ “son of man” (Matt. 21:42-45/Lk. 20:17-19; 26:62-66/Mk. 14:60-64/Lk. 22:66-71; cf. Dan. 2:44-45; 7:7-18, 23-27).

    How would this enemy, “the evil one,” be defeated? Not by military revolution, but paradoxically by Jesus’ own death (Mk. 10:38-40, 45/Matt. 20:28; Mk. 12:1-12/Matt. 21:33-45/Lk. 20:9-19). There was a strand in second-Temple Judaism which held that the suffering and death of righteous martyrs could take on Israel’s own eschatological suffering, thereby acting as “a ransom for the sin of our nation” (4 Macc. 17:20-22; cf. 6:27-29; 9:23-24; 18:3-4; 2 Macc. 7:36-38; 1QS 8.1-4). It could be argued that Jesus saw his own death in these terms. [2] Taking on Israel’s suffering and death at the hands of her enemies, he died for her sin, and by extension, the sins of the whole world to which Israel was supposed to be a light (cf. John 11:51-52; 1 John 2:2).

    What about the Temple? Whereas the Pharisees tolerated the Temple cult, and the Essenes believed that it needed to be cleansed, Jesus thought it had to be destroyed completely and rebuilt (Mk. 13:1-2/Matt. 24:1-2/Lk. 21:5-6; Mk. 14:58/Matt. 26:61). He symbolically acted out the destruction of the Temple, while quoting a prophecy of Jeremiah about its destruction (Mk. 11:15-18/Matt. 21:12-15/Lk. 19:45-47; cf. Jer. 7:11-14). According to a saying in John’s gospel, the Temple to be rebuilt would be Jesus’ own body (John 2:18-21). Forgiveness of sins was now available outside of the Temple cult, through Jesus himself, which was blasphemy to the priestly elite and Pharisees (Mk. 2:3-12/Matt. 9:2-8/Lk. 5:18-26). For Jesus, loving God and neighbor is far more important than the Temple cult (Mk. 12:28-34).

    Did Jesus succeed in bringing about his paradoxical kingdom of God? According to the early church, he did, and they re-defined God’s kingdom around him. Jesus, the Davidic king, had been enthroned not in Jerusalem but in heaven (Ac. 2:29-36; 5:30-31; 7:55-56; 13:32-33; 15:14-18; 17:7; Eph. 1:20-23; Phil. 3:20; Col. 3:1; Heb. 1:3; 8:1-2; 10:12-13; Rev. 2:26-28; 3:21). Jerusalem had indeed become the foremost city, not the earthly Jerusalem, but the heavenly city (Gal. 4:21-31; Heb. 12:18-24; Rev. 21-22). The Temple was also re-defined around the community of believers in Jesus (Eph. 2:19-22; 1 Pet. 2:4-6).

    Paul also cited many Scriptures to show that the climax of Israel’s story had come through Jesus, most clearly in his second letter to the Corinthians. The covenant of Moses had been replaced by the promised “new covenant,” which was to be given at the end of exile (2 Cor. 3:4-11; cf. Jer. 31:31-40). The “day of salvation” when Israel would be restored from exile was “now” (2 Cor. 6:2; cf. Isa. 49:8-12). Many prophecies about the restoration of Israel after exile are applied to present believers in Jesus (2 Cor. 6:16-18; cf. Lev. 26:11-13; Isa. 43:5-6; 52:4-11; Jer. 32:37-40; Ezek. 20:40-42; 37:24-28).

    The sermon on the mount

    When we place Jesus’ ministry in its historical context, we see that he believed the eschatological restoration of Israel, “the kingdom of God,” was coming in and through his ministry. Let’s try to interpret a specific passage, the sermon on the mount (Matt. 5-7), using this framework. [3] Jesus begins his sermon by reiterating that God’s kingdom is present; but it belongs to the poor in spirit and the persecuted (5:3, 10). The restoration of Israel will belong to the meek, merciful, and peacemakers (5:5-9), not those who vengefully seek to fight the gentiles.

    The people of Israel were meant to be “the salt of the earth,” “the light of the world,” but if they refuse this vocation, they’ll be cast out and trampled (5:13-14). They must let their light shine, rather than keeping it hidden as they’ve been doing (5:15-16). This isn’t an abandonment of Israel’s promises, of the law and the prophets, but their fulfillment (5:17-20).

    The law says not to murder, but they must not even be angry; Israel must reconcile with her accuser lest she be cast into Gehenna, into prison! (5:21-26) Not only must they not commit adultery, but they must not even desire someone’s wife, even their divorced wife, lest they be thrown into Gehenna (5:27-32). They must not take any oaths at all (5:33-37). They must not resist evil; if a Roman soldier forces them to carry his armor for one mile, they should go another mile! (5:38-42) They must love their enemy and pray for their persecutors, as their heavenly father does (5:43-48). This whole section is a re-interpretation of the law, which challenges the then-prevailing view that Israel has to fight her gentile enemies to bring in the kingdom of God.

    Unlike “the hypocrites” (the Pharisees and priestly elite, per Matt. 23), they should treat God as their father. They shouldn’t give alms, pray, and fast in public, but should do so in private where only their father, God, can see them (6:1-18). Moreover, they should forgive those who harm them, instead of taking vengeance, lest God not forgive them (6:12, 14-15). They shouldn’t focus on earthly treasures (6:19-24), nor should they worry about physical possessions (6:25-34). Once again, this is an implicit critique of the then-current view of God’s kingdom, which was centered around taking vengeance on the gentiles to gain the earthly treasures of land and wealth.

    Jesus continues that those who judge others will themselves be judged (7:1-6). Instead, they need only to ask their father and it will be given to them; why would their heavenly father be less gracious than a human father? (7:7-11) The law and prophets can be summed up in a single commandment: to do to others what you would want them to do to you (7:12). Few will follow this narrow path to life, and many will instead take a broader path to destruction (7:13-14). False prophets who lead Israel astray will be known by the result of their movement (7:15-20). Even some who call Jesus “lord, lord” won’t enter God’s kingdom if they fail to do his will (7:21-23). Those who listen to Jesus’ words will be secure, but if they fail to listen, they will fall greatly (7:24-27).

    The entire sermon on the mount fits very well into Jesus’ message of paradoxical kingdom. It can be boiled down into a single statement: Israel has failed her vocation to be the light of the world, and they must learn to desire peace, love their gentile enemies, and treat God as their father if they want to live; every other way leads to destruction. But what exactly is the “destruction” that Jesus believed was about to come upon Israel if she failed to repent? We’ll examine this in the next post.


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[1] For a more detailed analysis of this view, from various perspectives, see Exile: A Conversation With N. T. Wright, ed. James M. Scott (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2017).

[2] N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (London: SPCK, 1996), 284-302; for Paul, see Jarvis L. Williams, Maccabean Martyr Traditions in Paul's Theology of Atonement (Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2010).

[3] N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God, 147-149.

Moving this blog

    Hi everyone! After some deliberation I’ve decided to move my blog over to a new address,  https://thechristianuniversalist.blogspot.com/...