Jesus, Criteria, and the Demise of AuthenticityChris Keith, Anthony Le Donne Criteria of authenticity, whose roots go back to before the pioneering work of Albert Schweitzer, have become a unifying feature of the so-called Third Quest for the Historical Jesus, finding a prominent and common place in the research of otherwise differing scholars. More recently, however, scholars from different methodological frameworks have expressed discontent with this approach to the historical Jesus. In the past five years, these expressions of discontent have reached a fever pitch. The internationally renowned authors of this book examine the nature of this new debate and present the findings in a cohesive way aimed directly at making the coalface of Historical Jesus research accessible to undergraduates and seminary students. The book's larger ramifications as a thorough end to the Third Quest will provide a pressure valve for thousands of scholars who view historical Jesus studies as outmoded and misguided. This book has the potential to guide Jesus studies beyond the Third Quest and demand to be consulted by any scholar who discards, adopts, or adapts historical criteria. |
Contents
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Part I HISTORICAL METHODOLOGY AND THE QUEST FOR AN AUTHENTIC JESUS | 23 |
Chapter 1 THE INDEBTEDNESS OF THE CRITERIA APPROACH TO FORM CRITICISM AND RECENT ATTEMPTS TO REHABILITATE THE ... | 25 |
Chapter 2 THE CRITERIA OF AUTHENTICITY IN JESUS RESEARCH AND HISTORIOGRAPHICAL METHOD Jens Schröter | 49 |
Part II SPECIFIC CRITERIA IN THE QUEST FOR AN AUTHENTIC JESUS | 71 |
AN AUTHENTICATING CRITERION IN JESUS RESEARCH? Loren T Stuckenbruck | 73 |
ITS DEVELOPMENT INEVITABILITY AND HISTORIOGRAPHICAL LIMITATIONS Anthony Le Donne | 95 |
HISTORY AND PLAUSIBILITY Dagmar Winter | 115 |
THE HISTORICAL JESUS AND THE QUESTION OF SOURCES Mark Goodacre | 152 |
Part III REFLECTIONS ON MOVING PAST TRADITIONAL JESUS RESEARCH | 171 |
Chapter 8 WHY THE AUTHENTIC JESUS IS OF NO USE FOR THE CHURCH Scot McKnight | 173 |
A HISTORY OF DISILLUSIONMENT Dale C Allison Jr | 186 |
CONCLUDING REMARKS Chris Keith | 200 |
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THE CRITERION OF EMBARRASSMENT AND THE FAILURE OF HISTORICAL AUTHENTICITY Rafael Rodríguez | 132 |
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Common terms and phrases
Allison Anthony Le Donne Aramaic argued authenticity criteria baptism Biblical Bultmann century Christology church claim context criteria approach criteria of authenticity criterion of coherence criterion of dissimilarity criterion of double criterion of embarrassment criterion of multiple Crossan Dagmar Winter Dale Dale Allison discussion double dissimilarity Dunn E. P. Sanders early Christian Eerdmans Ernst Käsemann eschatological essay example form criticism form-critical Fortress Galilee Gerd Theissen gospel tradition Grand Rapids Greek Häfner Hebrew historical Jesus research historical Jesus scholars Holmén Hooker Ibid interpretation James D. G. Dunn Jeremias Jesus historians Jesus Remembered Jesus Seminar Jesus tradition Jewish John Judaism Käsemann language London Marginal Jew Mark and Q Mark Goodacre Mark’s material Matt Meier methodological Morna multiple attestation narrative original parables Porter reconstruction redaction Rodríguez Sanders sayings scholarship Semitic social memory sources story Synoptic Problem Teaching of Jesus Testament Theissen and Winter theological tion traditional criteria trans vols