2011-12-10

N. T. Wright on holding off theological conclusions about Jesus until history has had its say

" John the Baptist is said to be 'more than a prophet'; but if that is said of John, what must be said for Jesus himself? At this point some will want to jump without more ado into a full Nicene christology, and will, not for the last time, have to be severely restrained. It will not do for the elder brother (orthodoxy) to set terms and conditions for the return of the younger (history). But the question 'Who then is this?', or at least 'Who does he think he is?', will not go away. ... the stories that Jesus told indicate well enough that he did not see himself as a prophet entrusted with a task simply for his own generation, one member of a long, continuing line. None of the 'leadership' prophets who have left traces in Josephus thought of themselves in that way, either. The stories he told, and acted out, made it clear that he envisaged his own work as bringing Israel's history to its fateful climax. He really did believe he was inaugurating the kingdom."
N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1996),
p. 197

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