Pseudonymity and The New Testament - by Conrad Gempf
Pseudonymity and The New Testament - by Conrad Gempf
Pseudonymity and The New Testament - by Conrad Gempf
http://www.biblicalstudies.org.uk/article_nt_gempf.html
A few years ago I met someone who claimed to be C.S. Lewis. He clearly knew a lot about the
man whose identity he was appropriating and on occasion mixed what he said with genuine
excerpts from Lewis's books. He was very entertaining to spend an evening with, but he was not
the man he pretended to be. There were other people present - should I have denounced him to
them? Should I have confronted this man: 'Impostor!'?
Perhaps your feelings will change when I tell you that this man was on a stage at the time,
surrounded by props. I had gone to see a one-man show based on the life and writings of C.S.
Lewis. Despite the fact that the great majority of the audience with whom I was seated were
Christians who would claim to be against falsehood and deceit of any kind, no-one was unhappy
with the actor or the playwright for the fraud they conspired to present to us. In this context, the
pretence was not only acceptable, but laudable. We all paid good money to be lied to, and emitted
loud noises of approval when it was complete.
If we can forget for just a moment our deeply-ingrained acceptance of theatre and fiction as valid
genres, we may be able to glimpse just how peculiar the whole business is - how odd someone
from outside our culture might find it. I submit that it is in this frame of mind that we are best
able to approach the curious business of religious pseudonymity ('pseudo' = false; 'nym' = name):
the practice of writing a literary work under the pretence that someone else, usually someone
more famous, wrote it.
[p.9]
Pseudonymity and the documents
Whatever one thinks about the authorship of the books of the NT, there can be no doubt that there
are pseudonymous documents to be found outside of the canon. No doubt the most widely known
example of this is the so-called Gospel of Thomas, one of the Nag Hammadi Gnostic documents
(although it was known before their discovery). Virtually no-one who has studied this collection
of sayings believes that it originated with the disciple whose name it bears, despite the
introduction of the book which reads: 'These are the secret sayings which the living Jesus spoke
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authentic while Ephesians is not. Again there are reasons that relate to both form and content, and
again these are capable of a variety of interpretations or explanations.
Whether they are good reasons or not, it must at least be admitted that there are rational reasons
for doubting the authorship of some NT books. And these reasons arise from the text rather than
from some perversity of mind on the part of scholars. But how is this phenomenon to be
explained? What possible reason could anyone, let alone a Christian, have for writing a document
and pretending that someone else is responsible for it?
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documents written by authorities and forging such documents oneself. At least there is if what
we're reading is a magazine article or a book of non-fiction. We have entirely different
expectations of a play, a film or a poem, however. For example, if a television programme shows
some film footage of London in the 1930s accompanied by sombre music and the voice of a news
presenter doing the narration, the whole audience will treat the words differently than if the music
is light-hearted and the voice is that of a famous comedian. It is important to notice that there is
nothing intrinsically different about the footage or the medium that demands one not to be taken
literally - it is a more or less arbitrary feature of our society and culture, but a feature which
nearly everyone in our society is aware of.
Some biblical scholars have argued that it is our arbitrary cultural expectations that mislead us
when we consider authorship of some of these ancient books. The cultures which produced them
and for which they were produced may have had entirely different expectations than we have.
Perhaps when a new epistle bearing an apostle's name was produced after his death, people had
only the expectations we might have at a one-man play about C.S. Lewis. We are not likely to
condemn the playwright or the actor of plagiarism or misquotation as long as what is said is true
and
[p.10]
reasonably in character. Might not the early Christians have had this kind of expectation of
spiritual writings? A truly helpful epistle written by someone else in Paul's name might, thus, not
have been viewed either by the author or the audience as plagiarism or misquotation or lying. Just
as with the actor playing C.S. Lewis, none of the audience would have been 'fooled', nor would
the intention of the writer have been to make the people believe that Lewis or Paul were really on
the stage. Dishonesty doesn't really enter into it.
This is a very common way of understanding pseudonymity in Christianity and in ancient
cultures: that it is used more as an artistic literary device, rather than as a serious and dishonest
attempt to gain authority for a work by deceitful means. And to some extent, the evidence that we
have bears this out. An incident from the early church that is frequently mentioned is the church
father Tertullian's account of an elder of Asia in his time who wrote a book using Paul's name, out
of love for Paul and desiring to honour him thus. We shall have occasion to look at the ending of
this incident in the next section, but for the time being we can see that the incident illustrates that
some Christians did compose pseudonymously, apparently without feeling they were doing
something deceitful.
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own sake.
The modern discipline of biblical studies prides itself on scientific use of literary analysis, and we
tend to think that such 'tools' were the invention of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It is a
bit of a surprise, then, to find very similar techniques being used by church leaders to analyse
Christian literature as early as the first few centuries AD. And what they were using them for was
to determine authorship. About the author of Revelation, Dionysius wrote:
...I could not so easily admit that this was the apostle, the son of Zebedee... and the same person
who wrote the Gospel.... But from the character of both, and the forms of expression, and the
whole disposition and execution of the book, I draw the conclusion that the authorship is not
his.[4]
Dionysius came to the conclusion that it must have been another man named John who wrote the
book. Clearly some in the early church were interested in authorship, and were not exactly
gullible.
It is sometimes thought that in order to 'make it into the canon' a book had to meet the formal
requirement of being written by one of Jesus' followers. A moment's reflection shows that this is
too simplistic. The majority of the NT is attributed to Paul and Luke, two men who were not
followers of the Lord during his earthly ministry. Yet it is true that authorship mattered to those
who decided, or recognized, the canon. If, however, mere connection to an apostle is not good
enough grounds for taking a book seriously, much of the impetus for falsely claiming apostolic
authorship is removed.
In the outcome of the incident I mentioned in the previous section, about Tertullian's elder who
wrote his book in honour of Paul, despite the lofty motive the elder was not saluted, but rather he
was removed from church office. Tertullian also tells us that there were some teachings in the
book he didn't like. But these were probably not to be considered heretical - nor were they the
crux by which the book was rejected. It is not that Terfullian said, 'These beliefs are wrong,
therefore the book must be rejected'; rather it seems more akin to 'this book is a fake, therefore I
needn't change my point of view on these matters'.[5]
In short, the only reactions portrayed in the surviving literature are (1) this book really was
written by the apostle it claimed to be written by; (2) we don't know who this book was written
by, or it was written by a person with the same name as someone more famous; or (3) this book
was not written by the person who claimed to have written it and is to be rejected. This does not
sound to me like the concerns and reactions of a society that was comfortable with the sort of
artistic pseudonymity of which we spoke in the previous section.
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the church (Tertullian's elder). Although inspiration by the Holy Spirit and false claims of
authorship do not seem to us to be compatible, we cannot, I think, exclude the possibility that
God would work through such literary conventions. Pseudonymity need be only as deceitful as a
parable, if the audience knows what's coming.
On the other hand, the evidence shows that the church fathers were far from uninterested in the
authorship question, and yet we have no record of their congratulating a pseudonymous author or
consciously accepting a single pseudonymous work. We must conclude that if pseudonymous
works got into the canon, the church fathers were fooled by a transparent literary device that was
originally intended not to fool anyone.
It will be clear by now that I personally find no compelling reason to believe that any of the
books in the NT are written by anyone other than who they claim to be written by. The evidence,
overall, inclines me to the other direction. But, and this is important, I do not think that
pseudonymity can be ruled out as a serious possibility. The cases against the traditional
authorship of 2 Peter and the Pastorals in particular are strong and not easily dismissed.
In the end, though, the books' place in the canon was secured not by their authentic authorship
claims but by their being inspired by the Holy Spirit. And we must always remember that his
ways need not be our ways. In the light of the practice of ancient cultures, therefore, we must not
take the point of view that anyone who thinks there are pseudonymous books in the NT
necessarily has something wrong with their view of biblical authority.
The books of the Bible were written by specific human beings in specific cultural settings. Being
sensitive to these origins, even when features of them appear to conflict with our own cultural
expectations, enhances rather than detracts from our under standing of how the Holy Spirit used
these people and situations to bring us the book we know as Holy Scripture.
References
[1] For more complete arguments on both sides of the matter, it is best to look at introductions to
the NT and commentaries on the books in question. A good start would be D. Guthrie, New
Testament Introduction (Apollos, 1990) and W.G. Kmmel, Introduction to the New Testament
(SCM, 1975).
[2] On the one hand, evangelicals like Richard Bauckham come down on the pseudonymity side
of the question, while people of otherwise more liberal persuasions, like Luke Johnson, come
down in favour of authenticity, more or less. See R.J. Bauckham, Jude, 2 Peter (Word Biblical
Commentary, 1986), and L.T. Johnson, The Writings of the New Testament (SCM, 1986).
[3] Galen, In Hipp. de nat. hominis 1.42, as cited by Bruce Metzger, 'Literary Forgeries and
Canonical Pseudepigrapha', Journal of Biblical Literature Vol. 91 (1972), pp. 5-6.
[4] Dionysius, Extant Fragments 1.4, as cited by T.D. Lea, 'The Early Christian View of
Pseudepigraphic Writings', Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society Vol. 27 (1984), p. 69.
[5] See D. Guthrie, 'Appendix C: Epistolary Pseudepigraphy', in NT Introduction, pp. 1011-1028.
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