Anti-Semitism and Religious Violence Gospel-of-John
Anti-Semitism and Religious Violence Gospel-of-John
Anti-Semitism and Religious Violence Gospel-of-John
While it is a tragic fact that the Gospel of John has contributed to anti-Semitism and
religious violence during some chapters of Christian history, John is not anti-Semitic. It
was written by a Jewish writer, about a Jewish messianic figure, targeted first toward
convincing Jewish audiences that Jesus was indeed the Jewish Messiah. Salvation is “of
the Jews,” according to the Johannine Jesus, and each of the “I-am” sayings embodies a
classic representation of Israel. John is no more “anti-Semitic” than the Essene
community or the prophetic work of John the Baptist. On the other hand, “the Jews”
sometimes typify the unbelieving world and are portrayed as primary adversaries of Jesus
and his followers, despite the fact that some are also presented as coming to faith in
Jesus. The Ioudaioi in John can be seen to represent several associations, ranging from
“the Judeans” (suggesting north-south divisions) to the religious leaders in Jerusalem (or
locally in a diaspora setting), who actively oppose Jesus and the growth of his movement.
The main problem is with interpreting John wrongly or with allowing flawed
interpretations to stand.2 When read correctly, the Fourth Gospel not only ceases to be a
source of religious acrimony; it points the way forward for all seekers of truth to sojourn
together, across the boundaries of religious movements, time, and space.
A few years ago on display at Yale’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript
Library was the block-print collection of Fritz Eichenberg’s works, and of prime
notoriety within the collection was a striking print of a Jewish Holocaust victim on a
cross. This haunting image (“The Crucifixion,” 1980) highlights ironic tragedies on
several levels, making its prophetic points along the way.3 The on-looking guard at the
crucifixion is not a Roman soldier, but a Nazi SS officer. The Golgotha site is not a hill in
Jerusalem, but a death camp adorned with jagged barbed wire in the foreground, a
menacing guard-tower beacon in the background, and the names of eleven death camps
posted on a signpost. Central within the print, however, is the tragic figure of a man on a
cross wearing the Jewish Star of David on his jacket. As a Jewish European himself,
Eichenberg not only portrays this figure as a tragic victim in the singular, but as a
typological representation of the mass victimization of the Jewish nation at the hands of
Nazi Germany in particular, condemning also Christians and others for their anti-
Semitism on the global stage in general. Ironically, Jesus of Nazareth came to break the
1
This is an expanded edition of the essay by the same title in John and Judaism: A Contested Relationship
in Context, edited by R. Alan Culpepper and Paul N. Anderson, Resources for Biblical Study 87 (Atlanta:
SBL Press, 2017) 265-311, without the appendices below and other sections. That book represents a state
of the art collection of essays by an outstanding selection of international authorities, addressing an
extremely important subject in contemporary society. These essays were presented at the “John and
Judaism” held at the McAfee School of Theology, November 2015.
2
As important books and collections on the subject have shown: Culpepper 1987; Dunn 1991/2006; 1992;
1999; Kysar 1993; Rensberger 1999; Bieringer et al, eds. 2001; Reinhartz 2001abc; Lieu 2002; Pesch 2005;
Heemstra 2009; Donaldson 2010; Trachtenberg 2012; van Belle 2013; Frey 2013g; Nicklas 2014.
3
Fritz Eichenberg, a Jewish German-American who escaped Germany in 1933, contributed dozens of
wood-block ink prints to The Catholic Worker, edited by Dorothy Day. This image, first published in his
Dance with Death (1983; cf. Ellsberg 2004, 95), is also featured online in Hammond 2000.
1
cycles of violence in the world, but movements in his name have too often dreadfully
failed to carry out that mission faithfully.
“The Crucifixion”
(Fritz Eichenberg, 1980; http://www.quaker.org/fqa/images/eichnazi.gif)
2
It is a sad fact that just as the Old Testament conquest narratives have been wielded by
interpreters somehow to overturn the clear teachings of Jesus on peace and nonviolence,4
the Gospels of Matthew and John have been used to instigate and further anti-Semitism
and religious violence by Christians and others. The vexing presentations of “the Jews”
as the killers of Jesus at the hands of the Romans in these two Gospels have become
fodder for prejudicial platforms against those of Semitic origins, sometimes motivated by
political or economic reasons, and the voices of the wise and the discerning have too
often gone unheeded. This is terribly sad, given the tragic outcome for the Jewish nation
and the history of religious violence in western society. One’s first reaction might thus
favor banning these or other religious documents from the marketplace of ideas
altogether.5 Censorship, however, would produce a new set of prejudicial disasters, as
inquisitions and book-burning schemes always create more problems than they solve.
Questions remain, however, as to whether the Gospel of John was indeed anti-
Semitic in its conception and development, or whether such is a flawed reading of the
text altogether. Exegesis trumps eisegesis when it comes to the responsible interpretation
of biblical texts, and especially on world-impacting subjects it deserves to be applied.
The thesis of this essay is that while John has played a role in anti-Semitism and religious
violence, such influences represent the distortion of this thoroughly Jewish piece of
writing, which actually provides ways forward for all seekers of truth and inclusivity if
interpreted adequately. The Fourth Gospel represents an intra-Jewish perspective,
standing against violence and force, forwarding a universalist appeal to all seekers of
truth, while also documenting the dialectical engagement between revelation and religion.
Of several approaches to the problem of the presentation of Ioudaios and hoi Ioudaioi in
John, a variety of solutions have emerged. Given the facts that Jesus is undeniably
presented as “a Jew” in John 4:9, that salvation is “of the Jews” (4:22), that the evangelist
displays evidence of being Jewish, and that his goal is to show that Jesus is the Jewish
Messiah/Christ—fulfilling Jewish scripture, it cannot be said that the Johannine narrative
is ethnically anti-Semitic. Then again, the narrator shows Jesus referring to religious
authorities as bound to “your law” in John 8:17 and 10:34, and to “their law” in 15:25, so
some individuation between Jesus of Nazareth and religious authorities in Judea is
suggested by the text.6 The question centers on the character of what that individuation
4
If the Johannine Gospel is concerned with the revelation of truth, such cannot be furthered by force or
violence (with de la Potterie 2007). Thus, Miroslav Volf’s work on exclusion and embrace (1996, 264-68)
and Stephen Motyer’s analysis of truth in John (2008, 163-67) see John’s promise of liberation and
redemption (John 8:32) as being rooted in truth rather than force. On the conquest narratives, Jesus, and
nonviolence, see Anderson 1994, 2004b, 2004c.
5
This comes close to Maurice Casey’s approach to the truth of John’s Gospel. In Casey’s view (1996),
because John is anti-Semitic it conveys no historically worthy content regarding Jesus of Nazareth, and it is
to be disregarded by all persons with moral sensibilities and historical interests. Of course, Casey’s first
inference is flawed exegetically (Just 1999), and few of his other views are critically compelling.
6
For instance, if references to “your” and “their” law represent John’s total rejection of the Torah and thus
Judaism (Ashton 2007, 23), why does John’s story of Jesus feature no fewer than a dozen references to
central passages from the Torah being fulfilled in Jesus, either typologically or prophetically (see below,
Appendix III)? According to Manns (1988, 30), despite the fact that John’s Jesus seems to distance himself
from Jewish leaders, Jesus is still presented as fulfilling the heart of Jewish ideals.
3
might have been, how it developed, and whether it reflects an intra-Jewish set of tensions
or an extra-Jewish set of engagements between the emerging Jesus movement and its
parental Judaism.
One approach is to see the Gospel of John as theologically anti-Jewish. John’s
presentation of Jesus as the Jewish Messiah is seen by some interpreters as Christian
supersessionism. Jesus not only fulfills the typologies of Israel, but he virtually becomes
the new Israel displacing the need for the other. Within this approach John is seen as
being written against Jewish people and/or members of the Jewish religion, seeking to
supplant one religion with another. Therefore, this form of anti-Semitism may or may not
be ethnocentric, but it certainly is “religiocentric” for holders of this view. The problem
with that, however, is that John’s soteriology is also a universal one. The light enlightens
everyone (John 1:9), Jesus’s reign is one of truth (18:36-37), and the true sign of
discipleship is love, which knows no religious bounds (13:34-35). Authentic worship is
neither in Jerusalem nor Samaria; rather, it transcends particular religious forms,
locations, and expressions (4:21-24). John’s presentation of Jesus as the Messiah shows
the Revealer to be challenging all that is of human origin, including Christian religion
and power, as well as Jewish and Roman renderings of the same. John’s Jesus sets up no
cultic meals of remembrance (John 13), and he himself did not baptize, despite his
followers’ having done so (4:2). Therefore, John’s Jesus challenges creaturely religious
practices rather than setting up one religion over and against another. John’s scandal is
not that it is supersessionist—challenging Judaism; it is that it is revelational, challenging
all that is of human origin as an affront to human-made religion, proper.
A second approach is to read hoi Ioudaioi as a reference to “the Judeans”
(southerners versus Samaritans or Galileans) within Palestine or the Levant in general.
These themes thus represent a regional struggle between a province and the center of the
Jewish religious and political world. Certainly, Jewish people traveled to and from
Jerusalem, and extensive evidence in the text bolsters such a reading. The Jewish nation
would obviously have thought of Jerusalem as its center, so “Jerusalocentricism” may be
a helpful way to understand the Johannine use of the term Ioudaioi as referring to
Judeans in particular, not Jews in general. Thus, the “Jerusalemites” (7:25) are presented
among the “Judeans” who were seeking to kill Jesus (7:1, 19, 25). As a northern-
Palestinian narrative about its Mosaic prophet having been rejected by the leaders in
Judea, north-south dialogues certainly would have reflected also a variety of regional and
ideological concerns. This approach works fairly well for most of John’s presentations of
hoi Ioudaioi, and this is where most of the Johannine analysis should focus its attention.
Yet, associations extend beyond Judean-Galilean regional struggles to larger issues of
centralized religion versus its challenges from the periphery. As with the rich and
poignant tradition of the Jewish prophets before Jesus’s day, Jesus is not the first
progressive figure to encounter an uneven reception at the center of Jerusalem’s religious
elite. Thus, John’s north-south tensions reflect a series of dialectical engagements
between the cult-oriented center of Jerusalem-based religion and the charisma-oriented
periphery of first-century Galilean Judaism.
A third approach is to take hoi Ioudaioi to mean “particular Jewish authorities”
who wanted to do away with Jesus, described as a struggle between the unauthorized
prophet and official religious authorities. It certainly appears to be the case that in John
(as well as in the other Gospels) religious authorities are presented as the ones most
4
threatened by Jesus. Whether he was challenging their religious institutions, such as
temple worship and its sacrificial systems (let alone the money-changing operations), or
challenging the legalistic approaches to the Mosaic Law erected by scripture lawyers and
scribes, Jesus is indeed remembered as evoking controversy among the religious leaders
of his day. In that sense, John’s story of Jesus reflects an autonomous historical memory
of the ministry and last days of Jesus, developed in theological reflection. Thus,
Jerusalem’s Chief Priests, rulers, and Pharisees demand to know Jesus’s authorization,
which leads to pointed debates over Abrahamic, Mosaic, and Davidic authority. Then
again, even in the way Caiaphas, the chief priests, the Pharisees, and the called council
are presented, betrays political interests. Their willingness to "sacrifice" the Galilean prophet
reflects an endeavor to prevent a Roman backlash against the Jewish populace (11:45-53). And
of course, Judean-Galilean tensions between the Jesus movement and the Jerusalem
authorities did not begin with his ministry or end with his death. Regional tensions are
clear in the Johannine narrative, and later struggles between followers of Jesus and
Jewish authorities are by no means late and only late. The ways that these groups are
portrayed in John as being threatened by Jesus and his followers, including their
reactions, might even reflect several phases of debates within the developing Johannine
tradition, as Urban von Wahlde, Raymond Brown, and others have suggested.7
A fourth approach considers the presentation of religious authorities in John as
narrative characters who represent the ambivalent relationships with local Jewish
authorities by Johannine Christians in a diaspora setting, as they sought to convince
family and friends that Jesus was indeed the Jewish Messiah, sometimes to no avail. This
would involve a reflection of evolving religious dialogues within Johannine history and
theology—a multi-level reading of the text. Plausibly, post-70 CE Johannine Christianity
may originally have had a home within one or more synagogue communities within a
Hellenistic setting, leading to some followers of Jesus being eventually distanced from
the synagogue (aposynagōgos; cf. John 9:22; 12:42; 16:2) because of their willingness to
confess Jesus openly. The Birkat ha-Minim (the curse against the heretics, effecting
removal from the synagogue followers of “the Nazarene”) likely represents an orthodox
attempt to discipline perceived ditheism within the Jesus movement, even if the primary
interest was something short of expelling all Jesus adherents from all local synagogues.
Such a view overstates likely realities. However, when Jesus adherents became distanced
from local synagogues and joined in with local Gentile believers in Jesus, it appears that
some of them were courted back into the synagogue on the basis of Mosaic authority and
7
In Brown’s paradigm (Brown 1979, 2003), the pre-Gospel stage of John’s composition involved tensions
between Judeans, Samaritans, and Galileans (ca. 50-80 CE), while the stage in which the Gospel was
written involved at least six sets of dialogues within the Johannine situation (ca. 90 CE): dialogues with
“the world” (unbelieving Gentiles), “the Jews” (members of local synagogues), adherents of John the
Baptist (even in Asia Minor), those Brown calls “crypto-Christians” (ones who remained in the synagogue
as secret believers in Jesus), those he calls “Jewish Christian churches of inadequate faith” (those not
accepting the divinity of Jesus or the eucharist as the true flesh and blood of Jesus) and “apostolic
Christians” (Petrine-hierarchy institutional Christian leaders, who did not appreciate the spiritual work of
the risen Christ through the Paraclete). Von Wahlde (1979, 1996, 2000, 2010a) sees gradations of
difference between the ways that religious leaders are portrayed in John, arguing that the earliest edition of
John referred to Jewish leaders as “Pharisees,” “Chief Priests,” and “rulers,” while the second edition
referred to the adversaries of Jesus as the Ioudaioi. The latter term represents engagements with local
synagogue leaders in the Johannine situation, according to von Wahlde’s paradigm.
5
Abrahamic blessing—contingent upon their diminishing or denying their belief in Jesus
as the Messiah/Christ. This appears to represent the schism in the Johannine situation
reported in 1 John 2:18-25. 8 From this perspective, the narration of Jewish leaders’
acceptances and rejections of Jesus in earlier time periods served to explain how things
had come to be the way they were in later generations, including the inconceivable
theological problem of how Jewish leaders would continue to reject their own Jewish
Messiah.9
A fifth approach is to view John’s presentation of hoi Ioudaioi as archetypes of
the unbelieving world: ho kosmos. As the Revealer from God, Jesus reveals nothing
except that he is from God (according to Rudolf Bultmann10), and this brings a crisis of
faith for the world. Humans must be willing to accept the Revealer, but in doing so, they
must forfeit their attachments to creaturely wisdom and the worldly scaffolding of
human-made religion. Therefore, inauthentic existence is replaced by authentic, believing
response to the divine initiative, and this is the crisis effected by the Incarnation. The
Jewish leaders opposing Jesus in the Johannine narrative thus represent human hopes in
creaturely sufficiency, complete with its conventional successes, and this is why “the
world” finds the coming of Christ an offense and a scandal. In this sense, the Johannine
critique of hoi Ioudaioi implies more than a contextual critique of religious antipathy to
Johannine believers; it more generally and universally denotes the confrontation of
humanity’s devised religious approaches to God by the eschatological advent of the
Revealer. If the divine initiative scandalizes all that is of human origin—religious and
political ventures that are creaturely in their character rather than of divine origin—the
Johannine Jesus as the Christ must be seen as confronting Christian scaffolding and
investments as well as Jewish and Roman ones. As the universal light, available to all
(John 1:9), Jesus comes as the light illuminating those who walk in darkness (8:12; 9:5;
11:9), but they also must respond to the light even if it exposes the creaturely character of
their platforms (3:18-21). In that sense, Jesus as the life-producing “bread” brings a crisis
to the world: a crisis of decision as to whether one will make a stand for or against the
Revealer.11 And yet, as John is highly theological, its content cannot be divorced from its
originative and developing contexts. Thus, abstraction and particularity in John are
inextricably entwined.
A sixth approach is to see John as pro-Jewish. After all, nearly all persons and
groups mentioned in John, except for the Romans, are either Jewish or Semitic, and Jesus
is presented pervasively as the Jewish Messiah-Christ. Jesus is Jewish, and so are all of
his disciples; those touched by his ministry—whom he heals, teaches, feeds, and
8
Note the antichristic errors of interpretation, as well as the distinctive errors of the Johannine Antichrists.
Anderson 2007d, 2007e.
9
This is precisely the sort of issue faced by Paul a generation earlier in his writing of Rom 9-11, as Krister
Stendahl’s treatment of Paul among the Jews and the Gentiles reminds us (1976), although the tables by
now have been turned. Instead of Gentiles feeling inferior to more established Jewish members of the Jesus
movement, the Johannine Gospel asserts the Jewishness of Jesus for the benefit of his audiences, whether
they be Jewish or Gentile.
10
Jesus is the Revealer without a revelation (Bultmann 1955, 66); it is the “that-ness” (die Dass) of God’s
saving-revealing activity that calls for a response to the divine initiative rather than being concerned with
the “how” or the “wherefore.” Or, as de la Potterie (1997, 78) puts it, “John’s theology is above all a
theology of revelation.”
11
Thus, Jesus’s claiming to be the life-producing bread in John 6:35 invites audiences to make a stand “for
or against the Revealer” (Bultmann 1971, 213).
6
challenges—are all Semitic or Jewish. While some of the Ioudaioi in Jerusalem mount
opposition to Jesus, many of them also believe in him, and this fact has gone strangely
unnoticed among several interpreters. 12 Further, some leaders among “the Jews” also
come to believe in Jesus, and others offer support to the grieving family of Lazarus. Even
the Samaritans receive Jesus as the Messiah and welcome him to stay with them; despite
his rejection in Nazareth as presented in Mark 6, many receive him in Capernaum—even
within the household of the royal official (John 4:43-54). Greeks desire to meet Jesus in
John 12:20-26, and this fulfills his sense of mission, as the blessings of Abraham are
availed to the world. Climactically, the fulfilled word of Caiaphas, that the sacrifice of
Jesus would gather the scattered children of God in the diaspora, is presented as an
unwitting prophecy by the High Priest in John 11:49-52, extending the blessings of
Judaism to the world. Therefore, while some of “his own” rejected Jesus as the Christ, as
many as received him are welcomed into the divine family as children of God simply by
believing in his name (John 1:10-13).
In addition to these particular approaches, it could be that hoi Ioudaioi in John can
be used meaningfully in more than one of these categories, or that there may be other
ways of understanding the use of the term in John besides the above options.13 Adequate
interpretation of John and Judaism would thus involve a synthesis of multiple factors, and
it is likely that at different stages of its development the Johannine tradition possessed
distinctive approaches to the Ioudaioi in the Johannine situation. Thus, the literary
contexts of the term’s usage must be considered in the light of what may be inferred
about the history of the text and the history of the Johannine situation before constructing
an exegetical appraisal of the best meaning(s) of the term originally, and thus for later
generations. This forces an evaluation also of the history of interpretation, and it calls
interpreters to make responsible judgments regarding the adequacy of interpretive
applications in later generations.
While religious violence has sometimes been evoked by distortive readings of the
Gospels, Jesus commands Peter to put away the sword in John 18:11, just as he does in
the Synoptics (Matt 26:52; Luke 22:38). And, while John’s Jesus is portrayed as driving
sheep and cattle with a whip of cords, the dove sellers are expelled with words, not
force—not exactly a license for resorting to physical violence, and certainly not lethal
force, against humans (John 2:15-16). Further, Jesus declares that his kingdom is one of
truth; it is not of this world, which explains why his disciples cannot fight (John 18:36-
37). It is not that truth may not be furthered by violence, a factor of permission; it cannot
be furthered by violence, a factor of possibility. Rather, truth is furthered by
convincement, not coercion, and the Holy Spirit—the Spirit of truth—convicts persons of
12
As demonstrated below, in over a dozen instances Jews in Jerusalem are presented as believing in Jesus
in the Gospel of John. While Griffith (2008) suggests that some of these may have turned away, accounting
for some of the Johannine acrimony, the link between John 6:60-71 and 8:31-59 is not entirely certain;
nonetheless, echoes of 1 John 2:18-25 are palpable in the narration of John 6:66 (Anderson 1996, 258).
13
And, there may also have been disagreements in the late first century as to what it meant to be Jewish—
full stop (see Cohen 1993; 1999). In de Boer’s view, while issues of identity and behavior would also have
been key (2001), there might have been disagreement over those very measures. Therefore, confusion in
later generations of interpretation may reflect a historic reality: things were confusing back then, as well.
7
sin, righteousness, and judgment (John 16:8). The truth is always liberating (John 8:32).
Yes, John’s narrative carries a good deal of religious invective—a factor of heated
debates with religious leaders in Jerusalem and/or a diaspora setting—but one must go
against the clearly counter-violent presentation of Jesus in John to embrace any form of
religious violence. Therefore, resorting to violence cannot be supported by an
exegetically faithful reading of the Gospel of John. It goes directly against the Johannine
stance against violence, corroborated also by the clear teachings of Jesus in the
Synoptics.14
A further consideration involves John’s presentation of Jesus as combatting the
spiral of violence of his day, every bit as pointedly as does the Jesus of the Synoptics. 15
From the perspective of Jonathan Bernier, a strong case can be built that the issues related
to the aposynagōgos passages of John 9:22; 12:42; 16:2 were early rather than late.
According to Bernier, they reflect tensions in Jerusalem rather than in the diaspora, and
they are political in character rather than theological. Following the insurrection in
Sepphoris—near Nazareth—after the death of Herod in 4 BCE, when Judas the son of
Hezekiah raided Herod’s palace and confiscated weapons, Varus of Syria marched in,
putting down the rebellion and crucifying 2,000 Jews (Josephus, Antiquities 17.10.10;
Wars 2.5.2). A decade or so later, when Judas the Galilean launched a revolt against
Roman monetary taxation, founding the “fourth philosophy” Zealot movement, political
tensions again arose in Galilee. Therefore, the Birkat ha-Minim may have emerged as a
disciplining of perceived zealotry within Judean synagogues, lest as Caiaphas worried in
John 11:48-50, the Romans should step in and “destroy our place and nation.” Indeed, the
Birkat is clearly referenced later in Justin’s Dialogue with Trypho (ca. 150 CE), where
curses against Christians in the synagogues are referenced half a dozen times or so.16
And, Gamaliel II is associated with introducing the Birkat during the Jamnia period (70-
90 CE), but those later tensions with followers of the Nazarene (Jesus) may have
originated with concerns over Roman retaliation against messianic pretenders such as
Judas the Galilean, the Samaritan, Theudas, or the Egyptian.17
That being the case, the nearness of the Passover in John 2:13; 6:4; 11:55 is not
mentioned with theological significance in mind, but it references political tensions
related to Roman sensitivities regarding Jewish uprisings during Judaism’s greatest
nationalistic celebration, the Passover.18 In John 2 Jesus predicts the tearing down of the
temple and its rebuilding—a reference nonetheless to the resurrection and not the
temple’s eventual destruction in 70 CE. In John 6:14-15 the crowd wishes to rush Jesus
off for a hasty coronation as a prophet-king like Moses—an honor Jesus eludes by
escaping into the hills. In John 11 Caiaphas and the chief priests “sacrifice” Jesus
politically as a means of staving off a Roman backlash (vv. 48, 50). Despite these
14
Anderson 1994.
15
Richard Horsley (1987) argues compellingly that Jesus of Nazareth sought to reverse spirals of violence
endemic in the Levant over this period of time. Walter Wink (1992) contributed particular understandings
to how Jesus offered a “third way” in dealing with the fight-flight dichotomies of domination (Anderson
2014c, 34-38.
16
Horbury 1998.
17
This represents a more dialectical view of the Johannine-Jewish history of engagement in longitudinal
perspective. Rather than seeing the issue as being early only (Bernier 2013) or late only (Martyn 1968), it
may have involved earlier and later engagements, even over different issues (Anderson 2014, 52-55, 133).
18
Anderson 1996, 184; 2014c, 147-48.
8
politically laden tensions, however, John’s Jesus eschews violence and popularistic
acclaim. Rather, he confronts authorities—both Jewish and Roman—by appealing to
truth. He offers his followers unworldly peace (14:27), not a worldly kingdom (18:36-
37). In post-resurrection appearances, Jesus then bestows peace upon his followers
(20:19, 21, 26), and as Jesus’s kingdom is one of truth, despite tribulation experienced in
the world, his disciples are promised peace because he has overcome the world (16:33).
Therefore, on the basis of a clear and straightforward reading of the text, one cannot
adequately base violent actions upon the presentation of Jesus in the Fourth Gospel; to do
so violates the text exegetically.
Despite the fact of John’s contributing to anti-Semitism, this is not to say that such is a
sole or even a primary cause of anti-Semitism.19 It is to say, however, that unwittingly or
otherwise, anti-Semitic attitudes have either emerged from readings of John or have
resulted in the employment of John to support anti-Semitic agendas. It is a troubling fact,
for instance, that Martin Luther’s theologization of “the Jews” as villains of the faith
contributed to German anti-Jewish sentiments and preaching, which later played roles in
the tragic unfolding of the Holocaust.20 And Luther, of course, is not alone in that matter.
Samuel Sandmel reminds us of the anecdote he heard as a child: a man was beating up on
Jewish people after attending a Christian worship service.21 When a policeman stopped
him and asked him why he was doing so, he replied, “Because the Jews killed Christ.”
The policeman said, “But that was 2,000 years ago,” to which the man responded, “That
may be so, but I just heard about it today!”
This story points to problems of contemporary influence regardless of what a
biblical text originally meant, and what it authentically means hence. It is what people
make of a text and what people do in response to their understandings of it that present
real problems, not just imaginary ones. A further distortion continues, however, in that
some Christian catechisms have included derogatory portrayals of “the Jews” as a feature
of theological anti-Semitism with profound sociological implications.22 The Jewish “law”
is juxtaposed to the grace of God availed through Christ (1:17), and Christians all too
often bolster their religious commitments by disparaging other religions, including their
parental Jewish faith. My contention is that such approaches misunderstand what the
New Testament writings are claiming with regard to Jesus and to Judaism.23 All of its
19
Indeed, anti-Jewish measures precede Christianity by many centuries (cf. 2 Macc 6), and even in the
Common Era, anti-Semitic thrusts have come from many directions besides Christian ones. See, for
instance, John Gager’s book on the origins of anti-Semitism exogenous to Christianity as well as
endogenous to it (Gager 1983). Roman anti-semitism is also apparent in John and in other Greco-Roman
sources (Meeks 1975; Daniel 1979). On Luther’s anti-Semitism and its trajectories of influence, however,
see Töllner 2007 and Probst 2012.
20
Probst 2012.
21
Rendered in print in several ways, cf. Sandmel 1978, 155.
22
For the devastating ecumenical implications of theological anti-Semitism see Banki 1984, Leibig 1983,
and Reuther 1979. Then again, the best hope for building better ecumenical and interfaith relations hinges
upon clarifying what the Gospel of John is saying, as well as what it is not; see Knight 1968; Cargas 1981;
Cook 1987; Kysar 1993; Beck 1994.
23
In his book on Jesus and the transformation of Judaism, John Riches (1982) argues compellingly that the
goal of Jesus of Nazareth was neither to do away with Judaism nor to displace it; it was to restore it to a
9
writers were Jewish, and to develop out of them an anti-Jewish worldview goes against
the religion of Jesus, Paul, John and the heart of the New Testament. Jesus, Paul, and
John were thoroughly Jewish—full stop.24 Thus, anti-Semitism among Christians might
not have primarily emerged from reflective Bible study or exegetically adequate
Christian teaching. More often than is acknowledged, anti-Semitism has been evoked
from nonreligious sources, and for political or economic reasons that are then supported
by the flawed citing of scripture or religious stances. Likewise, those disparaging
Christianity might do so for political rather than religious reasons, so the fact of political
and economic intrusions into religious dialogues and interfaith discussions merits critical
analysis.
A less-obvious-yet-sinister fact thus involves the wresting and employment of
religious authority or motifs for the purposes of co-opting society into the toleration of,
and even the conducting of, evil. Here religion itself becomes both a pawn and a victim,
and in particular, the Gospel of John. Religious and nonreligious leaders alike resort to
yoking sources of rhetorical equity to their programs, and religious authority is all too
easily co-opted unwittingly. “God, Mom, and apple pie” get yoked to war efforts and
marshaled nationalism, but is apple pie really the cause of militarism? Of course not, and
neither are mothers or God. Thus, the authority of religion in general, and Fourth Gospel
in particular, get used as pawns by the cunning in ways that are often undetected.
Religious people must be skeptical of such ploys, especially because the religious tend to
be more trusting, and uncritically so. Politically motivated leaders have and always will
yoke religious values to their causes, whether or not they are personally religious, using
societal authority to motivate audiences to do their bidding. This is especially the case if
it involves the exalting of the home group and the villainizing of others. Inevitably, when
resorting to violence is then rightly criticized, those who have used religion as a pawn
then tend to blame it as a scapegoat. In blaming religious values for atrocities otherwise
legitimated by such persons, they deflect the blame away from themselves, hoping to
emerge personally unscathed. Thus religion in general, and the Fourth Gospel in
particular, get blamed as scapegoats. This sequence characterizes the modern era
extensively, and many a coopting or critique of religion should be seen as the
misappropriation of its authority, especially if followed by its denigration, rather than
representing the heart of authentic religious faith on its own.25
A parallel example involves the presentation of Israel as God’s chosen people in
the Bible, which has then yoked Christian fundamentalism to the Israeli cause against the
Palestinians, many of whom are Christians. This has led to America’s providing billions
of dollars in military aid to Israel’s use of violent force against populations internal and
external to its borders, including Christians, bolstered by simplistic “biblical” reasoning.
Such appropriations of Gen 12-17, however, do not prove the Bible is anti-Christian, and
neither does the fact that negative portrayals of the Ioudaioi in Matthew and John have
better vision of itself. Likewise, Richard Horsley and Tom Thatcher (2013) argue that the original
Johannine vision was the vitalization of Israel, not its supplanting with a new movement. What we see in
the Johannine reflection upon the movement’s uneven reception within its own ambivalent history is an
overall failure—at best only a partial success—in extending the grace of membership in the divine family
to all who might respond in faith to the divine initiative (Culpepper 1980; Anderson 2011, 22-23, 35-38,
183-90).
24
Falk 1985; Frey 2012b; Anderson 2014c, 46-47, 171-76, 208-13.
25
Anderson 2004b.
10
contributed to anti-Semitic views historically prove these Gospels are anti-Semitic. The
fault lies with anachronistic and inadequate interpretations of the Bible, including the fact
that political uses of biblical themes at times function to demarcate opponents and to
marshal support for causes in ways partisan. Just because religious texts possess
authority, however, this does not mean that they will be employed in rhetorically
adequate ways. Their misinterpretation and misuse must thus be challenged with rigor by
serious scholars if exegetical integrity is to be preserved. 26 Such is the goal of the present
essay.
Despite the fact that John’s presentation of Ioudaios and hoi Ioudaioi has contributed to
anti-Semitism, though, the question remains as to whether the category “anti-Semitic” is
appropriate for discussing religious tensions within the first-century Jesus movement. If
meant by “anti-Semitic” is “against the Jewish people” within the first century and later
eras, the answer is definitely “No.” Such a label is entirely anachronistic. The evangelist
was himself Jewish, as were the leaders and core members of the Johannine situation. It
would be akin to claiming the Essenes or John the Baptist were anti-Semitic in their
vitriolic judging of the Judean status quo, or that the Pharisees were anti-Semitic because
they opposed the Sadducees. Would any genuine scholar argue such a thesis? Obviously
not! If Christianity had not separated from Judaism over the next century or more, the
Johannine dialectical presentation of the Ioudaioi would not even be an issue—or, at least
not an interfaith one.
Another unattended factor in the discussion is the modest beginnings of the Jesus
movement followed by the growth of Christianity over the centuries. If the Jesus
movement had not outgrown its parental Judaism in terms of size and reach, the Jesus
movement would likely have been experienced simply as an irritating sect rather than a
societal majority. In fact, the emerging Jesus movement was largely a fledgling stepsister
to Judaism until several decades into the Constantinian era. It was only around 350 CE
that its numbers within western society broke the 50 percent mark, according to Rodney
Stark, and Christianity did not become the official religion of the Roman Empire until the
Edict of Thessalonica in 380 CE under Theodosius. 27 Therefore, it is anachronistic to
envision followers of Jesus in the Johannine situation as anything but the smaller of
competing religious groups.
On this account, Raymond Brown’s analysis of the Johannine community
reflecting fledgling bands of believers seeking to negotiate the worlds of their Jewish
background and emerging fellowship with Gentile believers in Jesus makes sense.28 With
some of their membership participating in synagogue worship on the Sabbath, with some
26
With Sean Freyne 1985, only as we examine closely the historical contexts of the developing Jesus
movement, appreciating impassioned ideals and experienced losses, can we appreciate what is meant by
Matthean and Johannine polemic regarding Jewish leaders, and more importantly—I would add—what is
not.
27
Stark 1997. Assuming a 40 percent growth rate per decade, Stark estimates the numbers of Jesus
adherents or Christians at the following dates to be: 40 CE—1,000; 50 CE—1,400; 100 CE—7,530; 150
CE—40,496; 200 CE—217,795; 250 CE—1,171,356; 300 CE—6,299,832; 350 CE—33,882,008 (p. 7).
These figures, of course, are estimations based upon Stark’s informed calculations.
28
Brown 1979.
11
meeting in house-churches for First-Day worship along with Gentile believers, and with
some participating in both venues of worship, Jesus adherents within the post-70 CE
Johannine situation must have been stretched in their capacities to manage community
life effectively. They still appealed to Jewish family and friends that Jesus was the Jewish
Messiah/Christ, and yet they also sought to extend the blessings of Judaism to Gentile
audiences within the Roman imperial world. Thus, Johannine believers were fledgling
minorities, not dominant majorities; so to read their community investments as
oppressing minority groups is anachronistic and wrong.29
That being the case, it is also wrong to compare Johannine Christianity too closely
with Qumranic sectarians, although some features of Jewish motivational dualism cohere
between Qumran’s War Scroll and Community Rule and the ethos of the Johannine
Gospel and Epistles. The light-darkness thrust of the Johannine writings, however, is
explanatory as well as motivational; it is Hellenistic as well as Jewish.30 It therefore does
not simply chastise religious leaders for their failure to embrace the sapiential teachings
and prophetic actions of the Revealer; it also calls for embracing the values of Judaism
within a diaspora setting in terms of Jewish faith and practice. This is precisely what is
going on in the later Johannine situation, where traveling ministers, likely two or three
decades into the Pauline mission, are teaching assimilation and cheap grace rather than
cultural resistance and costly discipleship.31 From the perspective of the Johannine Elder,
the second antichristic threat was not a matter of secessionism; it involved the threat of
invasive false teachings, advocating easy codes of discipleship supported by docetizing
Christologies. This is why Ignatius called for the appointing of a singular episcopal leader
in every church as a means of facilitating church unity against the rabid bites of those
who would divide Christian communities by their false teachings. Thus, rather than
seeing Johannine Christianity as a backwater sect, its struggles reflect engagements with
Jewish communities, Greco-Roman culture, and emerging centers of the Jesus
movement, rooted in seeking to maintain basic standards of Jewish ethos while also
embracing newcomers to the faith from outside Judaism. In that sense, they were more
cosmopolitan than sectarian—even more cosmopolitan than their synagogue-abiding
counterparts.32
29
On this anachronism the views of numerous interpreters founder; see, for instance, William A. Johnson
(1989), which upon assuming John to be anti-Semitic and levied against Judaism as an extra-Jewish
movement, finds his own suspicions confirmed without challenging the frailty of his initial assumptions.
30
Contra Ashton 2007, who sees Qumranic ethos “in the bones” of the Johannine evangelist, John’s
rendering of Jesus and his ministry is crafted for reception in a Hellenistic setting (Anderson 1997, 2007b,
2016). Therefore, John’s explanatory dualism follows Plato’s Allegory of the Cave (Republic 7), showing
that those rejecting Jesus sought to remain in the dark rather than coming into the light, lest it be exposed
that their platforms are rooted in human origin rather than divine initiative (John 1:10-13; 3:18-21). John’s
dualism is also motivational (like that of the Essenes) in that it calls for audiences to embrace the way of
life, light, and truth rather than the ways of death, darkness, and falsity (Anderson 2011a, 187-90; 2011b).
31
Anderson 1997; 2007e. In particular, the invitation to ingest the flesh and blood of Jesus calls for
embracing the way of the cross, as the bread that Jesus offers is his flesh given for the life of the world;
Forestell 1974; Anderson 1996, 207-09.
32
Here I take issue with the thesis of Wayne Meeks (1972) that Johannine Christianity was sectarian. If
John’s sector of early Christianity included Jewish and Gentile believers within an urban setting of the
second generation Pauline mission, they would have been more cosmopolitan than sectarian. That was their
challenge: how to help Gentile believers aspire to basic codes of Jewish faith and practice, being in the
world but not of the world (John 17:15-16; 1 John 2:15-17; 5:21; Anderson 2007e). See also Kåre
12
Nonetheless, the diaspora-setting tensions between Johannine believers and
synagogue leaders still appear to reflect a set of intra-Jewish struggles over the heart of
Judaism rather than the periphery. John’s narrative is written by a Jew, about Jesus the
Jew, who is believed to be fulfilling Israel’s divine vocation and global mission as a light
to the nations and a blessing to the world. Thus, in no way can the thoroughly Semitic
Gospel of John, the most Jewish of the Gospels, be considered anti-Semitic. If anything,
John represents a radical view of the Jewish vocation, in that it sees Jesus as the
embodiment of typological Israel as a means of blessing the nations. As being a
descendent of Abraham means receiving a blessed inheritance, so any who believe in
Jesus receive the power to become children of God (John 1:11-13).33 As the Law came
through Moses, grace and truth came through Jesus as the Jewish Messiah/Christ (1:16-
17).
Therefore, the central struggle between the Johannine leadership and local
synagogue leadership in the 80s and 90s of the first century CE involved struggles
regarding how to actualize the blessings of Judaism as extensions of grace to the world. It
is out of this contest over the heart of Judaism that the Johannine tensions with Jewish
communities grew. Like the author of Revelation, who disparaged religious sibling-rivals
as “those who claim to be Jews but are not” (Rev 2:9; 3:9), so the Johannine evangelist
heralds Jesus as fulfilling the heart of Jewish ideals; his is a radically Jewish vision.
Therefore, just as John cannot be considered anti-Semitic, neither can it rightly be
considered anti-Jewish in the general sense, even if it betrays tensions with particular
Jewish groups during its Palestine and diaspora settings. John’s presentation of Jesus as
the Jewish Messiah/Christ reflects an intra-Jewish debate wherein the evangelist’s radical
Jewish messianism is only partly compelling, eventually leading to the parting of the
ways with its parental Judaism. That eventuality, however, is only prefigured in the
Johannine writings, not yet actualized.34
Before searching out the “correct analysis” of the Fourth Gospel’s stance on Judaism,
however, it must be acknowledged that the presentation of hoi Ioudaioi in John is itself a
dialectical one, not a monological rendering.35 C. K. Barrett pointed out long ago that
Fugsleth’s thesis (2005), challenging sectarian appraisals of the Johannine situation within its diaspora
setting.
33
With Culpepper 1980; Pancaro 1970; Marinus de Jonge 1978, and van der Watt 1995, inviting audiences
into the divine family is the center of the Johannine Prologue and the rest of the Gospel. As a communal
response to John’s story of Jesus (cf. 1 John 1:1-3), the Johannine Prologue reformulates the Jewish agency
schema of the Johannine narrative (rooted in Deut 18:15-22) in a Hellenistic-friendly way, welcoming later
audiences into the divine family across cultural bounds as an invitation of grace (Anderson 2016).
34
Contra Meeks (1985) and others who over-read Johannine individuation from Judaism, the actualized
parting of the ways before some time into the second century (and even so, unevenly) is critically
questioned by recent scholarship: Lieu 2002; Nicklas 2014; Reed and Becker 2003; Dunn 2006; Shanks
2013; Charlesworth 2013. And, the reason that Katz (1984) argued against Martyn’s expulsion theory was
the fact of Jewish-Christian closeness of fellowship well into the second century CE, around the time of the
Bar Kokhba Rebellion in 132 CE.
35
Note the highly dialogical character of a dozen of John’s key theological subjects in, especially
presentations of the Ioudaioi. Even in John’s construction of the I-am sayings material, we see
presentations of Jesus as fulfilling typological associations with the true Israel (Anderson 2011a, 190-93).
13
unless the dialectical character of the evangelist’s thought and presentation of content is
considered adequately, interpreters are likely to misconstrue the overall Johannine
presentation of any given subject.36 Jesus is portrayed in John as the most human as well
as the most exalted; as equal to the Father as well as subordinated to the Father. Both
sides of John’s presentations must be considered in performing an adequate analysis of
any Johannine subject. If not, the interpretation will be inevitably flawed. This is
especially true on the subject of Jesus and Judaism within the Gospel of John.37
On one hand, some of “the Jews” in John are presented as archetypes of the
unbelieving world. They reject Jesus as the revealer of the deity, and the evangelist
portrays them as those who remain in darkness instead of coming to the light—those who
love the praise of men rather than the glory of God, whose father is not Abraham or
Moses but the devil (John 8:44). Robert Kysar and John Painter have pointed this out
effectively, and John’s presentation of quest and rejection stories reflects some of the
agony within the only partly successful Johannine mission.38 Then again, John’s tradition
is pervasively Jewish, and it presents a Jesus who embodies the heart of the true Israel,
declaring, “Salvation is of the Jews.” (John 4:22) It is also a fact that some of “the Jews”
explicitly believe in Jesus, so they are not presented in totally negative light (8:31; 11:45;
12:11). This fact has often gone unnoticed by scholars, and all of Jesus’s followers and
faithful associates in John are Jewish. Therefore, it cannot be said that John is
monologically anti-Semitic or anti-Jewish, or even that it is pervasively so. Despite
tensions between Jesus and Jewish leaders in John, the majority of Jewish and Semitic
figures in John (which includes the disciples, women, and even Samaritans) become
faithful followers of Jesus, even if it happens in a processive way. That is a textual fact.
Another point also deserves mention, which is to note that negative judgments are
not reserved exclusively for “the Jews” in John; disciples and members of Jesus’s band
are also judged harshly. First, those unwilling to ingest the flesh and blood of Jesus—a
reference to assimilating the death of Jesus on the cross as a call to martyrological
faithfulness (as in Mark 10:38-39)—have no life in themselves (6:51-54).39 Second, even
some of Jesus’s disciples are scandalized by his hard saying, calling for embracing the
way of the cross,40 and they abandon him and walk with him no longer (6:60-66). Third,
Peter (or someone among the Twelve) is also labeled by the evangelist as “a devil”
(6:70), although the redactor clarifies that he must have meant Judas, the member of the
Therefore, it is no surprise that first-rate scholars such as Zimmerman struggle with how to render John’s
complex presentation of hoi Ioudaioi within its narrative (Zimmermann 2013).
36
Given that Barrett (1972) argues compellingly that the Fourth Evangelist was a dialectical thinker (cf.
Anderson 1996, 136-65; 2004a), unless the evangelist’s multivalent presentations of the issue at hand are
considered (with Meeks 1972; cf. Anderson 2011a, 25-43), one cannot claim to have interpreted the Fourth
Gospel adequately.
37
According to Zimmermann (2013), John’s presentation of hoi Ioudaioi is uneven and highly problematic
if a singular impression is sought, making a simplistic judgment—positive or negative—likely erroneous.
Thus, the polyvalence of the Johannine narrative must be considered by interpreters if John’s theological,
historical, and literary riddles are to be assessed adequately (Anderson 2008; 2011a, 25-90), and on this
subject, all references to the word must also be accompanied with analyses of related Jewish themes (Lieu
2008).
38
Kysar 1993; Painter 1989.
39
The content here is martyrological, not ritually sacramental; with Borgen 1965; Anderson 1996, 110-36,
194-220.
40
The flesh profits nothing (v. 63; Anderson 1996, 210).
14
Twelve who would betray Jesus later (6:71; 12:4; 13:2, 26; 18:2-5).41 Fourth, Jesus’s
followers (including Peter) are presented as miscomprehending, which is always
rhetorical and deconstructive in narrative (13:6-12; 14:5, 8-9, 22; 16:17-18; 21:15-17).42
While Judas Iscariot is indeed presented as the clear villain in the text, it would be wrong
to say that John’s Jesus is anti-Kerioth (the hometown of Judas, 6:71; 12:4; 13:2, 26),
despite Kerioth’s being in the south and the fact that Judas is the only member of the
Twelve who is explicitly referenced as being from Judea. Still, the negative judgment
about Judas regards his acts of betrayal, not his place of origin. Nor should the Johannine
Gospel be considered anti-Petrine or anti-apostolic because some disciples abandon him
and he calls Peter a devil.43 It is the particular actions of those unwilling to embrace the
way of the cross, or of those miscomprehending the character of servant leadership, that
John’s Jesus rebukes, not individual or groups of disciples, overall.
So it is with some of the Ioudaioi and some Jewish leaders in John. While a leader
of “the Jews” in Jerusalem, Nicodemus, is presented as initially not understanding Jesus
in John 3, he “comes ‘round” and stands up for Jesus in John 7:50-51. He even helps to
bury Jesus in John 19:39-42 along with Joseph of Arimathea. Thus, it is particular actions
or the lack thereof that are challenged by the Johannine Jesus, not generalized people
groups. While Pilate is presented as an outsider to the truth in John 18-19, the royal
official and his household come to believe in John 4:46-54. Likewise, the Greeks aspire
to see Jesus in John 12:20-21, and the woman at the well becomes the apostle to the
Samaritans in John 4. Therefore, the fact of positive presentations of Jewish individuals
and groups must be held in tension with their negative or ambivalent portrayals, just as
the negative portrayals of some of Jesus’s disciples in John must be held in tension with
their positive presentations elsewhere.
Given the dialectical character of John’s renderings of different individuals and
groups, it is a flawed inference to assume that all Jewish people are portrayed negatively,
when most Jewish people in the Gospel of John respond to him positively and believe in
him. The Samaritans and the Galileans welcome Jesus (4:39-45), and in Jerusalem the
Pharisees dismay because “the whole world” is going after Jesus (12:19). Likewise,
Peter’s confession is followed by Jesus’s statement that one of his followers is a devil
(not simply a child thereof), and Judas is called the son of perdition. Note also that even
the brothers of Jesus do not believe in him (7:5); this does not reflect, however, an anti-
fraternal thrust. Thus, close followers of Jesus are not portrayed with general positivity,
and Jewish actants within the narrative are not portrayed with pervasive negativity,
despite the fact that Judean religious authorities are presented as opposing Jesus and
threatening others within their reach. Therefore, the fact of Johannine dialectical
41
Anderson 1996, 221-50; 2007c.
42
Anderson 1996, 194-97; 1997,
43
On this account, I believe Raymond Brown is wrong to distance the Johannine evangelist from Peter and
the apostolic band, changing his position on his being the son of Zebedee to an unknown eyewitness
figure—not one of the Twelve. the Johannine critique of Petrine leadership is just as easily viewed as a
dialectical engagement within the core of Jesus’s closest followers rather than from the outside (Anderson
1991; 1996, 247-77). Thus, seeing the Fourth Evangelist as challenging hierarchical developments from
within the Twelve, in the name of a more primitive understanding of the intentionality of Jesus for the
movement following his wake, has great implications for ecclesiology and ecumenicity: Anderson 2005.
15
presentations of key subjects must be taken into account before assuming too facilely a
monological Johannine thrust.44
As the above analysis suggests, John’s 72 references to Ioudaios and Ioudaioi deserve a
closer analysis than simplistic judgments have allowed. 45 These terms are used both
positively and negatively in the Johannine narrative, and distinguishing the focus with
regards to general-religious associations (hence referencing “Jew” or “Jews”) and
particular-geographic associations (hence referencing “Judean” or “Judeans”) is essential
for understanding explicitly what John is saying, and even more importantly, what John
is not. With reference to Judaism in general, and also to “Israel” in particular, the
following associations are found in the Fourth Gospel.
16
o Jesus extols Nathanael as an Israelite in whom there is nothing false (1:47)
o Nathanael lauds Jesus as the Son of God and the King of Israel (1:49)
o Nicodemus, as a teacher of Israel, should understand the spiritual
character of God’s workings (3:10)
o The Jerusalem crowd welcomes Jesus as the blessed one coming in the
name of the Lord, the King of Israel (12:13)
From this analysis four things are clear. First, some references to Ioudaios and Ioudaioi
imply the Jewish religion and its adherents in general, but these references comprise only
18 of the 72 references—a small minority. Second, one of these references is positive, but
the rest are neutral—simply explaining Jewish customs and practices to non-Jewish
audiences. Third, none of these references are negative or ambivalent. 46 Fourth, the
positive, or at least neutral presentation of Judaism in the Gospel of John is all the more
apparent when uses of “Israel” are analyzed. In all five instances, Israel-identity is
presented as highly valued, and in two of them Jesus is proclaimed the King of Israel.
Therefore, there are absolutely no pejorative statements about the Jewish religion,
Israel in particular, or Jewish persons in general in the Gospel of John as opposed to
Judean or Jerusalem-centered Jewish leaders and groups who are opposed to Jesus the
Galilean prophet. Thus, it cannot be claimed exegetically that the Johannine narrative
disparages Judaism as a religious faith, or its adherents, overall. If anything, references to
Jewishness and to “Israel” convey pervasively positive associations, and this is a textual
fact in John’s story of Jesus.
By contrast, however, when Ioudaios or Ioudaioi occur with reference to
particular religious leaders in Judea or in association with Jerusalem, the following
positive, neutral, negative, and ambivalent associations are found in John’s narrative.
This is where the analysis will be telling.
46
Assuming the two references to hoi Ioudaioi in John 6 refer to Judeans, despite the fact that the debate in
the Capernaum synagogue occurs in Galilee. As in Mark 7:1, it could be that religious leaders from
Jerusalem had come to Galilee to examine Jesus and the authenticity of his ministry. They could also be a
reference to Jewish authorities in general (with von Wahlde 1982), as John 6 was likely added to the
narrative in a later, diaspora setting (Lindars 1972, 46-63; Anderson 1996, 205-08).
17
o A great crowd of Judeans came also to see Lazarus, and many of the
Judeans were deserting the Jerusalem-based opposition to Jesus and were
believing in him (12:9-11)
18
o The Judean leaders did not at first believe the blind man had received his
sight (9:18)
o The Judean leaders had already agreed that anyone who confessed Jesus
to be the Messiah would be put out of the synagogue (9:22; cf. 12:42;
16:2)
o The Judean leaders negotiate with Pilate the death of Jesus, ironically
accusing him of blasphemy and then committing the same, confessing
they have no king but Caesar (18:31, 36, 38; 19:7, 12, 14, 20-21)
19
be from Judea, although the discussion is set in the Capernaum Synagogue; the places
where the Judeans gather (synagogues and the temple) in 18:20 could also be taken to
refer to Jewish places of worship more generally, although that saying is delivered in
Jerusalem.
The result of this analysis is that while many among the Judeans believe—as did
also the Galileans, the Samaritans, and the Hellenists—half of the Ioudaioi references in
John are to Judean leaders who question Jesus, fail to embrace his works and teachings,
and seek to do him in. They see him as an affront to temple money-changing and animal-
selling enterprises, and his healings on the Sabbath violate the Mosaic Law. In
challenging a legalistic interpretation of Mosaic authority, Jesus appeals to the Mosaic
Prophet schema rooted in Deuteronomy 18:15-22, whereby he is accused of being the
presumptuous prophet, who speaks on his own behalf. Jesus responds that he says or does
nothing except what the Father commands, which leads to his being accused of making
himself equal to God, claiming God as his Father.47 Jesus predicts things in advance to
show that he is the authentic Mosaic Prophet, but ironically, he is then accused of
blasphemy by those committing blasphemy before Pilate, claiming to have no king but
Caesar.
Palpable here also is the concern that if a popular uprising should threaten Roman
concerns for security, especially during Passover festivities, the Romans would exact a
preemptive backlash, causing hundreds or thousands to suffer or die. Therefore, the
concerns of Judean leaders were not simply over halakhic interpretations of the Mosaic
law; they had been on edge also about John the Baptist, and they appear threatened by the
groundswell around the John-and-Jesus movement. They also may have wished to
preserve their place within society, so John’s references to people privileging the praise
of humanity over the glory of God reflects a critique of religious leaders seeking to
preserve their societal status rather than being open to new revelations of God’s truth
(5:41-44; 7:17-19; 8:50-54; 12:43). Further, in defending a legalistic understanding of
Sabbath observance, Judean leaders are overlooking the love that was central to the
healings. In terms of corroborative impression, as does the Synoptic Jesus, the Johannine
Jesus also emphasizes the heart of the Mosaic law by his deeds and words. The center of
God’s concern is love, and those rejecting Jesus and his mission do so because God’s
love is not abiding in their hearts (5:42).
These themes are spelled out further in an analysis of other Jewish players in the
narrative, even if they are not referenced as Ioudaios or Ioudaioi explicitly.
47
Wayne A. Meeks shows how this Jewish agency schema accounts for Jesus in John claiming to be equal
to God (1990) as well as evoking a typical Jewish counter-move: challenging divine agency with
allegations of one’s being the presumptuous prophet, also forewarned in Deut 18 (1976).
20
o The Chief Priests of the Judean leaders ask Pilate to change the titulus to
“This man said, I am King of the Jews.” (19:21)
The Pharisees
o People questioning John’s authority were sent by the Pharisees, who later
learned that Jesus was making more disciples than John (1:24; 4:1)
o Nicodemus, a leader among the Judeans, was a Pharisee (3:1)
o The Pharisees challenge the crowd for their believing in Jesus and claim
they have been deceived; none of the Pharisees believed in Jesus (7:32,
47-48)
o The Pharisees claim that Jesus is testifying on his own behalf—implicitly
the presumptuous prophet of Deuteronomy 18:15-22 (8:13)
o The Pharisees question the man born blind, claiming that Jesus could not
be legitimate because he was a “sinner”—having performed a healing on
the Sabbath (9:13-16)
o Some of the Judeans report the raising of Lazarus to the Pharisees (11:45-
46)
o The Pharisees exclaim in dismay that “the whole world” has gone after
Jesus (12:19)
o Residents of Jerusalem refuse to confess adherence to Jesus openly for
fear of the Pharisees, lest they be put out of the synagogue (12:42)
The Authorities
o The Jerusalemites are baffled because the authorities who had been trying
to kill Jesus allowed him to continue speaking; they wonder whether they
had come to believe in Jesus (7:25-26)
o The Pharisees question whether any of the authorities or the Pharisees had
come to believe in Jesus (7:47-48)
o Many of the authorities believe in Jesus, but they are afraid to say so
because of the Pharisees, lest they be expelled from the synagogue (12:42)
The Crowd
o While not named as “the crowd,” Jesus’s disciples believe following his
first sign in Cana of Galilee, and many in Jerusalem believe in Jesus early
in his ministry, on account of his signs (2:11, 23)
o Jesus disappears into the crowd in Jerusalem; many believe in him on the
basis of his signs, yet others claim that he is deceiving the crowds and that
21
he has a demon—the crowd is divided on Jesus (5:13; 7:12, 20, 31-32, 40,
43)
o The crowd in Galilee follows Jesus, interested in his works, though even
some of his disciples abandon him and walk with him no longer (6:2, 5,
22, 24, 66)
o Many in the Jerusalem crowd believe that Jesus is indeed the Mosaic
prophet; they are accused of not knowing the Mosaic Law and declared to
be accursed by the Judean leaders (7:40, 43, 49)
o While not described as “the crowd,” many in Judea come to believe in
Jesus as he revisits the baptismal site of John’s ministry, believing on
account of his signs (10:40-42)
o Jesus speaks for the sake of the crowd in Bethany, that they might believe,
and many come to see Jesus and Lazarus after the sign (11:42; 12:9, 12,
18)
o The crowd in Judea testifies to the raising of Lazarus and the thundering
voice from heaven, and yet they also question the meaning of Jesus’s
words regarding the uplifting of the Son of Man (12:17, 29, 34)
From the characterization of these groups of people, several associations become clear.
First, the Chief Priests in Jerusalem plot to kill Jesus, and not only do they hand Jesus
over to Pilate to be crucified, but they also plot to kill Lazarus, lest his testimony be
compelling. Second, the Pharisees are presented as seeking to retard the popularism of
John the Baptist and Jesus—alleging the crowd has been deceived—accusing Jesus of
being the presumptuous false prophet as well as a sinner. They intimidate believing
authorities and others with threats of synagogue expulsion if they confess Jesus openly.
Third, the Chief Priests and the Pharisees collaborate (likewise in Matt 21:45; 27:62) in
seeking to have Jesus arrested, and they call a meeting in Jerusalem to decide what to do
about the rise of the Jesus movement and the fear of Roman retaliation. Fourth, unnamed
authorities are presented as ambivalent. On one hand, they seek to have Jesus killed; on
the other hand, some of them become secret followers of Jesus. Fifth, the crowd is
presented as especially interested in the signs of Jesus, and they come to believe that he is
the Prophet predicted by Moses despite being accused by the Pharisees of being ignorant
of the Law and accursed.
From the above analysis of the characterization of Judaism, Jewish individuals,
and Jewish groups in the Fourth Gospel, there is no negative presentation of Judaism in
itself. Nor are individuals or groups maligned simply for being Jewish. Rather, those who
welcome Jesus and believe are commended (all of them are Semitic or Jewish), and those
who question Jesus, rejecting his words and works, are disparaged. Jesus is received and
rejected in both Galilee and Judea, although his rejection in Galilee is minimal (some of
his followers abandon him, and the Judeans question him in John 6), and his rejection in
Jerusalem is most severely pronounced. There it is that the Chief Priests and the
Pharisees are synonymous with the Ioudaioi who challenge Jesus and endeavor to put
him to death. These Judean religious leaders also intimidate the Jewish crowds and other
authorities, accusing them of being accursed and threatening people with synagogue
exclusion if they confess Jesus openly. The crowds are impressed with Jesus’s signs, and
they identify him with the Prophet predicted by Moses, whose words come true and who
22
speaks authentically the message that God has instructed. The Pharisees are threatened by
Jesus’s popularity; they are offended by his healings on the Sabbath and scandalized by
his claiming to be one with the Father. This is why they collaborate with the Chief Priests
to put Jesus to death.
As is clear from the above analysis, the engagements between Jesus and the Ioudaioi in
John reflect largely, if not solely, tensions between the Jesus movement and the Judean
religious leaders, even if they are narrated in a later setting. It is anachronistic thus to
infer an actualized parting of the ways, as the Johannine Jesus movement is still grounded
within the Jewish family of faith, though seeing Jesus the Christ as extending the
blessings of Abraham and Moses to the rest of the world beloved of God. In that sense,
the Gospel of John deserves to be regarded as reflecting “Johannine Judaism” perhaps
even more fittingly than “Johannine Christianity.” John’s Jewish center of gravity is
evidenced in its thoroughly Jewish presentations of the Johannine Jesus, differing
emphases within its earlier and later material, and developing sets of engagements within
the evolving Johannine situation. Therefore, rather than seeing the relation between Jesus
and the Judean leaders in John as anti-Jewish, here we have an intra-faith set of tensions,
not an interfaith set of dialogues. The Fourth Gospel’s intra-Jewish character and
radically Jewish thrust can thus be seen in the following ways.
7.1. First, John’s Gospel is the most Jewish piece of writing in the entire New Testament.
This is because John represents a radical view of the Jewish vocation, even though it is
clearly in tension with the views of those managing the Jerusalem temple and its cultic
practices (the Chief Priests) and those appealing to scripture-based understandings of the
Jewish Covenant (the Pharisees). This is why the engagements between the Galilean
prophet and these formidable groups in Judea are especially pronounced in the Johannine
narrative, and therein lies the bulk of John’s negative presentations of Jewish leaders. The
uneven acceptance and rejection of Jesus and his vision of the heart of the Jewish
vocation is narrated alongside a robust appeal for Jewish and Gentile audiences alike to
receive Jesus as the Messiah-Christ, availing inclusion in the divine family any and all
who respond to that message (1:10-13). Thus, contra the two-level approaches of Martyn,
Brown, and others,48 John’s story of Jesus appears to convey more about the first level of
history than later levels of theology.49 More specifically, most of John’s presentation of
the ambivalent reception of Jesus by the Judean leaders coheres with topographical,
religious, and sociological knowledge of pre-70 CE Jerusalem, and more specifically,
cohering with the time period of Jesus’s ministry. Therefore, John’s story of Jesus, while
conveying constructed theology in a narrative mode, also conveys remembered history
48
In addition to the long-running critique of Martyn’s by Adele Reinhartz (1998, 2001a), note also critiques
of the Brown-Martyn two-level reading of John overall: Klink 2009; Hägerland 2003. Then again, D.
Moody Smith affirms the overall sketching of the Johannine situation as set forth by Martyn and Brown
(Smith 1996), although not all of John’s riddles can be explained on the basis of a single dialogue with the
local Jewish presence in a diaspora setting (Smith 1984).
49
Interestingly, the Gospel of John features more topographical and archaeologically attested details than
all the other gospels put together: von Wahlde 2006; Anderson 2006b. See the contributions of vols. 1-3 in
the John, Jesus, and History Project: Anderson/Just/Thatcher, eds. 2007; 2009; 2016.
23
within a theological appeal.50 And, on the first level of history, the Galilean prophet was
indeed unevenly received in Jerusalem, where he was finally killed at the hands of the
Romans, aided by the religious establishement.
In that sense, just as the Qumran community’s pitting of the Wicked Priest in
Jerusalem against the Teacher of Righteousness poses a means of bolstering its vision for
the heart of Judaism, John’s memory of Jesus performs something parallel. An example
of this pro-Jewish set of commitments is the fact that John identifies Jesus as the Jewish
Messiah. Each of the “I-Am” sayings in John bears associations with a typological image
of the essence of Israel—within the vineyard of Israel, Jesus is the True Vine; alongside
the light on the hill of Zion, Jesus is the Light of the World; among the shepherds of
Israel, Jesus is the True Shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep; in addition to the
bread which Moses gave—in the wilderness and via the Torah—Jesus is the heavenly
Bread which God now gives, and so forth. Nathanael is the “true Israelite in whom no
falsity exists,” and even the sonship of Jesus is portrayed in the trajectory of the authentic
Israel. Jesus in John not only comes as the anticipated Jewish Messiah and the authentic
Mosaic Agent of Yahweh, but he also embodies the heart of “a nation of vision,” Philo’s
description of Israel.51
In addition, the Fourth Evangelist reflects notably Jewish forms of exegetical
operation in his presentation of Jesus’s ministry. First, as Peder Borgen has shown,
John’s expansion upon the ministry of Jesus in ways cohering with Palestine-based
midrashim and Philo’s homiletical expansions upon biblical texts reflects a thoroughly
Jewish pattern of operation.52 Second, Jesus is also presented in John as fulfilling the
prophecy of Moses in Deut 18:15-22, confirmed by his words coming true. Therefore, the
Father and the Son are connected in John because the Son does only what the Father
commands.53 Third, Jesus fulfills the typology also of Elijah/Elisha in the performing of
his signs; thus, Moses and Elijah are not prefigured by John the Baptist in the Fourth
Gospel but by Jesus.54 Fourth, John’s Jesus fulfills Jewish scripture in the typological
sense as well as in the predictive sense. In that sense, John’s scripture-fulfillment
constructions reflect a distinctively Jewish pattern of worship and instruction designed to
affirm the fulfillment of Jewish scripture in the ministry of Jesus. 55 Fifth, John’s
presentation of Jesus as the Son of Man also fulfills the typologies of the true Israel,
confirmed likewise by the I-am sayings attributed to him by the evangelist.
50
Anderson 2006a, 175-89.
51
See Borgen’s engagement of Richter along these lines: Anderson 1996, 55-57.
52
Following the lead of Nils Alstrup Dahl 1997 (1962), Peder Borgen identifies numerous parallels
between the Johannine development of the manna motif in Exod 16:4 (and Ps 78:24-25) and its
developments in the Palestinian midrashim, targumic literature, and the writings of Philo (Borgen 1965).
53
For compelling treatments of the Johannine presentation of Jesus as fulfilling the Mosaic prophet
typology of Deut 18:15-22, see Borgen 1997; Reinhartz 1992; Anderson 1999. See also Appendix II,
below, where 24 parallels with this passage are found in John—especially Jesus’s word coming true,
showing that he is indeed the authentic prophet, of whom Moses wrote.
54
Wayne A Meeks (1967) shows the many ways in which the typologies of Elijah and Moses are
embellished and fulfilled in Samaritan literature and in John’s presentation of Jesus (Anderson 1996, 174-
76, 192). This may also explain why the Fourth Gospel presents John the Baptist as denying that he is
either Elijah or the Prophet (Moses)—contra Mark (Anderson/Just/Thatcher, eds. 2007, 20-21).
55
The Gospel of John features dozens of implicit and explicit fulfillments of Jewish scripture in the
ministry of Jesus (Anderson 2011a, 83-85; see Appendix III, below).
24
In 1924, an orthodox Jewish scholar of rabbinics at the University of Cambridge
made the remarkable statement: “To us Jews, the Fourth Gospel is the most Jewish of the
four.”56 J. B. Lightfoot and C. K. Barrett likewise considered John the most Jewish of the
Gospels, so a nuanced analysis is required before ascribing the Fourth Gospel an anti-
Semitic label.57 It is precisely John’s pro-Jewish thrust that evoked consternation among
competing visions of Jewishness with the developing Johannine tradition, and that is why
tensions continued later within the emerging Johannine situation. 58 Territoriality exists
only between members of like species, and this is why Jesus adherents within the
Johannine situation were subjected to discipline as their Christologies rose higher, and as
their movement gathered strength. Thus, tensions with Jewish leaders in a Hellenistic
setting shifted from the operations of the temple and healings on the Sabbath to
monotheism versus ditheism and the inclusion of Gentiles within the Abrahamic family
of faith.
7.2 A second feature of John’s intra-Jewish thrust can be seen in the development
between John’s earlier and later material. Assuming that some later material was added
to an earlier stage of John’s narrative composition, and that the Johannine Epistles were
likely composed between the first edition of John’s narrative and its finalization, some
interesting features of John’s Jewishness emerge.59 Of all John’s composition theories,
the most convincing is a modification of Barnabas Lindars’ view,60 which accounts for all
the major aporias in John with a minimum of speculation, and my adaptation of his view
is as follows:
The first edition of John likely begins with the testimony of the Baptist in John 1
and concludes with 20:31 as an alternative to Mark (ca. 80-85 CE)
The Beloved Disciple continues to teach and preach, and the Johannine Elder
writes the three Johannine Epistles as a circular (1 John), an epistle (2 John), and
a letter (3 John) building on the themes of the earlier narrative material (ca. 85-95
CE)
Following the death of the Beloved Disciple, the Elder adds to a first edition (or
stage) of John’s narrative the Logos hymn as an engaging introduction (similar to
1 John 1:1-3), eyewitness and Beloved-Disciple references (esp. 19:34-35), and
56
Stephen C. Neill 1988, 338; emphasis mine.
57
Lightfoot 2015, 41-78; Barrett 1975.
58
On the pervasively Jewish background of John, see W. D. Davies 1996, who sees John’s assertion of a
radically Jewish vision of Jesus and his mission as the reason that it received such strong opposition among
some Jewish audiences. Put otherwise, territoriality exists only among members of like species, and more
specifically, within the same gender.
59
This was the emerging consensus among several leading Johannine scholars in their analyses of the place
of the Johannine Epistles as having been written within the composition process of the Gospel. Cf.
Culpepper and Anderson, eds. 2014. For instance, Von Wahlde (2010a) follows Brown (2003) in seeing the
Johannine Epistles being written in Ephesus between the second and third (final) editions of the Gospel.
60
John Ashton and I came to the same judgment independently: Ashton 2007 (1991); Anderson 1996 (1989
Glasgow thesis). For a fuller development of John’s dialogical autonomy and composition, see Anderson
2011a, 125-55; 2015.
25
chapters 6, 15-17 and 21, circulating it among the churches as a complement to
the other Gospels (ca. 100 CE)
Within this relatively simple approach to the Johannine composition process, most of the
major Johannine aporias are addressed in fairly efficient ways. Chapters 4 and 5 seem to
have originally been followed by chapter 7, and chapter 6 appears to have added between
them, likely by the compiler. The compiler has apparently also crafted the Logos hymn
around the passages narrating the Baptist’s ministry in John 1:6-8 and 15, adding also
John 21 as a second ending, highlighting references to the tradition’s source and its
eyewitness heritage as authority attestations. As John 14:31 seems to have originally
flowed into chapter 18, it makes good sense to see the discourses of John 15-17 as
additions to an earlier edition, which explains also their repetitive features. While more
complex theories abound, this basic two-stage approach (although there may have been
multiple stages in the material’s development and composition) thus deals with John’s
most problematic literary, historical, and theological riddles with a minimal amount of
speculation. It also accounts for the similarities between some of the later material and
the Johannine Epistles, as we see a shift in the meaning of “belief” between these two
sets of materials. For the first-edition material, to believe in Jesus as the Christ is to
receive him as the Jewish Messiah/Christ. Within the later material, believing is more
closely associated with abiding in Christ and his community of faith. Therefore, we see a
shift from an apologetic interest to a pastoral concern between the earlier and later
editions of the Johannine story of Jesus.61
Significant for the present study, however, is an observable shift in emphasis
between John’s presentation of Jesus and Jewish subjects. Given that an interesting set of
distributions emerge between the material in the two editions, an analysis provides
insights into the community’s history and resultant meanings of the material:
1) First, the most intense presentations of the Judean leaders occur within the first
stage of the material’s development. This implies a remembered set of tensions
between the Galilean prophet and the religious authorities of Jerusalem.62 As an
augmentation of Mark, John’s presentation of the early ministry of Jesus shows
his work alongside that of John the Baptist as a challenge to temple-centered
practices in Jerusalem and the performing of early prophetic signs in Galilee
(2:11; 4:54)—before those rendered in Mark 1. John also includes three signs of
Jesus performed in Jerusalem and Bethany, beyond the Galilean miracles
presented in Mark—Sabbath healings and the raising of Lazarus—a total of five
signs not included in Mark. The rhetorical thrust of this selection thus poses five
prophetic signs of Jesus alongside the five books of Moses as a Jewish-friendly
apologetic narrative. Therefore, the early stage in John’s narrative development
presents Jesus as the Jewish Messiah, inviting audiences in a Hellenistic setting to
61
For an analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of over a dozen leading theories of John’s composition
leading to a new overall theory, see Anderson 1996, 33-68; 2011a, 95-170; 2015.
62
Tensions between followers of the Galilean prophet and the Jewish establishment in Jerusalem are
palpable in sources beyond the Johannine tradition, and hence John’s story of Jesus receives corroborative
support within its Palestinian phase of development (Reicke 1984).
26
believe in him as such, and to be welcomed into the blessings of the Jewish faith
by believing in Jesus of Nazareth.63
2) Within this material, the authorization of Jesus (and lack thereof) is key within his
engagements with the Judean leaders. While the Galilean visitors to Jerusalem are
impressed with his prophetic challenge to the marketization of institutional temple
practices (2:13-25; 4:45), the Judean leaders not only seek to dampen the appeal
of his work, but they begin planning to put Jesus to death because of a threefold
offense: the temple disturbance, healing on the Sabbath, and making God his
Father (5:18). Mosaic authority is here levied, as Moses gave the law regarding
the forbidding of work on the Sabbath (Exod 20:8-11), and the Shema reminds
Israel that the Lord God is one (Deut 6:4). To these challenges, Jesus is presented
as appealing to an alternative Mosaic authority—the Prophet-like-Moses typology
rooted in Deuteronomy 18:15-22 (5:16-30; 7:14-30; 8:12-20) bolstered by
Danielic Son-of-Man apocalypticism (5:27; 8:28). This, of course, raises further
consternation over Jesus’s emphasis upon the unity of the Son with the Father,
which then leads to charges of blasphemy and its capital penalty (8:59; 10:33). In
Johannine perspective, the religious authorities do not sense God’s love that was
central to the Sabbath healing, and while they may know the scriptures, they do
not see that they point to Jesus as the one of whom Moses wrote (5:31-46—a
reference to Deut 18:15, 18). While Jesus spiritualizes the water-libation theme of
Sukkot, they anticipate a Davidic Judean leader and are blind to the possibility that
a messianic leader might come from Galilee (7:37-52).
3) Resulting tensions between would-be followers of Jesus and the Judean
authorities are then referenced in a variety of ways, and palpable is the sense that
these tensions continued for several decades after the ministry of Jesus. First, fear
of the Judean leaders keeps people from expressing openly their allegiance to
Jesus (7:13; 19:38), and even after his death the followers of Jesus meet behind
closed doors as a factor of that intimidation (20:19). Second, this fear is named
more specifically as being felt by oppressed-though-believing Jewish authorities,
who fear the Pharisees’ endeavors to put open confessors of Jesus out of the
synagogue (12:42). The parents of the man born blind are also subjected to this
intimidation, as the Judean leaders “had already decided” that any who confessed
Jesus to be the Messiah would be put out of the synagogue—an existential reality
earlier and later (9:22). In the second-edition material, this threat is reflected upon
more generally in the later stages of the Johannine situation, as those who do not
know the Father or the Son will put people out of the synagogue, leading possibly
to their death (16:1-4—perhaps at the hands of the Romans if they do not confess
Caesar as Lord under Domitian’s reign). While theories of mass expulsions are
unlikely, the Judean leaders’ investment in dampening the Galilean Jesus
movement during the Palestinian phase of the Johannine situation continues on
within its Hellenistic phase, involving the understandable attempt to discipline
perceived ditheism within diaspora synagogues. Even if Bernier’s thesis is
correct, that the Birkat against the Minim began as a political concern, under
Gamaliel II, it later came to function as a means of disciplining aspects of Jewish
Thus, John’s apologetic thrust is designed to lead audiences into belief in Jesus as the Jewish
63
Messiah/Christ on the basis of the witnesses, the signs, and the fulfilled word (Anderson 2000).
27
faith and practice, which would have targeted perceived ditheism in post-70 CE
Judaism.
4) While Martyn disparaged links between the Johannine Gospel and Epistles, they
actually bolster his theory in a general sense, even though tensions with local
synagogues were not the most acute set of crises faced by Johannine believers in
the 80s and 90s. The Johannine Epistles thus reflect some of the internal
difficulties faced by the Johannine community and neighboring ones. First, there
is disagreement over what is sinful and what is not. Gentile believers might not
share the same convictions as to what is appropriate and what should be
eschewed, having become part of the Jewish family of faith. The final chapter of 1
John clarifies that death-producing sins are not options for believers, and the last
word coheres with the first word: stay away from idols! (1 John 1:5-10; 5:21).
That would have been especially relevant during the reign of Domitian (81-96
CE), when subjects of the Roman Empire were expected to reverence Caesar or
suffer the consequences.64 Being “out of the synagogue” also meant that while
believers did not have to pay the fiscus Ioudaicus (the two-drachma tax exacted
upon all Jewish subjects in the Empire—to be paid to Jupiter Capitolina, Josephus
Wars 7.218), they were expected to reverence Caesar one way or another. Second,
some have apparently abandoned the Johannine community, deciding to recant
their confessions of Jesus as the Christ, reflecting acquiescence to the continuing
effect of synagogue disciplining endeavors reflected in John 9:22 and 12:42. This
is less of a schism and more of a defection, as Jewish members of John’s
community find themselves courted back into the religious certainty and
sociological homogeneity of the synagogue. The appeal of Jewish family and
friends would also have been strong. Here the Elder counters by denying their
central interest—preserving Jewish monotheism—claiming that those denying the
Son will forfeit the Father, but those who receive the Son also maintain the
Father’s embrace (1 John 2:18-25).65 While the proselytizing defection crisis is
somewhat past, however, a third crisis is on the way: the false teachings of
traveling of docetizing prophets and teachers, who deny that Jesus came in the
flesh (1 John 4:1-3; 2 John 7). While the term antichristoi is also used to describe
these teachers, this crisis is altogether different from the Jewish departures. One
threat is past, the next one is impending; one threat involved secession, the later
involved visitation; one threat denied Jesus’ being the Jewish Messiah/Christ, the
later one denied his humanity. Yet the main interest of the docetizing threat was
probably more practical than theological—the legitimizing of assimilation to
culture over and against maintaining Jewish standards of faith and practice. In
terms of local pagan festivals, reverencing Caesar’s image, and “loving the
world,” a non-suffering Jesus alleviates the need for his followers to embrace
costly discipleship. A fourth crisis in the later Johannine situation involved
tensions with emerging institutional hierarchical leaders in neighboring Christian
communities. Here, the primacy-loving Diotrephes has not only forbidden
Johannine believers from visiting his community, but he threatens his own church
64
See the compelling argument by Richard Cassidy 1992 and the work of Tom Thatcher 2008; cf. also
Anderson 1996, 221-51; 1997, 41-50.
65
Anderson 1997, 32-40; 2007e.
28
members with expulsion if they take them in (3 John 9-10). 66 The Elder has
written to “the church” about Diotrephes, whose proto-Ignatian approach to
church unity is being experienced adversely by at least one neighboring
community. This leads the Elder, then, to finalize the testimony of the Beloved
Disciple (after his death—around 100 CE) and to circulate it among the churches
as a manifesto of Jesus’s will for the church—a spirit-based and egalitarian
approach to believers’ unity in Christ, the Jewish Messiah.
5) In the later material added to the Johannine Gospel, several operations and
interests are evident. First, the Jewish agency motif rooted in the Mosaic prophet
typology of Deut 18 has been transformed into a cross-cultural Logos hymn
designed to include Gentile believers alongside Jewish followers of Jesus (John
1:1-5, 9-14, 16-18; note parallels to 1 John 1:1-3). 67 Therefore, extending the
blessings of Abrahamic faith to the nations, despite the uneven reception of Jesus
among “his own,” as many as believe receive adoption into the divine family as
children of God (John 1:10-13). Second, the addition of John 6 features the only
occurrences of Ioudaios/Ioudaioi found in the supplementary material, and two of
these are simply within dialogues with Jesus in John 6:41 and 52, where “the
Jews” do not understand what Jesus has been saying. They are
miscomprehending, but not intensely adversarial here. The Passover feast of the
Jews is also mentioned as locating the time of the feeding in 6:4, which is
presented neutrally. What this later material suggests is that the intensity of
debates with local Jewish communities has waned; the thrust of the later material
is more pastoral than apologetic. It calls people to abide in Jesus and his
community in the face of hardships under Empire. A third feature within this later
material is that it displays virtually all of the incarnational material in the Fourth
Gospel, reflecting an antidocetic thrust: the Word becomes flesh (1:14), believers
must ingest the flesh and blood of Jesus—a reference to the way of the cross
(6:51-58), tribulation in the world is predicted (chs. 15-17), water and blood pour
forth from the pierced side of Jesus (19:34-35), and the martyrological death of
Peter is predicted (21:18-23). This thrust replicates the interest in staving off the
Docetists referenced in 1 and 2 John. 68 A fourth interest furthers John’s
egalitarian and spirit-based ecclesiology by presenting Peter as affirming the
authority of Jesus (6:68-69; a dialectical engagement of Matt 16:17-19?),
featuring Jesus’s teaching on the accessibility of the Holy Spirit to all believers
(chs. 15-16), and asserting the priority of loving the flock in the ambivalent
reinstatement of Peter (21:15-17). These features in the Beloved Disciple’s later
ministry would have been important for the Johannine Elder to assert, especially
in his dealing with Diotrephes and hierarchical developments within proto-
Ignatian Christianity, following the death of the Beloved Disciple.
7.3 A third feature of John’s intra-Jewish thrust involves closer foci upon the Palestinian
and diaspora settings of the evolving Johannine situation. As a result of this overview,
66
With Käsemann 1968 and others.
67
Anderson 2016.
68
So argues Borgen 1965, and this accounts for elements of John’s antidocetic emphases upon the fleshly
incarnation of Jesus, with Schnelle 1992.
29
the developing engagements in Jesus-Judean and Johannine-Jewish engagements are
evident within the evolving history of the Johannine situation. On this score, Martyn’s
earlier view that there was a singular dialectical relationship within the Johannine
situation—with the local synagogue in a diaspora setting—is far too limited. That was
one of the dialectical engagements within the Johannine situation, but it was not the only
one, and in the later phase it was not even the primary one. Brown’s multivalent
dialectical approach is more realistic, although it also fails to account for the Roman
presence under Domitian, and it makes too much of Samaritan inferences. 69 Assuming a
move to Asia Minor or some other diaspora setting during the Roman invasion of
Palestine from 66-73 CE, the following Jesus-Judean and Johannine-Jewish tensions are
plausible.
7.3.1 Palestine-Based Tensions Between the Jesus Movement and the Judean Leaders
Jesus follows the lead of John the Baptist in challenging the institutions and
religious practices of Galilee and Judea, leading off with the temple incident,
performing healings on the Sabbath, and creating cognitive dissonance with his
words and deeds; this evokes opposition by Judean leaders, who challenge his
authorization.
In response to Mosaic-Law and institutionalized-religion challenges, Jesus
defends his authorization citing the Mosaic Prophet typology (with his word being
fulfilled) and Son of Man apocalyptic agency.70
Jesus and his followers encounter resistance in Judea, leading to the Chief Priests
and Pharisees plotting to put Jesus to death at the hand of the Romans, which
indeed eventuates.
If an early Birkat ha-Minim was operative in Jerusalem during the ministry of
Jesus and following, it could reflect resistance against Jesus for political reasons,
disparaging Galilean political-messiah insurrectionism out of fears of a likely
Roman backlash.
Competition with followers of John the Baptist is palpable within the Johannine
narrative, as John is presented as being the key witness to Jesus—yoking his
popular authority to the Jesus movement.
Continuing tensions between followers of Jesus and Judean leaders are also
evidenced in the Johannine narrative, as the disparaging of Galileans and
Samaritans by the Jerusalemites continues.
With the movement to Asia Minor or another diaspora setting around 70 CE, the
Johannine leadership joins the local synagogue, likely worshiping with Jewish
community members on the Sabbath and with Gentile believers in Jesus on First
Day—plausibly reflecting the fruit of the Pauline mission.
69
For a fuller analysis of the Johannine community that Raymond Brown left behind, see Anderson 2014.
70
Borgen 1997; Reinhartz 1989, 10.
30
As Johannine believers witness to their conviction that Jesus is the Jewish
Messiah, this appeal is partially compelling; some come to believe in Jesus, but
others see the Father-Son relationship claims as a blasphemous development.
The blessing against the heretics bolsters the disciplining of perceived ditheists, as
the use of the Birkat ha-Minim becomes a codification of local concerns, leading,
perhaps unwittingly, to the departure of some Johannine believers.
Following a partial separation from the synagogue, some Johannine community
members are apparently proselytized back into the synagogue if they are willing
to diminish their beliefs in Jesus as the Messiah—embracing something like an
Ebionite Christology; John’s leadership calls for solidarity with Jesus and his
community.
As traveling Gentile-Christian prophets and teachers come within reach of the
Johannine situation, the Johannine leaders assert Jewish-based convictions against
their assimilative teachings—including admonitions regarding staying away from
idols, resistance to worldly customs, and refusing to offer emperor laud.
As monepiscopal structures of hierarchical leadership emerge within proto-
Ignatian Christianity, the Johannine approach to community organization
maintains its Jewish egalitarian and presbyter-based approach to discernment and
leadership.
Within these developments in the Johannine tradition and situation, it is clear that John’s
presentation of Jesus never really departs from its Jewish origin and ethos. As the Martyn
paradigm too easily dismisses the first levels of history in the Johannine tradition, a more
nuanced view of John’s historical memory sees most of its narrative as reflecting an intra-
Jewish perspective on what happened to Jesus “back then” and therefore “why it matters”
in later settings. While Martyn’s overall view that synagogue disciplining—leading to at
least some departures or perceived expulsions—has not been overturned by scholars
claiming close relations between Christians and Jews in the second century, 71 flaws in
this approach are threefold. First, Martyn wrongly follows a form of the earlier
Bultmannian view that the Johannine narrative was constructed upon an alien source; it
did not have its own historical memory to develop.72 This inference has been overturned
by the fact that Bultmann’s own evidence for a diachronic origin of John’s material is
completely lacking.73 Thus, the historical character of John’s memory of Jesus’s ministry
deserves renewed critical consideration on the einmalig level of the events reported.74
71
For instance, while Reuven Kimelmann questions inferences of mass expulsions from late first century
synagogues, he does acknowledge that the Birkat ha-Minim would have been targeted at Jesus adherents
within Jewish communities in Palestine, based on the report of Rabbi Issi of Caesarea (Kimelmann 1981,
232): “From this it is clear that minim can include at least Jewish Christians. Hence it is safe to conclude
that the Palestinian prayer against the minim was aimed at Jewish sectarians among whom Jewish
Christians figured prominently.”
72
Thus, Martyn supervised Robert Fortna’s doctoral work on the identification of a Signs Gospel (Fortna
1970) as the primary source underlying the Johannine narrative, allowing him to focus on the second level
of John’s story of Jesus, having eliminated the Johannine character of its origin, following Bultmann’s lead.
73
In the analyses of Smith 1965; Van Belle 1994; Anderson 1996, the stylistic, contextual, and theological
bases for inferring alien material underlying the Johannine narrative is not only inconclusive; it is
nonexistent (Anderson 1996, 70-136; 2014b).
74
Anderson 2006a. With Goodenough 1945, John contains a good deal of primitive memory as well as
later developments. See also the work of the John, Jesus, and History Project from 2002-2016
31
Second, Martyn wrongly discounts the Johannine Epistles as having anything to do with
the Johannine situation in which the Johannine Gospel was finalized. This may have been
a factor of the difficulty in dealing with the docetizing antichrists figures within his John-
Jewish paradigm, but if the secessionists in 1 John 2:18-25 returned to religious security
of the synagogue having first been distanced from it, the Johannine Epistles would
actually bolster Martyn’s overall theory. A third error with Martyn’s earlier work is that it
tends to confine the crises in the Johannine situation to a single set of issues, when real
life rarely affords such a luxury. Martyn actually modified his view later, taking note of
John’s Gentile mission in addition to Jewish engagements, further noting signs of
Johannine engagements with other Christian communities.75 Over seven decades, ample
evidence reflects at least six crises with other groups within the evolving Johannine
situation, including two crises within its pre-70 CE Palestine setting (Phase I: Judea-
Galilee tensions; Baptist-Jesus tensions), two crises within its early diaspora setting
(Phase II, 70-85 CE: synagogue-Johannine tensions; imperial-Jewish tensions), and two
crises within its later diaspora setting (Phase III, 85-100 CE: docetizing-Johannine
tensions; Christian institutionalizing-Johannine tensions). A running set of dialogues with
Markan and Matthean traditions is also palpable from the earliest to the latest stages of
gospel traditions, reflecting a seventh set of dialectical engagements.76
The significance of this analysis for the present study is that it can no longer be
claimed that the Johannine presentation of Jesus and the Ioudaioi is confined to
theological construction in the late first-century Johannine situation as a projection of
Johannine theology with no historical memory behind it. Rather, the opposite is more
likely the case. John’s presentation of Jesus and his ministry conveys an autonomous
memory of Jesus’s works and teachings, reflecting real tensions between a Galilean
prophetic leader and religious authorities in Jerusalem. While that memory is narrated
later, coming into its written formation later in the history of the Johannine situation, its
content did not originate there. As an alternative to Mark, John’s story of Jesus includes
material that augments Mark’s narrative, reflecting acute tensions between Jesus and the
religious leaders of Jerusalem. In terms of primitivity, critical realism, and corroborative
impression, John’s socio-religious presentation of religious challenge, disputed
authorization, popularist sentiment, and concerted opposition with relation to the
engagements of Jesus in Jerusalem, John’s story of Jesus is far more rooted in early
historical memory than modern critical scholarship has allowed. 77 In that sense,
continued opposition by religious leaders in the second generation of the Pauline mission
reflects secondary concerns not primary ones. Even in the light of an uneven reception
among Jewish family and friends within that diaspora setting, John’s story of Jesus is that
of the Jewish Messiah/Christ, offering Abrahamic blessing to the rest of the world.
Therein lay its promise and its later challenges.
(Anderson/Just/Thatcher, eds. 2007; 2009; 2016) and Charlesworth’s acknowledgment of a paradigm shift
within New Testament studies since the turn of the millennium (Charlesworth 2010).
75
Martyn 1996; 2007.
76
Anderson 2002; 2013.
77
Thus, John and Mark are best seen as the Bi-Optic Gospels—two distinctive perspectives from day one:
Anderson 2001; 2013.
32
and Prejudice, Christian and Otherwise
Like John’s rendering of so many other themes, John’s presentation of hoi Ioudaioi is
highly dialectical.78 This is a point too often missed by those studying John’s tensions
between Christianity and Judaism. On one hand, as we have seen, Jewish leaders are
portrayed as being threatened by Jesus and opposing him and his movement. On the other
hand, Jesus is presented as fulfilling many of the central typologies of Israel itself, even
representing the Father’s sending of the Son as the Prophet anticipated by Moses in Deut
18. The negative references to the Ioudaioi in John are almost exclusively confined to
particular Judean religious authorities who engage Jesus pointedly in adversarial ways.
Granted, he calls them “children of your father, the Devil” in confronting their claims to
be children of Abraham and never to have been in bondage (an ironic claim, given
histories with Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, and Rome). They, in turn, claim Jesus has a
demon and that he is a blasphemer, deserving of being put to death (cf. Lev 24:16). These
invective slams are neither anti-Jewish nor anti-Christian; such inferences are thoroughly
anachronistic. Rather, John’s Jesus declares that salvation is of the Jews and presents
Jesus as fulfilling Israel’s historic typologies in eschatological ways. 79 This cannot be
considered anti-Semitic, and John’s author and compiler, its subject (Jesus), and a good
portion of its audience were all Jewish. Therefore, John’s story of Jesus—in tension with
Judean authorities, some of whom indeed believe in Jesus—must be seen as an intra-
Jewish set of engagements. Just as John’s narrative cannot be used as a basis for violence,
nor can it be read responsibly as advocating any form of anti-Semitism. It is radically
Jewish in its self-understanding, even if that inference is contested.80
John’s presentation of Jesus as the Revealer, however, does challenge religious
and political bastions of power and authority, yet these challenges extend beyond first-
century Judean leadership and ancient imperial Rome. They also apply to modern and
postmodern institutions and authorities, whether they be Christian, secular, political,
economic, or ideological. On these and other subjects, the best antidote to wooden
interpretations of John is the balancing of particular claims with others found within the
same gospel narrative. The best corrective to John, in other words, is John. Does John
portray Jesus as overturning Jewish religious structures and forms only to set up “good
Christian ones” in their place? Absolutely not! True worship takes place irrespective of
place and regardless of cultic form (4:21-24); it must be in spirit and in truth. In that
sense, the Johannine Jesus challenges not only Jewish dogmatism and religiosity, but it
78
As with other tensive presentations of John’s key subjects (Anderson 2011a, 25-43), the epistemological
origins of John’s theological tensions include: the creative work of a dialectical thinker, forwarding his
understanding of the divine-human dialogue (revelation an its uneven responses), within a dialectical and
evolving Johannine situation, by means of crafting a narrative designed to engage targeted audiences in
imaginary dialogues with Jesus—the subject of the narrative (Anderson 1996, 252-65). These four
dialectical operations are also evident in the Johannine Prologue, which was added to the final stages of the
narrative in order to create an experiential response to John’s story of Jesus (Anderson 2007a).
79
As John Painter (1978) points out, “Israel” in the Fourth Gospel is never identified specifically with
believing Jews or other groups of people. Embrace within the flock of the shepherd is simply a factor of
receptivity and responsiveness to the voice of the shepherd.
80
Given evidence of encounters between Pharisaic and Christian Judaism in the late first century CE (Wild
1985), it is no surprise that John’s story of Jesus reflects the ethos of Palestinian Judaism (Borgen 1965).
Additionally, the Jewish feasts in John are remembered with energetic vitality (Yee 1988), showing another
side of John’s radical Jewishness.
33
also challenges Christian instantiations of the same. The truth in John is not a new set of
notions to be assimilated intellectually; it is a spiritual reality, revealed by the divine
agent and communicated by the Spirit of truth. Likewise, to be a seeker of truth is to be
open to the enlightening work of the eternal Christ in whatever form or from whatever
sector it may be found. John’s Gospel, as well as the greatest source of Christian
exclusivism (John 14:6), is also the greatest source of Christian universalism (John 1:9;
6:45).81 In that sense, John’s presentation of Jesus, because it challenges as contingent all
that is worldly and partial, challenges all religious dogmatism, if understood adequately.
Because the Spirit of truth is available to all, each person has the privilege of engaging
the spiritual presence of God and testifying to what one has seen and heard (John 3:32;
Acts 4:19-20; 1 John 1:3). When this happens, people not only are enabled to listen to
one another; they are better enabled to listen together, with one another, to the subtle
promptings of the divine. Hearkening back to Isa 54:13, Jesus declares in John 6:45,
“they shall all be taught by God.” Thus, the greatest Johannine scandal is not its
exclusivism but its universal inclusivism, which defies religious, political, and societal
bounds.
So, what do we do with anti-Semitism, religious violence, and the Gospel of
John? First, while it is true that John has contributed to anti-Semitic tendencies in Europe,
America, and elsewhere, this is not the same as deeming John to be an anti-Semitic
document in terms of its origin and character. John is thoroughly cosmopolitan in its
ethos and rhetoric, and to fail to acknowledge that fact is to make an egregious
interpretive error. Also, John will not go away. Sacred scriptures are here to stay, and the
problems they evoke must be addressed with exegetical acuity rather than anachronistic
eisegesis. Therefore, what we see about hoi Ioudaioi in John is neither a prejudice against
a race or a particular religion, but a set of reflections rooted in a community’s tumultuous
history reflecting its own struggles and alienation from its parent religious movement,
while also seeking to extend the blessings of Judaism to the greater world beyond.
Wrongly or rightly, this is seen as a fulfillment of Israel’s vocation rather than its
aberration.
While none of the general references to the Jewish nation or the Jewish religion
are negative, John’s Jesus is opposed by particular religious leaders and groups in Judea,
and within that memory lies the heart of the adversarial struggle. John’s tradition does not
respond, however, with the supersession of one religion over another. Here Bultmann’s
insight relates powerfully. It is not Jewish religion proper that the saving/revealing
initiative of Jesus as God’s agent in John confounds; it scandalizes all that is of creaturely
origin, including the religious platforms and scaffolding of Christianity, political and
social empires, and even irreligion as a human construct. The reader is thus invited to be
a seeker of truth, and such is the means of liberation, the character of authority, and the
center of our common commitments (8:32). And, the truth is especially liberating when it
comes to correcting flawed interpretations of classic religious texts.
As Professor Henry Cadbury used to say to his students at Harvard Divinity
School, “It may take us five hundred years to get the interpretation right on this particular
text, but we’re going to start today.” And, may it be so in our careful readings of this
polyvalent text.
Anderson 1991; see also Alan Culpepper’s important essay inclusivism and exclusivism in the Fourth
81
Gospel, 2002.
34
35
Appendix I:
Period II: The First Asia Minor Phase, the Forging of a Johannine
Community (ca. 70-85 CE)
Crisis A—Engaging Local Jewish Family and Friends
Crisis B—Dealing with the Local Roman Presence
(The first edition of the Johannine Gospel is prepared.)
The Johannine evangelist and perhaps other associates relocate to one of the mission
churches—plausibly Ephesus or another mission setting in Asia Minor—some time
before or around the Roman destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE. Their contacts with
the local synagogue eventually become strained (the Birkat ha-Minim is a
codification of Jewish opposition to the Jesus movement), leading to an individuated
82
This outline is an adaptation of Table 2.5 and Appendix II in The Fourth Gospel and the Quest for Jesus,
LNTS 321 (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 2006) 196-99.
83
Ignatius describes visiting Judaizers (Barrett 1982) and Docetists (Goulder 1999), who proselytize and
bring false teachings among the churches of Asia Minor—living under the hegemony of the Roman
Empire; in addressing these threats, he advocates appointing a single bishop in every church as a means of
dealing with internal and external threats to church unity.
36
Johannine community composed of Christian Jews and Gentile Christians. While
appealing for Jewish family and friends to receive Jesus as the Jewish Messiah,
members of the synagogue also exhort those with Jewish backgrounds to return to the
way of Moses and the household of Abraham. This leads some to abandon the new
community and rejoin the synagogue, while Jesus-adherents who never left, and
perhaps others who did, sought to straddle the two communities. During the reign of
Domitian (81-96 CE) the increased expectation of public emperor worship and
participation in pagan festivals and civic life creates a crisis for Hellenistic followers
of Jesus, especially Gentile Christians with non-Jewish backgrounds.
Period III: The Second Asia Minor Phase, Dialogues between Christian
Communities (ca. 85-100 CE)
Crisis A—Engaging Docetizing Gentile Christians and their Teachings
Crisis B—Engaging Christian Institutionalizing Tendencies (Diotrpehes
and his kin)
Crisis C—Engaging Dialectically other Christians’ Presentations of Jesus
and his Ministry (actually reflecting a running dialogue over all three
periods)
(The evangelist continues to teach and perhaps write; the Epistles
are written by the Johannine Elder, who then finalizes and
circulates the testimony of the Beloved Disciple after his death.)
The Johannine sector of the early church grows, both by the starting of new
communities and by establishing contact with other Christian communities in Asia
Minor and beyond, leading to correspondence and intervisitation between the
churches. Some Gentile teachers/preachers comfort their audiences with a teaching
allowing some worldly assimilation, including softening the stand on forbidding
emperor worship and participation in Hellenistic festivals, legitimated by a non-
suffering Jesus. Rising institutionalization among neighbor churches reflects a proto-
Ignatian means of addressing similar issues, but it also becomes a strident matter as
expressed by Diotrephes and his kin. Dialogues with Synoptic traditions continue,
now with a focus on Matthean-Johannine dialogues regarding church leadership and
how Christ continues to lead the church.
The Post-Johannine situation reflects the spurned docetizing preachers’ taking the
Johannine Gospel with them, leading into what eventually became some parts of
second-century Christian Gnosticism (including eventual Johannine influences upon
Heracleon, the Gospel of Truth, and the Gospel of Philip). The Johannine Gospel
becomes a favorite among orthodox Christians in the broader Mediterranean world,
and Montanus and his followers are moved by its influence to seek to restore the
spirit-based vitality of the church. John’s dialectical Christology becomes a source of
debate among Christians, and eventually the Johannine Gospel is employed to combat
Gnostic influences (Marcion and Valentinus) and to challenge those who would reject
the Johannine writings (referred to pejoratively as the Alogoi) for secondary reasons
37
(references to the Paraklētos, differences with the Synoptics, dissention over the
Apocalypse and its interpretation, advocating for a particular calendar, etc.). By the
turn of the second century CE the Fourth Gospel has become the “Spiritual Gospel”
written by “John the Theologian,” a great source of debate within Christology studies
and Jesus research to the present day.
38
Appendix II:
Rather than rooting in the Gnostic Redeemer-Myth, the History-of-Religions origin of the
Johannine sending motif is the Prophet-like-Moses agency schema outlined in
Deuteronomy 18:15-22. The language and themes of the septuagintal rendering of this
passage may be found throughout the Johannine Gospel, and the Father-Son relationship
is replete with these associations. Eight primary parallels and twenty-four secondary
parallels confirm the centrality of this schema within the Johannine narrative.84
a) 15a, 18a—The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me (Moses) from
amidst the brethren.
i) Jesus—is anticipated as (John 1:17; 3:14; 6:32; 7:19, 22), is written about by
(1:45; 5:46), and is identified as being a prophet like Moses (6:14-15).
ii) The role of “the Prophet”—is ceded by John the Baptist (1:21-25) and declared
to be Jesus by the Samaritan woman (4:19), the Jews (7:40), and the blind man
(9:17).
84
The content of this outline is rendered more fully in Anderson 1999, and it is presented in a slightly
different form in the new introduction to The Christology of the Fourth Gospel in its third printing (Eugene:
Cascade Books, 2010) lxxix-lxxviii.
39
iii) In John, of course, Jesus not only speaks the word of God, he is the Word of
God (1:1, 14).
e) 19—Whoever does not heed Yahweh’s words, which the prophet speaks in his name,
will be held accountable.
i) Those not receiving the Son or his words believingly have already been judged
(3:16-18; 12:47), and the Father entrusts all judgment to the Son (5:22, 27) as the
truthful words of the Son produce their own judgment if rejected (12:48).
ii) Eschatologically, the judgment of the world involves the casting out of the ruler
of the world and the lifting up of the Son of Man (12:31-36; 16:11), and the
Paraklētos will be sent as a further agent of revelation and judgment (16:8-11).
g) 22a—If a prophet speaks in the name of the Lord and the word does not take place or
does not occur, that is a message the Lord has not spoken.
i) The words testified about Jesus by the primary Johannine witness (John the
Baptist) are true (1:15, 26-27, 29-32, 36; 3:28; 10:41).
40
ii) Moses’ writings, the Law, and the Scriptures are fulfilled in the ministry of
Jesus (1:45; 2:17, 22; 5:39, 46; 6:45; 7:38; 10:34-36; 12:14-16; 13:18; 15:25;
17:12; 19:24, 28, 36-37; 20:9), confirming the authenticity of his mission.
iii) The word of Caiaphas regarding Jesus’ sacrificial death is ironically fulfilled
(even unknowingly, 11:49-52) being the High Priest that year; and even Pilate
declares, perhaps unwittingly, Jesus to be “the King of the Jews” (19:14-22).
iv) Predictions and earlier words of Jesus are fulfilled in John, especially about
his own departure and glorification (2:19-22; 3:14; 4:50-53; 6:51, 64-65; 7:33-34,
38-39; 8:21, 28; 10:11, 15-8; 11:4, 23; 12:24, 32-33; 13:33, 38; 14:2-3, 18-20, 23;
15:13; 16:16, 20, 28, 32; 18:9, 32). Likewise, Jesus makes several other
predictions assumed to have transpired, though not narrated explicitly (21:18-19,
22-23).
v) To remove all doubt, Jesus declares ahead of time what is to take place so that
it will be acknowledged that he is sent from God (13:18-19; 14:28-29; 16:2-4;
18:8-9, 31-34). The typological embodiment of Deut. 18:22 could not be put any
clearer; Jesus is the true Prophet like Moses because all of his words—as well as
the testimony about him—come true. Thus, he is clearly sent from God (3:16-17,
34; 4:34; 5:23-24, 30, 36-38; 6:29, 37-40, 44, 57; 7:16-18, 28-29, 33; 8:16-18, 26,
28-29, 42; 9:4; 10:36; 11:42; 12:44-45, 49-50; 13:20; 14:24; 15:21; 16:5; 17:3, 8,
18, 21-25; 20:21) and is to be heeded as though heeding the one who sent him.
h) 22b—That prophet has spoken presumptuously; do not fear him (Note the irony, given
the fulfilled prolepses!).
i) Jesus is accused of testifying about himself (see above under f), and his not
being from David’s city (7:41-52) becomes an ironic criterion for rejection.
ii) Ironically, in seeking to have the “presumptuous prophet” put to death at the
hand of Pilate—in keeping with Deut. 18:20 (19:7)—the Jewish leaders commit
blasphemy and hail Caesar as King (19:15).
iii) Furthering the irony, those tending to be feared in John are the Jewish
religious leaders (7:13; 9:22; 12:42) rather than God or the Prophet like Moses
sent from God, and even Jesus’ disciples are “afraid of the Jews” (20:19).
41
Appendix III:
In constructing his story of Jesus as the Jewish Messiah, the Fourth Evangelist displays
extensive engagements with Jewish scripture, both directly and indirectly. Indirectly,
Jesus is held to be the Messiah typologically, in numerous ways. Jesus fulfills such
typologies as the redemptive word and wisdom of God, the patriarchal legacies of
Abraham and Jacob, the royal associations of David and Solomon, the prophetic
typologies of Moses and Elijah, and the apocalyptic ministries of Elijah and Daniel.85
The Word and Wisdom of God are the source of creation and redemption (Gen
1:1– 2:4; Prov 8:22-30 John 1:1-18).
Being children of Abraham is asserted by Jews in Jerusalem, who claim they were
slaves to no one; Yahweh’s promise to bless the world is fulfilled in the Greeks’
coming to Jesus (Gen 12–22 John 8:12-59; 12:20-21).
Parallels to the ascending and descending angels of Jacob’s ladder are referenced
by Jesus, and in contrast to the water from Jacob’s well, the water Jesus avails is
living and life producing (Gen 28:12 John 1:51; 4:5-12).
Just as Moses brought the law, raised a serpent on a pole, provided manna in the
wilderness, produced a wondrous sea crossing, and predicted a prophet to come,
Jesus brought grace and truth, was raised on a cross, fed the multitude, delivered
his disciples safely to the shore of the lake, and spoke words that came true (Exod
20:1-18; Num 21:8; Exod 16:4 / Ps 78:24-25; Exod 14; Deut 18:15-22 John
1:17; 3:14; 6:1-13, 16-21; 5:46; 18:9).
While Jesus’s coming from the city of David is debated, he indeed rides into
Jerusalem on a donkey, fulfilling the Davidic prophecies of Zechariah. (Zech 9:9
John 12:14).
Just as Elijah raised the son of the widow of Zarephath and parted the water with
his mantle, and just as Elisha raised the son of the Shunammite woman from the
dead and fed the crowd of one hundred with barley loaves, so Jesus raised
Lazarus from the dead, fed the five thousand with barley loaves and fish, and
delivered his disciples across the sea (1 Kgs 17:17-24; 2 Kgs 2:8; 4:8-44 John
11:1-44; 6:1-21).
Just as Ezekiel referred to his lowly obedience to God with “Son of Man”
language, and just as Daniel used the same term with reference to the heavenly
agent of God coming to judge the earth, Jesus as the Son of Man in John obeys
whatever the Father commands and is paradoxically lifted up on the cross as a
result of his divine commission (Ezek 2:1-8; Dan 7:13 John 3:13; 5:27; 8:28;
12:23).
85
Adapted from Paul N. Anderson, The Riddles of the Fourth Gospel; An Introduction to John
(Minneapolis: Fortress, 2011) 84.
42
In addition to typological fulfillments of Jewish scripture in John’s narrative, explicit
references to scripture having been fulfilled in the ministry of Jesus abound. Much like
the Matthean tradition, the Johannine tradition shows text-based developments
connecting events and details in the ministry of Jesus with the fulfillment of key biblical
texts as a means of asserting the conviction that Jesus is the Jewish Messiah. Some of
these connections appear to have developed within the later Johannine tradition, and in
that sense, their formation need not have been tied Palestinian Judaism in particular.
The reader is told that the disciples later found anticipated in scripture a particular
meaning for what Jesus had done or said: the temple incident (John 2:17 Ps
69:9); the triumphal entry (John 12:13-16 Zech 9:9); the disciples and Jesus
both point to scripture as that which testifies to his mission and authenticity (John
1:45; 5:39 Deut 18:15-22).
Hebrew scripture is cited by a person or group (John the Baptist declaring his
mission (John 1:23 Isa 40:3); the crowd at the entry to Jerusalem (John 12:13
Ps 118:25-26), at times in flawed ways (the Jewish leaders after the feeding,
John 6:31 Exod 16:4; Neh 9:15; Ps 78:24-25); the Jerusalem authorities in
seeking a Davidic Messiah (John 7:41-42 Mic 5:2).
Jesus cites scripture directly at times (John 6:45 Isa 54:13; John 7:38
possibly Zech 14:8 or Isa 44:3; John 8:17 Deut 17:6; 19:15; John 10:34-35
Ps 82:6; John 13:18 Ps 41:9; John 15:24-25 Ps 35:19 and 69:4; John 17:12
possibly Ps 41:9 and 42:10) in the course of explaining his actions and
teachings.
The narrator cites the fulfillment of a particular scripture passage (John 12:14-15
Zech 9:9; John 12:38 Isa 53:1; John 12:39-41 Isa 6:10; John 19:24 Ps
22:18; John 19:28-29 Ps 69:21; John 19:31-36 Exod 12:10, 46; Num 9:12;
and Ps 34:20; John 19:34-37 Zech 12:10) as the culmination of Jesus’s
ministry, reflecting a special set of connections between events and scriptural
associations.
43
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