In Search of "Jewish Christianity" and its "Theology":
Problems of Definition and Methodology
by R. A. KRAFT
University of Pennsylvania
[Appeared originally in
Recherches de Science Religieuse 60(1972) 81-92]
Cardinal Danie/lou's volume on The Theology of Jewish
Christianity\1/ has played an extremely important role in the
formation and development of my own interests and work as a
student of Christian origins. While still a neophyte doctoral
student at Harvard, I was given the assignment of preparing a
detailed report on that book as a means not only of learning more
about Christian origins and about current approaches to that
subject, but also as my first real introduction to French
literature. A direct result of that assignment was my first
publication -- a brief review of Danie/lou's book\2/. Indeed, it
was largely because of what Danie/lou wrote about "Jewish
Christian exegesis" that I decided to examine the use of Jewish
sources in the Epistle of Barnabas as the subject [82] of
my doctoral dissertation\3/. Thus I have a profound respect for
the wealth of information contained in Danie/lou's investigation,
and for the stimulating manner in which he synthesizes and
presents the material. It is a book that I regularly recomment=d
to my graduate students as basic reading for their work in
Christian origins.
-----
\1/ The/ologie du Jude/o-Christianisme (Paris: Descle/e,
1958); English edition and translation (including some revision
by author) by J.A. Baker (Chicago: Regnery/ London: DArton-
Longman-Todd, 1964). For the series title, see below, n. 4.
Page numbers will be cited by giving first the page of the
original French (if the material is present in the French) marked
by an asterisk (*), followed by the equivalent page number of the
English translation ( = ET). The English wording used herein is
not necessarily taken from the ET, but may be the author's own
translation. I would like to thank Mr. Harold Remus for his many
valuable suggestions regarding the final form of this essay.
\2/ Journal of Biblical Literature 79 (1960), 91-94.
Approximately 50 reviews or notices of the volume are listed in
the bibliographies to Biblica. It would be a valuable
project to synthesize the comments of the reviewers, but that has
not been attempted here.
\3/ The Epistle of Barnabas: its Quotations and their Sources
(Harvard University, 1961); a precis appeared in Harvard
Theological Review 54 (1961), 300. The dissertation is
available in microfilm from the Harvard University Library.
=====
Nevertheless, I continue to have serious reservations about
the central focus of Danie/lou's book as I understand it -- his
"theology" of "Jewish Christianity." On the one hand, I find
myself questioning the very concrete manner in which he speaks of
"the theology" of Jewish Christianity. Is it
historically accurate to suggest that anything so neat and
seemingly homogeneous ever existed among early Christians? I
have no doubts that there was at work in certain Jewish circles
during the hellenistic period a somewhat intangible
Zeitgeist that clearly included many factors and ideas
treated by Danie/lou under the heading "Jewish Christian
theology" -- a spirit of the times into which Christianity was
born and in which many early Christians continued to exist for a
long period. But to me, there is a vast difference between often
heterogeneous (sometimes even competing!) yet typical factors at
work in a particular cultural milieu at a particular time, and a
concrete homogeneous "theology" of the sort that Danie/lou seems
to be proposing.
On the other hand, I sometimes find myself uncomfortable
about the methods employed by Danie/lou in seeking to
identify and isolate elements that he feels were part of this
"Jewish Christian theology." Does his search for a "theology of
Jewish Christianity" arise inductively from clues provided by
the ancient sources themselves? Are there adequate criteria for
determining which sources can be expected most closely to reflect
this "theology"? Are the various sources analyzed in a
consistent manner in the attempt to draw relevant information
from them? Admittedly, historical investigation must by its very
nature frequently involve circularity of argument, but what
"controls" exist by which to regulate the argument as adequately
as possible? It is to such issues as these that I [83] wish to
turn my attention in this critical appreciation of, and attempt
to contribute to, the ongoing work of Cardinal Danie/lou.
(1)The Context of Discussion: Definitions and Presuppositions
At the outset, it should be recognized that Danie/lou's
treatment of "Jewish Christian theology" is the first part of a
larger project in which he intends to deal with the "history of
Christian doctrine(s) before Nicea"\4/. Volume two appeared in
1961 under the title "Gospel Message and Hellenistic Culture in
the 2nd and 3rd Centuries," focusing on the "Greek milieu"
(especially Justin, Irenaeus, Clement, Hippolytus, Origen, and
Methodius\5/). A third volume on Latin theology in the same
period has been promised\6/. This helps to explain the opening
words of the English version of volume one:
-----
\4/ Bibliothe\que de The/ologie: Historier des doctrine
chre/tiennes avant Nice/e.Message Evange/lique et Culture Helle/nistique aux IIe et
IIIe sie\cles (1961). An English translation has been
promised for the near future.
\6/ See the opening paragraph of volume 2.
=====
Three worlds went to the making of the Christian Church, three
cultures, three visions and expressions of truth -- the
Jewish\7/, the Hellenistic and the Latin; and each of them
produced its own distinctive Theology
[p. 1 ET].
-----
\7/ Probably it would be more accurate to read here "Jewish-
Semitic"; see below.
=====
But exactly what Danie/lou's reasons are for this seemingly
arbitrary division of the (theological) world into three parts on
the basis of cultural-ideological-linguistic criteria is not
explained. Whether the evidence contained in the various
witnesses from each "world" would support such a division of
requires close, systematic scrutiny and cannot be pursued here.
But a feeling of artificiality and arbitrariness is left at the
outset by this procedural presuppostion in Danie/lou's treatment
of pre-Nicene theology.
In the same vein, Danie/lou states that volume one will deal
with the earliest stage of Christian theology, up to the mid-
second century (pre-Justin, so it seems). But the reasons for
this chronological division are not sufficiently clarified.
Doubtless it has something to do with the way in which [84]
"conventional courses of instruction on the history of Christian
doctrine" have tended to begin with second century Christianity
and examine its relationships to Greek philosophical thought (cf.
Harnack)\8/. Danie/lou wishes to examine what preceded that sort
of "Greek" development and to deal with the earliest stage of
Christian theology. Thus he states, without any argumentation
beyond a reference to the work of L. Goppelt\9/, that
"Christianity which had spread throughout the entire
Mediterrranean basin, remained Jewish in structure until the mid-
second century" (19* = 9 ET). Again, when discussing criteria
for identifying "Jewish Christian" writings, he states that "the
Jewish Christian period extends from the origin of Christianity
to around the mid-second century" (21* = 11 ET). Why so?
Danie/lou admits that "Jewish Christian theology" survived to
some degree in later Syrian Christianity, and also indicates the
presence of "Jewish Christian" ideas in "heterodox" persons and
movements that continued to exist beyond the second century (e.g.
Ebionism and certain "gnostic" groups; see below). He claims
not to be interested in heterodox "Jewish Christian" groups
per se , but only as they shed light on "orthodox"
Jewish Christian ideas. This delimitation of content, with its
focus on "orthodox" Jewish Christianity, also may provide a
concealed clue as to the chronological assumptions behind
Danie/lou's presentation. Apparently "orthodox" Jewish
Christianity must be in some sort of direct continuity with the
"orthodox" Christian theology (theologies? Hellenistic and
Latin !) of the second and third centuries, and thus is treated
within the chronological limitations noted above. But if one
concentrates on the conceptual similarities between various early
Christian writings and movements, without attempting to impose on
them (later) theological judgments regarding "orthodoxy" of
"heterodoxy," the approximate limit of mid-second century would
seem to be [85] quite arbitrary. On the other hand, it also
needs to be asked whether significant alternatives to DAnie/lou's
"Jewish Christian theology" might not have existed already in
first century Christianity -- whether all Christianity was, in
fact, "Jewish in structure until the mid-second century" (19* =
9 ET). Danie/lou seems to admit that the "biblical theology" of
the New Testament writings "has points of contact and affinities
with extra-canonical theology...of both Hellenistic and Jewish
Christian type" (p. 1 ET; cf. 433*) does this not suggest the
possible existence of a theological orientation which was
"hellenistic" and non-Jewish-Christian (by Danie/lou's
definition; see below) in "orthodox" circles prior to the middle
of the second century? But more of this problem of diversity
below.
-----
\8/ See p. 1* = 2 ET: "Harnack, for example, regarded theology as
born from the union of the gospel message and Greek philosophy;
and in his History of Dogma, a Jewish Christian theology
finds no place simply because he never suspected its existence."
\9/ Christentum und Judentum im ersten und zweiten
Jahrhundert: ein Aufriss der Urgeschichte der Kirche
(Gu%tersloh: Bertelsmann, 1954); English translation of the first
part in Jesus, Paul and Judaism (1964). Danie/lou's
reference to Goppelt's work is general and rather vague.
=====
Another difficulty relating to the context in which
Danie/lou's discussion is presented and the presuppositions
behind his presentation has to do with the meaning of the term
"theology" as it is used in the phrase "the theology of Jewish
Christianity" or in the above-mentioned idea that each of the
"three worlds" of early Christianity "produced its own
distinctive Theology." By "theology," Danie/lou claims to
indicate "an attempt to construct an overall view based on the
foundation provided by the divine events of the incarnation and
resurrection of the Word" (433* =1 ET). By definition, this
would be "orthodox" theology as over against approaches to
Christianity in which incarnation and resurrection are not focal.
At one point Danie/lou seems to be making a distinction between
the sort of "theology" for which he is searching and the
particular theological positions of individual representatives of
early Christianity:
Our concern is not to describe and analyze theologians, but a
Theology. None of the great writers of the early Church
belongs wholly to one tradition, to one alone of the three worlds
mentioned earlier... It may not be out of order to warn the
reader that a complete portrait of any particular Christian
theologian of the first two, or even three, centuries will not be
found either in this volume or in the second, each taken by
itself. ...The principal subject remains the world of
belief and not its outstanding exponents. In so far as the
conceptions of individuals are represented her, it is rather
those of the nameless thousands of believers who did not
move between the worlds, but worshipped God through the eyes, and
served him through the ordinances of their Jewish forefathers"
[pp. 3-4 ET, italics mine]. [86]
Even Paul, who for Danie/lou qualifies as "Jewish Christian" (19*
= 9 ET), apparently does not represent a purely "Jewish
CHristian" theological position but also stands between the
Semitic-Jewish and the hellenistic-Greek thought worlds (see 433*
= 1 ET).
In one sense, then, Danie/lou's "theology of Jewish
Christianity" (as also his "hellenistic Christian theology")
seems to be an idealistic abstraction -- a purified and
systematized distillation of various ideas drawn from a variety
of sources, without special regard for the question of whether
any actual person or group of persons ever consciously
adhered to such a "theology." This "Jewish Christian theology"
would be related to actual early Christians as the Platonic world
of ideas is thought to be related to the empirical world. Yet,
Danie/lou also suggests that there were "nameless thousands of
believers" who actually adhered to such a "Jewish Christian
theology" -- believers whose ideas are reflected in the variety
of sources from which Danie/lou has collected data by which he
reconstructs "the theology of Jewish Christianity."
Unfortunately, the elusiveness of this group makes it difficult
to measure their precise relationship to Danie/lou's "Jewish
Christian theology."
I must admit that such an approach in which concrete
historical evidence seems subservient to principles accepted on
other grounds, makes me very uncomfortable\10/. For myself, I
prefer to investigate history and the ideas of people in history
inductively, avoiding a priori judgments whenever
possible. I do not find it objectionable to speak of the ideas
and theological orientation of particular individuals (e.g. the
"theology" of Paul), while recognizing that not every such
individual consciously attempted to achieve some sort of
consistent overview that could be called a theological "system."
Indeed, I am willing to admit that certain theological ideas can
even be implicit in what a person says or believes,
without the person being fully conscious of his "theology" at
every point. And certainly a given group or community can be
said to have a selfconscious theological position (e.g.
Marcionite theology) [87] even though not every member of the
group necessarily possessed a theological awareness of the
details of the group position. But in each instance an
identifiable historical entity (person or group) had existed
and can be examined by means of critical historical methodology.
It seems to me legitimate to ask whether any historically
identifiable and selfconscious entity (person or group) ever
existed behind Danie/lou's "Jewish Christian theology"? Is
there any way of breaking through the circularity of argument
whereby the reconstructed "theology" provides the primary
evidence for the existence of "Jewish Christianity" as an entity,
while the supposed existence of Jewish Christianity as an entity
is the rationale for reconstructing Jewish Christian theology? It
is true that in Danie/lou's presentation, his (orthodox) Jewish
Christianity gains a semblance of concreteness by being
contrasted with identifiable brands of "heterodox" Jewish
Christianity (e.g. Ebionites, Elkesaites, certain "gnostic"
group), but this does not solve the problem in a convincing
manner; rather, it simply serves to further change the focus of
the discussion from the meaning of "theology" for Danie/lou to
the meaning of "Jewish Christianity" itself.
-----
\10/ I am similarly uncomfortable with terms such as "biblical
theology" or "New Testament theology" or even "theology of the
Apostolic Fathers," all of which relegate the ideas of
individual authors to a synthetic abstraction based on an a
priori judgment or assumption regarding the "unity" of the
particular collection of writings.
=====
(2)Defining "Jewish Christianity"
For Danie/lou, "Jewish Christianity" does not refer
to a particular selfconscious group but is an umbrella term used
to designate a type of Christian outlook -- the expression of
Christianity in thought forms borrowed from
"Spa%tjudentum" (see 19* =9f ET). It includes two
other groupings sometimes referred to as "Jewish Christian" in
modern discussions: (1) "Ebionite" and related "heterodox"
groups for which Jesus is prophet or messiah, but not son of God
(although Danie/lou does not wish to focus on this sort of Jewish
Christianity as such); and (2) the "orthodox" Christianity
represented by the earliest community at Jerusalem, led by James
and his successors (sometimes later called "Nazarenes"), for
whom Jesus' messiahship implied divinty. It also includes every
other early Christian or group for whom characteristically Jewish
thought forms were basic, regardless of whether such Christians
had any direct connection (including genealogical) with any
Jewish community or with the Jewish world [88] at large\11/.
It should be noted that Danie/lou simply presents this definition
of "Jewish Christianity" as the way in which he chooses to use
the term\12/; no attempt is made to derive the idea of such
"Jewish Christianity" inductively by means of careful analysis
of ancient references to particular individuals (e.g. James,
Paul, Cerinthus) or groups (e.g. "Hebrews" vs. "Hellenists,"
"circumcision party," "Ebionites") described in ancient
sources as being closely associated with Judaism in one way or
another. Indeed, the definition seems to presuppose the results
of Danie/lou's investigation, that a body of characteristically
Jewish thought underlies most of the earliest Christian sources.
-----
\11/ Apparently the reference to "their Jewish forefathers" on
p. 4 ET either is not intended to be genealogical, or the
"nameless thousands" pictured in that context (see above) are to
be considered as only part of the total "Jewish Christian"
group.
\12/ Here, Danie/lou makes another passing reference to Goppelt's
work noted above, n. 9.
=====
For Danie/lou "Spa%tjudentum" means the various
sorts of Judaism in existence at the beginning of the common era,
although for reasons not sufficiently explicated, he chooses to
exclude Philo's Judaism from his investigation of Jewish
Christianity and thus to concentrate on the Jewish-Semitic
thought world\13/. He sees in the development of heterodox
Jewish Christian groups a continuation of the varieties of
"heterodox" Judaism: Ebionism derives from an Essenic Jewish
heterodoxy which emphasized the break with the "official" Jewish
cult (cf. 76*, 82* = 64, 69 ET); Cerinthus represents a
development of zealot messianism (82* = 69 ET); Carpocrates
reflects heterodox Jewish gnosis (98* = 85 ET); etc. But even
"orthodox" Jewish Christianity, with its more acceptable
christology, existed in a variety of forms related to the
varieties in "Spa%tjudentum" (19* = 10 ET).
-----
\13/ See p. 20* = 10 n. 18 ET: "The influence of Philo is not
included here, since it belongs to a type of Judaism expressed in
the forms of Greek philosophy, and will therefore be of more
direct concern in the study of hellenistic Christianity" (see
e.g. volume 2, pp. 297-302).
=====
Danie/lou claims that despite the "diverse streams" within
Jewish Christianity, "there was a common mentality": "a first
form of Christian theology, Semitic-Jewish in expression" (20* =
10 ET), an "overall view" (433* = 1 ET), a "common basis" (1* =
3 ET), a "doctrinal system...Semitic in structure [89] and
expression" (4 ET). But it must be asked, was there any
conscious awareness of this "common" bond on the part of these
"Jewish Christians"? Presumably both Paul and his
"superapostle" opponents at Corinth (see 2 Cor 11) would qualify
as "Jewish Christian." They would both probably even be
considered christologically "orthodox" by Danie/lou's standards!
But that cannot change the fact that they seem to have had
radically different outlooks on the basic point (to Paul, at
least) of what constituted the heart of the "gospel." Should not
the descriptive categories for our study of men and movements in
history derive from the historical situations themeselves -- from
the selfconsciousness of the participants? How can Danie/lou's
abstraction "Jewish Christianity" help me to understand what was
happening among early Christians? Does it not, in fact, tend to
blind me to the problems of which the historical participants
were conscious in their own times, by viewing them from later
perspectives quite foreign to them (e.g. Semitic-Jewish,
hellenistic, Latin)?
(3)Probing the Sources: the Problem of Methodology
In all fairness, it must be acknowledged that Danie/lou does
not claim to be pursuing his subject by means of inductive
historical description. Rather, he is attempting to establish a
thesis which is stated at the beginning of the volume: that there
was in earliest Christianity a common mentality ("Jewish
Christianity") characterized by the use of techniques and ideas
derived from Spa%tjudentum. In an attempt to identify
early Christian materials that derive directly from this supposed
Jewish Christian outlook, Danie/lou proposes three criteria: (1)
a date prior to the last half of the 2nd century; (2) use of
literary genres popular in Spa%tjudentum; and (3)
presence of ideas characteristic of Spa%tjudentum ,
especially the use of apocalyptic imagery. But Danie/lou does
not think it necessary that each particular writing under
consideration must meet all three requirements in order to
qualify as "Jewish Christian" (21* = 11 ET). The arbitrary
nature of the chronological criterion has already been mentioned
above. The matter of literary genre is not discussed with any
precision by Danie/lou, but seems to be of most significance for
his first category of allegedly Jewish Christian writings, namely
pseudepigraphical [90] works like Ascension of Isaiah,
2 Enoch(Slavonic), and Testaments of the Twelve
Patriarchs. The statement that apocalyptic is "the dominant
Jewish thought form of the period" (2* = 4 ET; see also 21* = 11
ET) requires further comment since it is of such central
importance to Danie/lou's thesis.
Danie/lou offers no evidence in support of his claim about
the dominance of apocalyptic in Spa%tjudentum. Certainly
not every witness preserved from Spa%tjudentum was
apocalyptically oriented, and certainly other interests such as
ethical and philosophical wisdom, cult and calendar, history and
legend were also characteristic of some Jewish sources and
representatives. Even Danie/lou's quick dismissal of Philo (and
presumably any other such "hellenistic" Jewish witnesses) as
relevant evidence for "Jewish Christianity" does not leave
Spa%tjudentum without non-apocalyptic currents of
thought. But if streams of Judaism existed in which apocalyptic
was not particularly central, is it not possible that a similarly
non-apocalyptic outlook was included among the earliest
("orthodox") Christian theological positions? Must there be but
a single theological position in earliest Christianity?
Even if Philo is dismissed as "hellenistic," does not that leave
open the possibility that an early Christian "hellenistic
theology" (to use Danie/lou's terms) might also have existed
from the earliest period? Perhaps, detailed, inductive
investigation would reveal that in the earliest decades of
Christian existence there were several competing (or at
least selfconsciously different and distinguishable) theologies
of "hellenistic" as well as of "Jewish" coloring, even within
early Christianity of a christologically "orthodox" sort (by
Danie/lou's definition).
The need for adequate controls becomes most evident when
Danie/lou applies his criteria to the extant non-canonical
literature from early Christianity. His thesis is that in
earliest Christianity there is a common mentality with
pronouncedly apocalyptic features. One criterion for identifying
extant sources is the apocalyptic imagery. It is no surprise
that the sources support the thesis! It is to be expected that
the sources will show a common mentality of some sort, since they
are identified primarily with respect to the kind of thought
world they represent. It is not difficult to find
something in common between any series of writings
from approximately the same period of history. The problem is
whether the method [91] of investigation is adequate to
identify what are the most significant and characteristic
features of the materials, from the viewpoint of what their
ancient authors and editors intended to convey. More careful and
consistent attention to the methodological problems is desirable
at the outset of such an investigation.
Nevertheless, Danie/lou's approach has proved fruitful in a
variety of ways. Some very significant patterns of thought are
seen to be common to several of the allegedly Jewish Christian
sources -- e.g. angelology pervades documents such as
Ascension of Isaiah, 2 Enoch, Testaments of the
Twelve Patriarchs, Shepherd of Hermas, Apocalypse of
Peter, Epistle of the Apostles; the "theology of the
cross" is important in Ignatious(t>, Gospel of
Peter, Odes of Solomon, Epistle of the
Apostles, and perhaps elsewhere; ecclesiological interest is
obvious in Ascension of Isaiah, Ignatius,
Shepherd of Hermas, 2 Clement, and Odes of
Solomon. Unfortunately, no single "doctrine" or pattern of
doctrines is common to all of the sources examined, nor is there
a really close unity between the particular ways in which each
document expresses a particular doctrine -- e.g. there is not
one angelology common to all the angel-oriented sources,
but several angelologies; similarly there are several
ideas concerning millennium, redemption, incarnation, the cross,
etc. The "common mentality," then, applies not to details of
doctrine, but primarily to general areas of thought represented
in various ways in the various sources. Unity is achieved by a
process of theological abstraction; it is not obvious in the
study of the particular documents and traditions themselves.
(3)Summary and Conclusions
It is the farthest thing from my intention to leave the
impression that Danie/lou's study entitled "The Theology of
Jewish Christianity" has not made any significant or positive
contribution to the study of early Christian histroy and thought.
He has gathered together a wealth of evidence from various early
Christian sources to suggest that Jewish ideas and interests were
of great influence among early Christians. Even if the framework
of his presentation appears to be overly dependent on what seem
to be unexamined presuppositions, [92] and even though his
method of approach may lack sufficient controls at points (all of
which is simply another way of saying that I would not have
approached the subject in the same manner!), the result of his
labors is an impressive description of the apocalyptic Jewish
atmosphere breathed by many early Christians. Whether it is
helpful to call this sort of atmosphere or Zeitgeist a
"theology" in the rather specific manner employed by Danie/lou
must be left to the individual reader to decide. But whatever
one wishes to call it, the material in Cardinal Danie/lou's
"Theology of Jewish Christianity" recaptures an aspect of early
Christian thought that the student of Christian origins cannot
afford to neglect. For the reasons outlined in this essay, it is
probable that the rigid historical inductivist could not have
produced such a bold and convenient synthesis of materials. In
that instance we would all be poorer. Despite the above-
mentioned difficulties, I am convinced that our understanding of
early Chrisitianity has been advanced in an important manner by
Danie/lou's "Theology of Jewish Christianity" with its excellent
overview of the Jewish apocalyptic thought world(s) of earliest
Christianity.
[[end]]