Hurtado on why Crossan’s Jesus Won’t Do

Hurtado on why Crossan’s Jesus Won’t Do April 16, 2012

Here is a reprint of an article by my friend Larry Hurtado on—-

Why Was Jesus Crucified?
by larryhurtado

On Good Friday (today), it’s appropriate to address the question of why Jesus was crucified. Earlier this week on Radio 4 a well-meaning “thought for the day” presenter opined that Jesus’ problem was that he was just a helluva nice guy up against some mean old religious leaders. They didn’t like his more free-wheeling “can’t we all just love one another” stance, and so . . . they just did him in. But I would say that such a view seriously misrepresents Jesus, the religious leaders, and pretty much everything.

Also, how does such a nice guy as this sort of Jesus manage to get himself crucified? The two main answers are typically either of the sort given by the presenter asserting narrow-minded/jealous (Jewish) religious leaders (the sort of view that can all-too-easily slide over into rather recognizable anti-Semitic feeling), or (in some more recent publications) the notion that it was all a big mixup (as expressed, e.g., by J.D. Crossan and Geza Vermes). So, Vermes proposed that “nervous authorities in charge of law and order” were alarmed by Jesus’ ill-timed “affray in the Temple” (the “Temple-cleansing” scene). But it was a tragic error, and they over-reacted (Vermes, The Religion of Jesus, ix-x). Crossan’s view is somewhat similar, though he only briefly addresses the question of Jesus’ crucifixion (curiously, in a large book about the “historical” Jesus). He, too, focuses on Jesus’ action in “the confined and tinder-box atmosphere of the Temple at Passover,” proposing that this “could easily have led to arrest and execution” (Crossan, The Historical Jesus, 360).

Crossan’s Jesus is both a really nice guy, and also really humble, never seeing himself as having any special role or significance. His was (in Crossan’s distinctive phrasing) “a brokerless kingdom” in which “open commensality” (sharing food) was the central gesture.

As I wrote a few years ago, “Miscarriages of justice are known, undeniably, even in jury-based trials in modern democracies. But Vermes’ picture of things [and that of Crossan as well] would make notorious examples of court stupidity like the Dreyfus affair or the Dred Scott case minor blips by comparison. They only led respectively to a prolonged national crisis in France and the American Civil War, whereas the crucifixion of Jesus led to the two thousand years of Christianity with all its positive and negative consequences!” (Hurtado, Lord Jesus Christ, 58).

It’s important to note that Jesus didn’t simply die, he was killed, and not simply killed but executed, and not simply executed, he was crucified (despite the assurances of our Muslim friends to the contrary). We know from other incidents (as, e.g., reported by Josephus) how the Temple authorities and Roman administration treated people who simply caused a disturbance in the Temple, and it wasn’t crucifixion. Flogging, maybe but not crucifixion. The point of crucifixion wasn’t simply to end a person’s life but, much more, to humiliate and degrade to the extreme, to say “See what this guy got? This is what anyone gets who raises his hand against Rome!”

Pilate was a figure of uncertain character (as my colleague, Helen Bond judges in her book on him), probably not your favorite-uncle type, but he probably knew his job, which was primarily to keep order, keep the Jews in their place, and oversee tax-collection and Roman administration more generally. A hard guy, probably, but not likely someone who crucified people on a whim. He likely took stock of the situation and judged that Jesus had (whatever his intentions) generated what might be an incipient movement that could lead to greater trouble if not nipped in the bud forcefully.

As I’ve put it (in Lord Jesus Christ (esp. 54-56), Jesus rather clearly polarized people over what to make of him. He “quickly became a figure of some notoriety and controversy” (LJC, 55). Though his preaching seems to have focused on “the kingdom of God,” the issue quickly became whether he was or wasn’t the authentic spokesman of that kingdom. And talk of “kingdom” could make ruling authorities worried.

Granted, it also seems likely that the Temple authorities colluded in some way in Jesus’ arrest and execution. After all, the High Priest was appointed by Rome and served as Rome’s pleasure. It would not go well for the Temple authorities if they were seen to ignore someone who seemed to challenge their authority and, by extension, that of Rome.

As I’ve argued (LJC, 54-55), the issue isn’t really what Jesus thought he was or what he intended. The key thing, instead, is what effects and results his activities had on his contemporaries. Some became his followers, willing to abandon their livelihoods to do so. Others (including some powerful people) judged him dangerous, and eventually decided to move against him with mortal intent. That’s what I’d call polarization!

So, however attractive to our own gentle instincts may be the sort of Jesus touted often, a guy who wouldn’t hurt a fly and just wanted everyone to be friends, we have to posit a Jesus who could get himself crucified. And we should do so without caricatured Jewish leaders and Roman governor, and without invoking some legal goof-up. Instead, probably everyone involved knew what they were doing.


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