Re: Three Assumptions
Posted: Thu Sep 19, 2019 3:42 pm
Given the presence of Charlesworth in the room at the moment, one might like to hear that his essay demolishes Feldman's thesis root and branch. Feldman is trying to imagine why Josephus might not have wanted to write about David in a certain way and is thinking primarily of David's "reputation" for messianic associations. But Charlesworth points out that messianic association with Davidic interest was simply not a big deal in first century Judea -- hence the Romans are not likely to have been aware of it at all. Given Charlesworth's point about the lack of focus on David for messianic speculations in Josephus, it is far more likely that Josephus was merely writing from the more common perspective of David in his own day. Interest in David was prominent, Charlesworth writes, but not as a messianic figure. (David by this time had been exalted to a scribal status, a preeminently pious figure.)John2 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 19, 2019 2:38 pm arnoldo wrote:
Josephus wrote under extraordinary circumstances which must be taken into consideration.
Abstract
In the portrayal of David in his paraphrase of the Bible in the Antiquities, Josephus was confronted with a dilemma. On the one hand, as the beneficiary of so many gifts from the Romans, he could hardly praise David, who was the ancestor of the Messiah, and who ipso facto would lead a revolt against Rome and establish an independent state. On the other hand, David was a great folk hero, and his qualities of character could be used in answering the calumniators of the Jews. Josephus' solution was to adopt a compromise: thus he gives David a distinguished ancestry without stressing it unduly. He uses the figure of David to answer the denigrators of the Jews; he notes David's wealth to refute the canard that the Jews are beggars; he ascribes to him the cardinal virtues of wisdom, courage, temperance, justice, and piety to counteract the charges that the Jews were not original, that they were cowards, that they were immoderate, that they lacked humanity (a corollary of justice), and that they were impious. When David is elevated, it is not so much for his own sake as it is to increase the drama of the situation.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/23507841?s ... b_contents
I'm not sure how much David was a factor in the (in my view) messianism of the Fourth Philosophy given my view that Josephus' "ambiguous oracle" was based on the book of Daniel, which doesn't mention David at all.
In his An Introduction to the Theology of the New Testament the former Dean of York, Alan Richardson, presents an insight that is worth quoting:
The OT passages that Richardson has in mind as referring both to David and the Messiah refer clearly only to David. The interest in David was impressively high during the time of Jesus, as we know more clearly now than when Richardson wrote, thanks to the recovery of compositions in the name of David—like the More Psalms of David—and writings which celebrate him, both among the Dead Sea Scrolls and elsewhere.17 We now know also that there were descendants of David living in Palestine during the time of Jesus.18It is truly astonishing, in view of the weight of OT prophecy concerning the Davidic Messiah, how little the NT makes of the matter. The evangelists represent Jesus as the new Moses, the new Joshua, the new Elijah, and so on; but there is perhaps only one pericope in the tradition which sets forth Jesus as the new David, viz. the Walking through the Cornfields on the Sabbath (Mark 2.23-28).16
The “truly astonishing” reaction is the key for us; the NT writings do not elevate Jesus as a type of David. Jesus was not celebrated by his earliest followers as “a” or “the” new David. And despite the movement of “Christ” from title to proper name, the confessions preserved in the N'T writings celebrate Jesus as “Lord,” or “Son.” Conspicuously absent among the kerygmata and creeds is the confession that Jesus is the long-awaited Christ. The only true exception is Marks account of Peter’s confession.
Even if Mark accurately records Peter’s words, we have no way of discerning what Peter meant by “Christ.” Even if we knew exactly what he meant, we still would not be able to perceive what Jesus was thinking, since scholars throughout the world have come to agree that according to Mark Jesus did not simply accept Peter’s claim that he was the Messiah (contrary to Matthew’s version). (pp. 8 f)