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N.T. Wright’s How God Became King

Some years back I visited several Christian schools to help a friend’s widow choose where to send her four young children. While touring a large evangelical school, the principal showed me to the auditorium where the school choir rehearsed Joy to the World in preparation for the upcoming Christmas concert. At the conclusion of the song, the choir director instructed the children that Joy to the World didn’t apply for today, it was a “millennial hymn” because “Jesus doesn’t reign today.” The choir director’s comment would be non-controversial in many, perhaps even most, American evangelical churches.

James R. RogersTheologian N.T. Wright’s most recent book, How God Became King: The Forgotten Story of the Gospels, squarely takes on this implication of American Evangelicalism’s “premillennial” theology. Yet as Wright relates in the preface, the book aims to draw the attention of Christian layfolk in all churches to a set of important, yet often overlooked, themes useful to understanding the richness of the gospels.

How God Became King is basically a popularly written introduction to several theses in Wright’s academic work, particularly his work in the book series on “Christian Origins and the Question of God.” It draws most directly on the best book so far in that series, the brilliant Jesus and the Victory of God.

While Wright occasionally succumbs to the temptation shared by many scholars to overestimate the uniqueness of his own contribution (“We need a fundamental rethink about what the gospels are trying to say”), an important central purpose animates Wright’s argument in the book: When Christians understand the good news of Jesus Christ in the full-orbed narrative arc of the Scriptures, they cannot help but want to live the new life that Jesus offers us in himself as part of a community centered unreservedly in and around him and his work. Wright’s love for and mastery of the whole Bible—both Old and New Testaments—is so winsome and compelling, that his points not being quite as radical as he thinks they are is a foible easy to overlook.

Wright argues that four aspects of the gospels need to be brought (again) into balance in popular understanding. He does not claim that all are ignored. Rather, analogizing his argument to balancing a stereo system, he argues that several of these themes are “too loud” in relation to the others, and thereby prevent us from hearing the full resonance of the gospel.

The first theme to recover for Wright is that the “gospels present themselves as the climax of the story of Israel.”

The ancient heretic Marcion radically divided the New Testament from the Old, maintaining that “the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ is not the God of the Old Testament.” While explicit versions of Marcionism have been long rejected, soft versions nonetheless continue to exist in much popular piety. Witness, for example, the popular contrasts of the “vengeful, wrathful” God of the Old Testament with the “loving, gentle” Jesus of the New Testament.

Wright wants to correct this, emphasizing that the gospels see the events surrounding Jesus as “bringing the long story of Israel to its proper goal.” This means giving the events of Jesus’ life as reported in the gospels their due rather than skipping the middle by going directly from his birth to his crucifixion. Wright famously quipped in an earlier work that it’s not as though Jesus could have been born a Viking who then saved us by dying in a fishing accident. Understanding the Old Testament—and by that Wright does not mean simply understanding a couple of isolated prophecies—is vital to understanding Jesus and his work.

The second, related dimension of the gospels that Wright argues must be restored as a proper focus of understanding is that “the story of Jesus is the story of Israel’s God coming back to his people.”

Wright concedes that Christians continue to contend for the deity of Jesus as against those who would deny it (including those in the Church who would deny it). Wright’s gripe with the orthodox camp is that “proofs” for Jesus’ divinity often abstract away from the broader biblical corpus in the Old Testament and thereby obscure rather than illuminate. For example, read in light of pivotal passages in the Old Testament (e.g., Psalm 2 and 2 Samuel 7), references to Jesus as the “son of God” in the gospels are more apt to intend to point the reader to Jesus’ kingship rather than to his deity.

Similarly, understanding the way by which Yahweh became present with his people in tabernacle and in temple is critical to understand Jesus’ vocation during his life, where he identified himself as God’s temple. So, too, this theme then embellishes the Church’s self-understanding of her vocation after Pentecost, in which Christians collectively and individually bear God’s presence in and with them as his temples.

Third, Wright argues that the gospels launch God’s community of renewed individuals, a community centered around learning and receiving Jesus in Word and sacrament, and living that new life together. He counterpoises this with individualistic, deracinated notions that the Christian hope is living forever after death as a bodiless spirit in heaven. The latter draws more from Gnosticism than it does from Christian orthodoxy.

Finally, Wright argues that the gospels are about the “story of the kingdom of God clashing with the kingdom of Caesar.” As in earlier works, Wright points out that Caesar also claimed the title “son of God” and offered his own gospel of Roman peace. If Jesus is the Lord, then Caesar isn’t.

Although this last point has been the subject of extensive study among the last generation of scholars, it is probably the theme in Wright’s discussion least-recognized among lay Christians. Perhaps because of its relative novelty, Wright’s argument is at its clunkiest on this point. To be sure, the modern state has its share of messianic pretensions. These pretensions are not limited to ideologies with overt, secular eschatologies, like Marxism or Nazism. Democratic states can share these pretensions, witness Clinton’s invocation of a “New Covenant” or Reagan’s “City on a Hill.”

Nonetheless, Wright comes close to sounding like an Anabaptist at points in his discussion, ignoring that while the gospel is uniquely necessary to create true peace and justice, nonetheless there is an entirely legitimate and necessary role for civil government in providing the requisite order for the good of society, and for the proclamation and living out of the gospel.

Yet Wright is correct to complain that even when churches hear, preach, and discuss so many Bible texts, they often bleed the power out of them, turning Old Testament readings into little more than morality tales for children and turning gospel readings into little more than “principles for success.” This new work serves as a useful corrective, and an accessible introduction to major themes in his more-academic work. His invitation to Christians is to read large chunks of the Scriptures rather than simply focusing on isolated verses, and so to receive and participate in the power and excitement of God’s grand story.

James R. Rogers is department head and associate professor of political science at Texas A&M University. He leads the “New Man” prison ministry at the Hamilton Unit in Bryan, Texas, and serves on the Board of Directors for the Texas District of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod. His previous “On the Square” articles can be found here.


RESOURCES

N.T. Wright, How God Became King: The Forgotten Story of the Gospels

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Comments:

8.14.2012 | 11:51am
I would recommend Wright's 'Simply Jesus' as a prior reading for 'How God Became King ... '. Wright correctly identifies that we have lost our Jewish roots and have therefore not understood Scripture properly. The Old and New Testaments are indeed a unity. God has become King of this world in and through Jesus.
8.14.2012 | 1:19pm
David Layman says:
The problem with Wright's effort to repoliticize the life/teachings of Jesus is very simple: from a historical perspective (i.e., reading the story at face value), Jesus failed.

He did not return at the destruction of the temple, contrary to his own apparent expectations (Mark 13: 24-27, see the repetition of "in those days, e.g., vv. 17, 19, 24). He did not return within the lifetime of any of the disciples (contrary to the plain meaning of Matthew 16:28).

Jesus' "life" can be viewed as "true" only in retrospective, i.e., in the light of his death and resurrection. But so viewed, everything about Jesus, his life, and his teaching, becomes redefined. We do not interpret Jesus Christ according to his fleshly existence, but according to God's supernatural power in raising him from the the dead (2 Corinthians 5: 16-17 and Romans 1:3-4).
8.15.2012 | 11:00am
Mark says:
As a non-believer who has read the Gospels and a handful of books and articles on biblical history, I am surprised some of this stuff would be obscure to Christians with a bit of curiosity in them.

Just sit down some afternoon and read one of the Gospels from start to finish and read it critically just like you would any other text. Pretty soon, one will be filled with questions about what one is reading:

Why does Matthew go to such great lengths to establish that David and Solomon are Jesus' ancestors? Why does Luke offer [a historically questionable] explanation for why "Jesus of Nazareth" would be born in Bethlehem?

Who is this John the Baptist fellow and why is he dunking people in water?

Who are all these Pharisees and scribes and why do they care so much about Jesus? What is this temple that Jesus goes to in order to drive out the moneychangers? What's so important about it?

What does "Christ" mean?

None of these questions are answerable without understanding the basics of ancient Judaism and ancient Jewish history -- something that certainly Matthew assumed of his readers. Once Jesus is placed in a Jewish context, it is possible to make sense of all this and to understand that Gospel authors like Matthew wanted their Jewish readers to be convinced that Jesus was the Messiah.
8.15.2012 | 11:06pm
rey says:
Layman, you just said that the historical Jesus was a big fat failure, and then to save face, you said "We do not interpret Jesus Christ according to his fleshly existence, but according to God's supernatural power in raising him from the the dead (2 Corinthians 5: 16-17 and Romans 1:3-4). " So what you mean is, you beleive Jesus is a failure, and historically just died and stayed dead, but you pretend that God raised this failure from the dead because it helps you believe you can go to heaven without living morally. I think that's repugnant.
8.16.2012 | 2:14pm
David Layman says:
@rey:

Why is my interpretation "repugnant"? It comes straight out of Paul. Read the texts I cited. Jesus did NOT bring about the kingdom of God that the Jews in the Early Jewish period were expecting. That is why to this day an observant Jew, asked why he doesn't believe Jesus is the Messiah, will say he did not fulfill the prophecies. He didn't meet the "job description." He was a messianic pretender who got killed. End of story (for the Jew).

We Christians believe that is NOT the end of the story. Because of the resurrection, and the presence of Jesus' spirit in the church, Christians see something more in the prophecies. Take Isaiah 7:14 as an example. The objective meaning seems to be "before a baby born of a young woman is weaned I will save you". Only in light of the Christian story can Christians see a further meaning: the "virgin" who will have a son (in the Septuagint parthenos translates the Hebrew almah, which may or may not mean "virgin") is the mother of Jesus.

If you think the belief in the resurrection is mere pretense, then obviously you are not a Christian, and there is nothing more to talk about (This entire conversation assumes that something about Jesus is religiously normative.) But if Jesus is not raised, then our faith is folly and vanity (paraphrasing 1 Corinthians 15, esp. v. 14).

Only by reading the entirety of the Jesus story in the light of Easter faith does the rest of the story have meaning or significance. Christians may differ on exactly what that significance is, but one thing we cannot say: the meaning of the Jesus story is found purely or primarily in the mundane significance of his earthly life and teaching.
8.16.2012 | 2:21pm
David Layman says:
Further comment to "rey"

Only after I composed my response did I observe that you attributed to me the idea that Jesus "stayed dead", and this belief "helps [me] believe [I] can go to heaven without living morally."

I have no idea how you arrived at those interpretations, and I deny they are accurate descriptions of what I believe. I repeat: if Jesus was not raised my faith is vain. And I haven't the foggiest idea how a Jesus who "stayed dead" could possibly enable anyone to "go to heaven," without or with a moral life.

You must have someone else's beliefs in mind.
8.16.2012 | 3:10pm
Great summary article JRR. Though the 4 themes identified by Wright are useful indeed, as you say, the contrasting themes of 'child vs adult,' 'slave vs freeman', 'heir vs son', far far outweigh them; And, ironically, a myoptic focus on the synoptic gospels is not how a Christian comes to benefit from the knowledge o Anabaptist f the distinctions, but rather seeing and giving place to the of Paul's gospel/doctrine and that contained in the synoptic gospels.
3.13.2013 | 7:33am
Re: David Layman,
I disagree with your initial premise. Matthew's Gospel refutes Jesus' failure. In Matthew 4, Jesus takes on the mantle of Israel himself, and we soon see that He has become faithful Israel - not the nation. He is led into the wilderness by the Spirit and is tested for forty days. His temptations mirror the temptations that Israel had faced there and was successful where they had failed, he then crossed from the Jordan into the Promised Land and began to act out Israel's mission to the people of Israel first and the surrounding people second. (Israel's mission statement(s) can be found in Gen 12:2-3 and Exo 19:5-6.) Jesus did not return when the temple was destroyed; his life, death, and resurrection was the sacrifice of the suffering servant (Psa 22; Isa 53) that made daly sacrifice unnecessary. Further, his Holy Spirit came in power at Pentecost, through which he literally dwells with his people, indicated by his claim, "I will be with you, even unto the end of the age." Jesus was faithful Adam, Son in the house rather than servant, and faithful Israel. It is his followers, through the Holy Spirit, that take on Israel's mantle and fulfill the mission which national Israel never could accomplish. Israel never blessed the nations. Even when they had expanded, they where self-focused and oppressed the Gentile nations around them (e.g., Solomon's harsh taxes). Only through Jesus, the missions of Paul and the influx of the Gentiles, were the Scriptures pertaining to the blessing/serving as priests for the nations fulfilled. Jesus failed in no sense. We merely await culmination.
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