What the
Talmud Really Says About Jesus
by David Klinghoffer,
Religion BookLine -- Publishers Weekly, 1/31/2007
Will
Peter Schaefer's new book, Jesus in the Talmud (Mar.), be
controversial? "I'm afraid so," Schaefer told RBL.
"That's why I'm nervous."
His editor at Princeton
University Press, Brigitta van Rheinberg, laughed but agreed:
"You think, oh, whoa, this is not going to go over well in
certain circles."
Schaefer, who heads up
Princeton's Judaic studies program, has collected and analyzed
all the passages in the Talmud that apparently refer to the
founder of Christianity, texts that were previously censored
from Talmud editions for centuries. In his book he
argues—against other scholars—that the scandalous passages
indeed refer not to some other figure of ancient times but to
the famous Jesus of Nazareth.
What exactly is so
scandalous? How about Jesus punished in Hell for eternity by
being made to sit in a cauldron of boiling excrement? That image
appears in early manuscripts of the Babylonian Talmud, as does a
brief account of Jesus' trial and execution—not by the Romans
but by the Jewish high court, the Sanhedrin. The Jewish
community, to the extent Jews were even aware of these excised
texts, has been content to let them remain obscure and unknown.
Schaefer, a
distinguished German-born Christian scholar who describes
classical rabbinic literature as "my first love," has now
definitively let the cat out of the bag. This undermines a
widespread assumption that, of Judaism's and Christianity's
respective sacred texts, only the Christian Gospels go out of
their way to assail the rival faith, whereas Judaism's classical
texts refrain from similar attacks.
It seems fair to say
now, however, that the Talmud is every bit as offensive to
Christians as the Gospels are to Jews.
The Talmud's scattered
portrait of Jesus unapologetically mocks Christian doctrines
including the virgin birth and the resurrection. Which isn't to
say that the rabbinic invective is meant simply to insult. In
his book, the author calls the Talmud's assault on Christian
claims "devastating."
"It is a very serious
argument," said Schaefer, who emphasizes that the rabbis'
stories about Jesus were never intended as an attempt at
historically accurate narrative. Rather, in the classic Talmudic
style, they encode legal and theological argumentation in the
form of sometimes-imaginative storytelling.
One naturally wonders,
when Jesus in the Talmud is published, what the results
will be for Jewish-Christian relations. "I certainly don't want
to harm Jewish-Christian dialogue. God forbid," Schaefer said.
But dialogue requires honesty, and "I'm trying to be honest."
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This article originally
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