History "for its own sake" isn't popular until it stops being just that. Even the most "objective" historian is driven partly by her own peculiar curiosities - a personal need tragically isolating her from those presently uninterested - but also by any number of additional factors. The need for a pursuit, the need to master something, the need for a field, a career, a dissertation topic, perhaps even the need for any of these things to provide the symptomatic isolation she so deeply desires.
On a broader scale, the strains and pockets of antiquarianism that do exist must - necessarily, if ironically - must be recognized as exceptions that prove the rule (and domination) of present needs in the search for the past. To go beyond personal need, then, what are some of the larger political motivations that might drive someone - sincerely or otherwise - to pursue "That Noble Dream" of revitalizing the past "as it actually was" and "for its own sake", and to believing the past has perhaps its best value when presented this way?
Here are a few "antiquarian" attitudes one might adopt, and how each is driven by present needs.
Truthful Idealism
reporting inaccuracies is [thought to be] responsible community service
Reform / Resistance
overturning dominant narratives can open the eyes of the abused
Practical Corrective
improved knowledge of the past can benefit daily operations
Sensitivity Training
confronting the otherness of the past can help reduce narcissism
There are probably many others, but these four come easily to mind - quite for obvious reasons, if you know me well at all. (!) Nevertheless, despite seeing my own psychology almost painfully on display, I must claim no egotism in affirming that each of these four categories can be a positive motivation for looking into the past, although none of them are ever likely to be popular, for obvious reasons.
However, it has also occurred to me there is one additional style that will always stand as a popular reason for looking into the past "as it was", or at least, as something-other-than-what-we-think-it-was, and that is:
Story Quality
history, like fiction, can illustrate the possibilities of human existence
With this addition, it cannot be too heavily underscored that the key word is, of course, "possibilities". The reason we human beings read fiction is precisely because it offers a mixture of aspects we know from our own personal realities and aspects that are grippingly unlike our own personal realities, perhaps especially those of the moment. Thus, one form of antiquarianism as presentism can be merely a desire for escapism.
Equally motivating, if less blatantly conscious perhaps, is that revisiting the past as it was (as it may-have-been or supposedly-was) - that revisiting different and surprising versions of the past can be a proactive exploration to discover something 'new in the old', to restore knowledge about additional 'ways to be in the world' that have been largely forgotten, or that may simply appear to be under-appreciated by one's own personal world, at the present. In short, the desire to look into a foreign past can arise simply from feeling as if one is a foreigner in the painfully familiar world of one's present existence.
This last example is what drives Historians to Revisionism, or why History worth writing about is always likely to seek an ironic viewpoint in some way or another. This also explains everything about my own journey, to some degree or another, and that right up to this very - ahem - present moment, as this piece I am writing would not exist if it were not presently my own need to understand better how various forms of antiquarianism and presentism interact, oppose and/or assist one another.
The conclusions realized in this post are both unsettling and bracing, in ways I can't yet articulate. But to realize that antiquarianism is only opposed to presentism on the surface of things, that it is only a different sort of presentism - that is both challenging and helpful. And I may need to remind myself more often that when someone appears to be twisting the past into shapes that suit present agendas, it is not their methodology in particular, not their revisionism, that may need confronting the most. It may be their motivation. But if that point is true, then I begin to wonder... to what end all this research???
To one of five ends, I suppose, as I have just detailed above.
Thus, I do hope, we may yet live in hope...
April 13, 2014
April 6, 2014
Chronology in the Fourth Gospel
As Narrative isn't quite History, so narrative Sequence is not the same as Chronology. Thus, scholars misapprehend greatly in their perennial refrain that John's "chronology" differs from that of the synoptics. (*See notes at bottom for two caveats which are well known but still misrepresented as indicators of "John's Chronology".)
More precisely, what they usually mean is that the fourth Gospel differs dramatically in narrative content, and as such it obviously differs also in narrative sequence. However, it's another question entirely to ask what the fourth Gospel might have to say for itself about the actual chronology of Jesus' life (in the period it treats). At that point, we need a method for getting from narrative to history. We do not merely transfer narrative literature directly into chronological history. Narrative is literature but chronology is history, and while most history is literature, there are few scholars today who would dare speak as if literature was tantamount to history.
That's enough for a start, to illustrate what I'm suggesting. I hope this rough analysis of John's first seven chapters demonstrates my initial point in this post rather conclusively, that we should not characterize the "chronology" of the fourth Gospel as being like or unlike the "chronology" of another Gospel, if what we are thinking of is primarily or largely NOT chronology, but rather the narrative content and sequence of those Gospels.
There is much more to be done. Hopefully much of it by more highly trained smarter folks. Either way, watch this space for developments.
Anon, then...
So then, the "chronology" of the fourth Gospel is not merely its content as per narrative sequence, but rather something we must construct from the text (like we do with all meaning) by investigating chronological elements embedded within narrative content. To this end, the primary question is not "How does the writer script his detailed emplotment?" but rather "How does the writer demonstrate his awareness of TIME and its relationship to both plot and characters?" This is not to say that there may be subtle flashbacks necessarily hiding at points within John's narrative that would then require a re-sequencing of so-called "chronology" (this has been suggested before, but this is not my personal view) - although it may be worth remembering this for caution's sake. The actual point is that "John's chronology" should only refer to whatever the fourth gospel has to say about chronology, properly speaking. We understand that narrative sequence is selective emplotment that relates aspects of a story and the storyteller's design, in the literary sense, and we should also understand that chronology has never been recognized as a literary term, but a term that refers to the actual past, whether represented by memory or by narrative or by scholarly reconstruction based on critical analysis of things such as texts.
Just as a theologian does not present John's theology merely by repeating key phrases which she judges to be of theological value, and a historian does not present John's history merely by repeating verbatim whichever stories she judges to have historical value, so can we not present John's chronology merely by repeating the sequence of episodes being portrayed in John's narrative. The proper theologian makes note of relevant content and constructs a theory to summarize or explain "John's theology", and the careful historian takes note of places where John's narrative may or may not clearly reflect real world situations in detail. Likewise, to speak of John's chronology, one must examine the narrative for declarations that reflect TIME as a significant aspect of the narration. By this, I do not mean necessarily the same thing as "a sense of narrative time", an invaluable tool for the purposes of narrative criticism but not designed for extracting historical content from the form of a narrative. What I mean is that we must read the narrative as a narrative and yet search for indications of reference to historical chronology.
To illustrate, here are some references from the first seven chapters of John, with my commentary and a tentative working set of classifications or labels for different types of references the Gospel writer employs. The English text below (for ease of reference) is from Young's Literal translation, which I chose both because its what I had on hand and because I like to be different. Someday I'll learn how to use that fancy software I bought years ago.
verse
|
YLT
|
Chronology
|
||
1:6
|
6There came a man—having been sent from God—whose name is
John,
|
Reference point. We begin our story at the point when, readers
remember, John the baptizer made his big splash (no pun intended).
|
||
1:15
|
John doth testify
concerning him, and hath cried, saying, ‘This was he of whom I said, He who
after me is coming, hath come before me, for he was before me;’
|
Clarification. Embedded Dialogue. Jesus got big *after* John got
big. This is the central chronological reference point for this story, as a
narrative set within known past events.
|
||
1:19
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And this is the testimony
of John, when the Jews sent out of Jerusalem priests and Levites, that they
might question him,
|
Reference point. Readers recognize that John is active and not
yet imprisoned.
|
||
1:28
|
These things came to pass
in Bethabara, beyond the Jordan, where John was baptizing.
|
Reference point. IFF readers knew at what phase of JtB's public
ministry he operated from there.
|
||
1:30
|
After me doth come a man,
who hath come before me, because he was before me:
|
Repetition. Again, Jesus' public profile rises only *after* John
became big.
|
||
1:31
|
because of this I came
with the water baptizing.
|
Progression. JtB speaking of himself in past tense. He's been at
it a while.
|
||
1:35
|
On the morrow, again,
John was standing
|
Daily Counter. Micro-chronology self-contained within the
narrative, distinguished by such a preface.
|
||
1:43
|
On the morrow, he willed
to go forth to Galilee, and he findeth Philip… from Bethsaida, of the city of
Andrew and Peter; 45Philip findeth Nathanael…
|
Daily Counter. Micro-chronology self-contained within the
narrative, distinguished by such a preface.
|
||
2:1
|
And the third day a
marriage happened in Cana of Galilee
|
Daily Counter. Micro-chronology self-contained within the
narrative, distinguished by such a preface.
|
||
2:11
|
This beginning of the
signs did Jesus in Cana of Galilee
|
Clarification. IFF readers knew of Jesus' ministry as something
which began only once JtB was arrested, this comment recognizes that reader
knowledge and thereby marks this event as a small scale exception.
|
||
2:13
|
And the passover of the
Jews was.. and Jesus went up to Jerusalem
|
Season/Festival. As the first such indicator, this is merely an
reference to the present episode's particular occasion. In conjunction with
later references, however, it will come to mean more. See below…
|
||
2:20
|
The Jews, therefore,
said, ‘Forty and six years was this sanctuary building
|
Number of years. Situates the beginning of our story in time,
but only depending on reader knowledge about the historical past. Not at all
helpful in understanding the internal chronology of narrated events relative
to one another. For its own sake, without detailed knowledge, this statement
may as well say, "King Herod's heyday was several decades ago." For
most of John's original readers, that may have been its mot likely effect,
perhaps even its intended effect. The number 46 is precise enough that
detailed knowledge could place this in some precise year, but also large
enough that an average person could easily place it as being well after
Herod, easily after Archelaus, and not yet in the days of Agrippa.
|
||
3:22-23
|
After these things came
Jesus and his disciples to the land of Judea, and there he did tarry with
them, and was baptizing; 23and John was also baptizing in Aenon,
nigh to Salem… for John was not yet cast into the prison
|
Reference point. John's imprisonment was remembered as a major
historical development, the time periods before and after which stand in reader memory as distinct epochs.
The narrative is thus careful to note which period these events fall into.
ALSO, Clarification. IFF readers knew of Jesus' ministry as having begun in
Galilee, this comment recognizes that reader knowledge and marks this (as
above) as an exception.
|
||
4:1-3
|
When therefore the Lord
knew that the Pharisees heard that Jesus more disciples doth make and baptize
than John, 2(though indeed Jesus himself was not baptizing, but
his disciples,) 3he left Judea and went away again to Galilee.
|
Oblique reference. Jesus going into Galilee suggests, especially
on the heels of the above clarifications, that our story is about to enter
the expected phase of that early period in Jesus' public campaign. ALSO,
oblique reference. IFF the reader knew (or remembered from earlier Gospels)
that "going into Galilee" is a sign JtB has just been arrested. At
any rate, Jesus' response to this development (whatever it signifies) marks
this episode as a point after which Jesus will have to be careful about being
in Judea.
|
||
Note 1
|
At this point, it's worth revisiting the perrenial mistatement,
"J's chr is diff from the S's." and the frequently cited
observation that this is most obviously demonstrated in that Jesus goes back
and forth into Judea, which differs from the synoptics. Even if narrative
sequence were the same as "chronology", this early portion of
John's narrative perfectly aligns with Mark 1:9,14, which puts Jesus coming
"from Nazareth in Galilee" and then returning "into
Galilee". Therefore, technically, Mark does in fact show Jesus going
"back and forth" into Judea, albeit for a total of two times
altogether. Therefore, the Gospel of John is not differently ordered. It
merely includes a few side trips which Mark, Mt & Lk do not share. But
the critical point to note here is not whether these side trips belong in any
harmonized timeline (or not). Rather, what is noteworthy here is that these
are not chronological discrepancies. They are additional episodes. The travel
involved does not make them problematic for temporal comparison. The
synoptics consistently show Jesus travelling frequently, if not constantly.
|
|||
4:4
|
And it was behoving him
to go through Samaria.
|
Geographical contingency. The position of Samaria requires that
actions described in 4:4 can only have happened after the episode which ended
at 4:3. Although - depending on one's interpretation of the aorist verbs in
4:3 - it *could* possibly be that 4:4 is *technically* a flashback.
|
||
4:35
|
it is yet four months, and the
harvest cometh
|
Seasonal reference. Depending on whether Jesus means the fall or
spring harvest, this may be intended to tell us that Jesus lingered in Judea
for a few months after Passover, or for many months.
|
||
4:43-46
|
And after the two days he
went forth thence, and went away to Galilee, 44for Jesus himself
testified that a prophet in his own country shall not have honour; 45when
then, he came to Galilee, the Galileans received him, having seen all things
that he did in Jerusalem in the feast—for they also went to the feast.
46Jesus came, therefore, again to Cana of Galilee, where he made the
water wine
|
Daily counter. ALSO, reference point. The purpose of the daily
counter here may be merely to indicate that the historical reference of 4:3
(going into Galilee) is substantially the same event as what is being
referred to in this passage. It is less likely the writer wants us to know
how long the samaria layover lasted and more likely he wants to maintain
continuity of reference with the significant point of time he's been building
towards - that Jesus came at a certain point into Galilee as a public figure,
on the heels of John's arrest. The "two days" signifies that this
arrival is the same arrival referred to in 4:3. Finally, the reference to
Cana confirms again that the wedding episode did indeed belong to an earlier
time period *before* Jesus' premier in Galilee as a public figure.
|
||
4:54
|
54this again a second sign did Jesus, having come out of Judea to
Galilee.
|
Clarification. Again, emphasizing a distinction between what was
perceived (and remembered) as the beginning of Jesus' public phase, and what
was actually going on in the early stages of Jesus' recruiting activity,
prior to John's arrest. Whereas the synoptics narrated the official launch,
so to speak, John is at pains to illustrate the "soft launch" of
Jesus' ministry. This "second sign" would have been the first one
of the remembered beginning.
|
||
5:1
|
After these things there
was a feast of the Jews, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem
|
Episodic contingency. Not the first usage, but "after these
things" bears closer scrutiny, I suspect.
|
||
Note 2
|
The fact that John uses
it sometimes and not others may suggest that he only takes care to
chronologize specific episodes as being "after" all the preceding
episodes, or perhaps merely "after" the immediately preceding
episode. In either case, it also bears asking whether this implies that
episodes NOT beginning with this phrase are perhaps NOT representing
chronological events by their narrative sequence, or perhaps merely that the
writer is not willing to certify them precisely as such. Again, these
questions require further scrutiny. I do not currently have a guess as to
what pattern they might or might not reveal. What this does do is illustrate
that narrative sequence of a story is not always meant to align with the
chronological sequence of past events, and should not be taken as such. My
best guess on "after these things" is that the placement of this
phrase resembles a Geometry diagram, where sometimes the lines appear to be
perpendicular but we cannot necessarily tell, and at other times we have
evidence to declare that two lines are indeed perpendicular, and we certify
them as such by adding a small square in the vertex. In other words, I'm
leaning towards "the writer is not willing to certify them
precisely", but in that case we might pay special heed to his caution by
respecting the possibility of alternatives...
|
|||
5:9-10
|
and it was a sabbath on
that day, 10the Jews then said to him that hath been healed, ‘It
is a Sabbath
|
Occasional reference. This is not a reference to any passing of
time, or any related time, subsequent or prior. Rather, this is merely an
indicator of the different social context that was situational on any sabbath
occasion.
|
||
6:1-4
|
After these things Jesus
went away beyond the sea of Galilee (of Tiberias), 2and there was
following him a great multitude, because they were seeing his signs that he
was doing on the ailing; 3and Jesus went up to the mount, and he
was there sitting with his disciples, 4and the passover was nigh,
the feast of the Jews.
|
Episodic contingency. Again, "after these things".
ALSO, Seasonal/Festival. It has been one or more years since the previous Passover occasion. That makes this a new category, Seasonal Contingency. In combination
with the episodic contingency (stock phrase, "after these things"), the writer tacitly purports that this
Passover is distinctly other than and also after the one previously discussed. ALSO, occasional
reference. The social context of Passover happens to condition some aspects
of the forthcoming episode.
|
||
6:17
|
they were going over the
sea to Capernaum, and darkness had already come
|
Daily Counter. The fall of night indicates continuity with the
immediately prior events, by indicating they belong to the same continuing
period of wakefulness, or "day".
|
||
7:1-2
|
And Jesus was walking
after these things in Galilee, for he did not wish to walk in Judea, because
the Jews were seeking to kill him, 2and the feast of the Jews was
nigh—that of tabernacles
|
Episodic contingency. Again, "after these things".
ALSO, Developmental Contingency. Judean Jews seeking to kill Jesus is an
indication of escalation since 4:1-4. ALSO, Seasonal/festival. The
tabernacles puts this a few months after Passover (but how to presume whether
in the same year? Only by the episodic contingency.)
|
||
7:14
|
And it being now the
middle of the feast, Jesus went up to the temple, and he was teaching,
|
Daily Counter. Again, less important as micro count of
particular days, more importantly a marker that this episode belongs nearly
in time with the immediately prior episode.
|
||
Note 3
|
Note: At this point, two
of John's narrative trends may be juxtaposed to enhance our perception of the
Gospel's overall sense for "chronology". First, the festival
references assure us that significant time has passed, at least a year,
possibly two or more. Second, the daily markers and stock phrase "after
these things" have been relatively frequent. Put together, we must
conclude the amount of narrated activity is obviously not enough to fill up
the amount of time being covered. (Cf.21:25) This, again, provides reason to
question the narrative sequence AS chronology. Since the episodes are
obviously not intended to be chronologically SEAMLESS, we cannot guarantee
that each mini-episode (by which I mean either pericopes or even portions of
various pericopes) was intended to duplicate chronological sequence precisely
according to narrative sequence. What we MUST therefore look for, to suss out
the Gospel's "chronology" as it were, is specific indicators of
historical reference, association of epochs or markable occasions, and
various types of purported contingency.
|
That's enough for a start, to illustrate what I'm suggesting. I hope this rough analysis of John's first seven chapters demonstrates my initial point in this post rather conclusively, that we should not characterize the "chronology" of the fourth Gospel as being like or unlike the "chronology" of another Gospel, if what we are thinking of is primarily or largely NOT chronology, but rather the narrative content and sequence of those Gospels.
There is much more to be done. Hopefully much of it by more highly trained smarter folks. Either way, watch this space for developments.
Anon, then...
----------------------
*As promised, here are the two caveats to my initial point at the top. Although these cannot justifiably characterize "the chronology" of an entire literary biography, there are two particular instances in John's narrative that do indeed proffer a distinctly chronological element that directly contradicts their apparent counterparts in the synoptic materials. The first instance is that John seems to disagree with the Synoptics about whether Jesus was crucified before or after the first night of the Passover feast. The second instance is that John puts 'the temple incident' at a Passover distinctly two or more years prior to the Passover at which Mark & Matthew & Luke narrate what many believe is the very same incident, although a minority believe the writers may simply be aware of different but similar incidents.
Whether these discrepancies may be explained is not necessarily a "chronological" matter, but as long as they remain contradictions they are indeed chronological differences. However, for reasons given above, these two instances alone do not in themselves justify the perennial statement that "John's chronology differs from that of the synoptics."
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"If I have ever made any valuable discoveries, it has been owing more to patient observation than to any other reason."
-- Isaac Newton