The facts recorded here and the commentaries quoted
from several extremely eminent Christian experts in
exegesis have refuted affirmations of orthodoxy supported
by the line adopted by the last Council on the absolute
historical authenticity of the Gospels. These are said to
have faithfully transmitted what Jesus actually did and
taught.
Several different kinds of argument have been given.
Firstly, quotations from the Gospels themselves show
flat contradictions. It is impossible to believe two
facts that contradict each other. Neither can one accept
certain improbabilities and affirmations that go against
the cast-iron data provided by modern knowledge. In this
respect, the two genealogies of Jesus given in the
Gospels and the untruths implied in them are quite
conclusive.
These contradictions, improbabilities and
incompatibilities pass unnoticed by many Christians. They
are astonished when they discover them because they have
been influenced by their reading of commentaries that
provide subtle explanations calculated to reassure them
and orchestrated by an apologetic lyricism. Some very
typical examples have been given of the skill employed by
certain experts in exegesis in camouflaging what they
modestly call 'difficulties'. There are very few passages
indeed in the Gospels that have been acknowledged as
inauthentic although the Church declares them canonic.
According to Father Kannengiesser, works of modern
textual criticism have revealed data which constitute a
'revolution in methods of Biblical exegesis' so that the
facts relating to Jesus recorded in the Gospels are no
longer 'to be taken literally', they are 'writings suited
to an occasion' or 'combat writings'. Modern knowledge
has brought to light the history of Judeo-Christianity
and the rivalry between communities which accounts for
the existence of facts that today's readers find
disconcerting. The concept of eyewitness evangelists is
no longer defensible, although numerous Christians still
retain it today. The work done at the Biblical School of
Jerusalem (Fathers Benoit and Boismard) shows very
clearly that the Gospels were written, revised and
corrected several times. They also warn the reader that
he is "obliged in more than one case to give up the
notion of hearing Jesus's voice directly".
The historical nature of the Gospels is beyond
question. Through descriptions referring to Jesus
however, these documents provide us above all with
information about the character of their authors, the
spokesmen for the tradition of the early Christian
communities to which they belonged, and in particular
about the struggle between the Judeo-Christians and Paul:
Cardinal Daniélou's work is authoritative on these
points.
Why be surprised by the fact that some evangelists
distort certain events in Jesus's life with the object of
defending a personal point of view? Why be surprised by
the omission of certain events? Why be surprised by the
fictitious nature of other events described?
This leads us to compare the Gospels with the
narrative poems found in Medieval literature. A vivid
comparison could be made with the Song of Roland
(Chanson de Roland), the most well-known of all poems of
this kind, which relates a real event in a fictitious
light. It will be remembered that it describes an actual
episode: Roland was leading Charlemagne's rear-guard when
it was ambushed on the pass at Roncevaux. The episode
which was of minor importance, is said to have taken
place on the 15th August, 778 according to historical
records (Eginhard). It was raised to the stature of a
great feat of arms, a battle in a war of religion. It is
a whimsical description, but the imaginary element does
not obliterate one of the real battles that Charlemagne
had to fight in order to protect his frontiers against
the attempts made by neighbouring peoples to penetrate
his borders. That is the element of truth and the epic
style of narrative does not remove it.
The same holds true for the Gospels: Matthew's
phantasms, the fiat contradictions between Gospels, the
improbabilities, the incompatibilities with modern
scientific data, the successive distortions of the
text-all these things add up to the fact that the Gospels
contain chapters and passages that are the sole product
of the human imagination. These flaws do not however cast
doubt on the existence of Jesus's mission: the doubt is
solely confined to the course it took.