Tuesday, June 6, 2023

Andrew J. Byers on the use of Psalm 82 in John 10:34-36

 

 

When Jesus is accused of blasphemy after claiming ‘I and the Father are one’ in John 10:30, he cites Psalm 82 in response to this accusation levelled by his potential executioners: συ ανθρωπος ων ποιεις σεαυτον θεον (‘you, being a man, are making yourself God’—10:33). This charge lies at the heart of later christological controversies for which John’s Gospel is adduced as an instructive resource. The question in these controversies and to a large degree in John 10 is this: how can Jesus exist as both human and God? the fourth evangelist does not provide in his narrative a Trinitarian formula in reply, of course. In his final words to the Jews in the entire Gospel—whose hands are clutching stones—Jesus gives warrant to his explicit self-identification with the one God of Shema by appealing to Psalm 82, already noted in this study as the most important deification text in patristic theology.

 

It is not written in your law, ‘I said, you are gods’ [εγω ειπα θεοι εστε]? If he called them ‘gods’ [θεους] to whom the word of God [ο λογος του θεου] came (and the scripture is not able to be broken), how can you say of whom the Father consecrated and sent into the world, ‘you blaspheme’, because I said, ‘I am a son of God?’ (Jn 10:34b-36)

 

The appeal to Psalm 82 associates Jesus not so much with the one God of Israel (with whom he has just identified himself in 10:30), but with a more general category of divine being: θεοι (LXX, Ps. 81:6). These gods appear in the Psalm as a plurality, and Jesus maintains the collective nature of their identity (note the plural εκεινοι/those). What I will argue below is that Jesus is drawing on a Jewish tradition associated with Psalm 82 that not only legitimates his own claim to divine status, but also indicates that his coming into the world will result in the plural, collective deification of a new people. (Andrew J. Byers, Ecclesiology and Theosis in the Gospel of John [Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series 166; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017], 186-87)

 

After discussing the 1st-century interpretation of Psalm 82:6 (see Jerome H. Neyrey on the use of Psalm 82:6 in John 10:34-35), Byers writes:


 

. . . The use of Psalm 82 in John 10:34-36 [is] not just to provide a christological apology for Jesus’ supposed blasphemy in John 10:3, justifying Jesus’ claim to divinity; the citation reaffirms the developing ecclesial vision in which a new society is created by the divine revelation provided by Jesus. The standard christological interpretation of John 10:34-36 among Johannine scholars follow the line of a ‘from the lesser to the greater’ method of argumentation: if mortal beings can in some way be referred to as ‘gods’ and ‘sons of the Most High’ (a phrase parallel to ‘gods’ in Ps. 82:6), then a fortiori surely Jesus in his unique vocation as ‘the Son of God’ and consecrated divine agent can be legitimately designated as ‘god’.

 

My own proposal here is that the citation of Psalm 82 allows Jesus to make an ecclesiological statement as well as a christological one. He is indeed a divine being, but in citing Psalm 82 with its likely connections to the scene at Sinai, he highlights not only his divine status, but also the divine status granted to those who receive him as the definitive revelation of God (see John 1:18). The ecclesial significance of this psalm in John’s Gospel is noted by Käsemann, for whom the ’community under the Word’ is a ‘heavenly reality’:

 

This idea is expressed in the most astonishing form in 10.34f. There the statement of Ps. 82.6, ‘You are gods,’ is justified through the reception of the Word. To be sure, this verse has a christological slant, but it cannot be limited to Christology only, since it already had validity for the community of the old covenant. The accepted Word of God produces an extension of heavenly reality on earth, for the Word participates in the communion of Father and Son. This unity of Father and Son is the quality and mark of the heavenly world. It projects itself to the earth in the Word in order to create the community there which, through rebirth from above, becomes integrated into the unity of Father and Son. (Käsemann, Testament, 69)

 

Käsemann, however, understands the evangelist’s ecclesiological use of Psalm 82 to betray a ‘frightening understanding of the Johannine community’ that amounts to ‘gnosticising’ and claims that ‘his interpretation of the Old Testament is also gnosticizing’ in regards to Psalm 82 and elsewhere. (Ibid., 70) Though he discerns some loose idea of a participatory ecclesiology, Käsemann enlists the citation of Psalm 82 as another example of the Fourth Gospel’s aberrant trends towards Docetism and Gnosticism. Recognizing John’s Jewish milieu and the Jewish interpretive traditions likely affixed to Psalm 82 leads to different conclusions. The participatory ecclesiology in view is that of a renewed Israel established by the faithful reception of the supreme revelation of Israel’s one God.

 

The foregoing discussion affirms that Psalm 82 was not employed in John as a haphazard christological proof text. Bultmann, John, 389) At a critical point in the narrative where the clash with the Jews has reached a climactic pinnacle, the citation of this psalm—freighted with connections to the giving of Torah—provides a summative reflection on the ecclesial narrative script established in the Prologue. The Word of God—Jesus—has appeared in history as the ultimate disclosure of divine reality whose rejection leads to death, but whose acceptance leads to filiation and deification (‘you are gods’ and ‘sons of the Most High’). Just as Israel’s inception was associated with receiving the words of Torah at Sinai, the faithful reception of the words of Jesus, who is himself the Word, creates a new people of God who enjoy the divine gift of eternal life. If the deification and fall of Adam is also evoked by John’s use of Psalm 82, a possible resonance with this psalm as discussed above, it would suit well the theme of new creation climactically depicted in Jesus’ re-enactment of Genesis 2:7 by breathing his breath/Spirit into his disciples in John 20:22, thereby forming a new humanity. And this new humanity consists of the ‘children of God’, that is, those ‘to whom the Word of God came’ and who received him; conversely, those ‘to whom the Word of god came’ but who rejected him will ‘die in [their] sins’ (8:24); or, as Psalm 82:7, puts it, they will ‘die like humans’ (Ps. 82:7).

 

In sum, the evangelists’ use of Psalm 82 makes this statement about believers: ‘you are gods’. (Ibid., 194-96)