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Biblical texts that called mortals "gods" attracted attention from com
mentators and became the focus of ingenious interpretations and exegetical
1
principles. This is certainly true of Ps 82:6, "I said: Tou are Gods'" The pres
ent study examines the use of Ps 82:6 in John 10:34-36. It is my hypothesis
that the Fourth Gospel understands Psalm 82 very much the way it was
understood in Jewish midrash, for which it might be the earliest extant
example. An examination of the understanding and function of Ps 82:6 in
John 10.34-36 will necessarily entail a survey of Jewish interpretations of
that Psalm to put the Johannine passage in its proper perspective
I. Status Questionis
In the 1960s, a debate emerged over the interpretation of Ps 82:6-7 in
relation to John 10:34-36, the general lines of which were summarized by
Anthony Hanson.2 He called attention to four different ways in which Psalm
82 was understood in Jewish traditions, with reference to (a) angels, (b) Melchizedek, (c) judges, and (d) Israel at Sinai. All four interpretations are
attested to in midrashic literature, but which one relates to John 10:34-36?
Angeh. In an early study on Psalm 82, J. A. Emerton3 argued that in the
targum to the Psalms,4 Qumran,5 the Peshitta, and the Fathers, *lohm in
Psalm 82 was understood to refer to "angels." Emerton suggests that *lohm
refers to superhuman beings to whom the nations were allotted (e.g., Deut
1
For example, Exod 71, where God says to Moses, "I make you as god to Pharaoh" This
caused no little difficulty to Philo, as he wrestled with its interpretation in Leg All 140, Sac
9, Det 39-40, 161-62, Migr 84, 169, Mut 19-20, 125, 128-29, Somn 2189, Quod Omn 43-44,
see also Post 43-44 and Vii Mos 1158
2
Anthony Hanson, "Johns Citation of Psalm LXXXII Reconsidered," NTS 13 (1966-67)
363-67
3
J A Emerton, "Some New Testament Notes," JTS 11 (1960) 329-32
4
See Luis Diez Merino, Targum de Salmos (Biblio Poliglota Complutense IV,1, Madrid
Instituto Francisco Suarez, 1982) 142 and 269
5
See John Strugnell, "The Angelic Liturgy at Qumrn - 4QSerek Srt Olat HaSsabbt," in
Congress Volume Oxford 1959 (VTSup 7, Leiden Brill, 1960) esp 336-42
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4:19; Daniel 10), whom the Jews regarded as angels but whom the Gentiles
called gods (see 1 Cor 10:20).
Melchizedek. In llQMelch, Psalm 82 was cited apropos of Melchizedek.
The modern editor of llQMelch described the document as an "eschatological midrash" which cast Melchizedek in the role of judge.6 Emerton, who
had argued that the "gods" mentioned in Psalm 82 were "angels," now saw the
Melchizedek = Elohim reference in llQMelch strengthening his earlier
interpretation of Psalm 82; he suggested that Melchizedek was being identified with the archangel Michael.7 Hanson conceded that Melchizedek
might be called "god," but rejected its relevance for John 10.8
Judges. Psalm 82 has also been interpreted in Jewish tradition to refer
to the judges of Israel, evidence for which comes from b. Ber. 6a and Midr.
Ps. 82.9 This interpretation of the psalm enjoyed considerable popularity
during a certain period of Johannine scholarship.10 Returning to the issue of
Melchizedek in llQMelch, Joseph Fitzmyer,11 who basically agreed with van
der Woudes original interpretation of the passage, paraphrased line 10 of this
fragment as follows: 'Elohim (Melchizedek) has taken his stand in the
assembly of El (Yahweh), in the midst of gods (angelic court) he gives judgment."12 He understands Melchizedek's role in that text not as an angel but
as a judge.13
Israel at Sinai. As far back as Billerbeck,14 it was argued that Ps 82:6-7
was historicized in Jewish traditions to refer to Israel at Sinai when God gave
it the Torah, making it holy and so deathless. This midrash, which has
become a popular understanding of the use of Ps 82:6-7 in John 10:34-36,15
implies that Israel experienced a new creation at Sinai. Because God gave
6
The original study was by A. S. van der Woude, "Melchisedek als himmlische Erlsergestalt in den neugefundenen eschatologischen Midraschim aus Qumran Hhle XI," in Oudtestamentliche Studien XIV (Leiden: Brill, 1965) 354-73; see also Marinus de Jonge and A. S.
van der Woude, "llQMelchizedek and the New Testament;' NTS 12 (1965-66) 304.
7
J. A. Emerton, "Melchizedek and the Gods: Fresh Evidence for the Jewish Background
of John X.34-36,"/rS 17 (1966) 400-401.
8
Hanson, "John s Citation of Psalm LXXXII Reconsidered," 366.
9
See W. G. Braude, The Midrash on the Psalms (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1959)
2. 59-60.
10
For example, B. F. Westcott, The Gospel According to St. John (London: John Murray, 1908)
70; M-J. Lagrange, vangile selon Saint Jean (Paris: Gabalda, 1948) 290; and R. H. Lightfoot,
St. Johns Gospel (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1956) 209.
11
Joseph A. Fitzmyer, "Further Light on Melchizedek from Qumran Cave 11,"/BL 86 (1967)
25-41, which is also found in his Essays on the Semitic Background of the New Testament
(Missoula, MT: Scholars Press, 1974) 245-67.
12
Ibid., 261-62.
13
Ibid., 251-53.
14
See Str-B, 2. 543.
15
For example, see C. K. Barrett, The Gospel According to St. John (2d ed.; Philadelphia:
Westminster, 1978) 384-85; and Nils Dahl, "The Johannine Church and History," in Jesus in the
Memory of the Early Church (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1976) 109-30.
649
Israel the word of Torah, to which it became obedient, Israel became deathless once more as it resumed the "image and likeness of God" given it at creation. James Ackerman, the chief proponent of this argument, suggested that
the Johannine Prologue bears striking resemblances to the "Sinai myth,"
indicating how Wisdom once dwelt on earth with humankind (Ps 82:6), thus
making them immortal; but because Wisdom was rejected and returned to
heaven, sinful mortals now die (Ps 82:7).16
As regards these interpretations and John 10, Hanson rejected the traditions that interpret "god" as either angels or judges.17 He correctly concluded
that only the last interpretation of Psalm 82 (Israel at Sinai) has any bearing
on the argument in John 10.18 All of the studies cited above, however, are
deficient for several reasons. First, they tend to argue for an extrinsic interpretation of Psalm 82 in John 10: if Jews in their scriptures or tradition can
call a man "god," then Jesus is not totally out of line in being called a divine
figure.19 This type of extrinsic argument shows little respect for the midrashic
understanding of Psalm 82 or other texts from scripture about the justification in the first place for calling any human "god," even by extension. Are
there intrinsic reasons in the midrash on Psalm 82 which give warrant to such
a predication? Second, those who treat the background of Psalm 82, even in
passing, do not present an adequate exegesis of the argument in John 10 to
see on what grounds Jesus is acclaimed "equal to God" (10:30, 33) and what
Psalm 82 has to do with that argument. There are some commentators who
deny that Psalm 82 in any way responds to the charges.20 There is, then, much
work left to be done. We turn now to a more detailed exegesis of John 10 to
see what is being argued, so that we might assess more clearly the meaning
and function of Psalm 82 in relation to that argument.
II. The Argument in John 10:28-37
Unless Psalm 82 is used in a purely extrinsic manner21 in John 10:34-36,
then we must investigate how it functions as an apology to a specific charge
in the forensic dynamics of John 10. The starting place is 10:30, where Jesus
claims "I and the Father are one (or equal)." The crowds correctly interpret
16
See James Ackerman, "The Rabbinic Interpretation of Psalm 82 and the Gospel of John,"
HTR 59 (1966) 186-91.
17
Not all agree with Hanson; for example, see E. Jungkuntz, "An Approach to the Exegesis
of John 10:34-36," CTM 35 (1964) 556-65.
18
This interpretation has already been urged; see James Ackerman, "Rabbinic Interpretation," 186-91.
19
Jungkuntz summarizes how many modern commentators see the use of Psalm 82 either
>n an ad hominem argument or consider it simply irrelevant to the narrative's claims ("An
Approach to the Exegesis of John 10:34," 556-58).
20
For example, Rudolf Bultmann, The Gospel of John (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1971) 389.
21
That is, "a play on words"; see, e.g., A. Loisy, Le quatrime vangile (Paris: Emil Nourry,
^21) 335.
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this to mean that Jesus in some way claims "equality with God." His claim
leads them to a judgment, "blasphemy, because you, being a man, make yourself God"(10:33). Several questions arise: In what respect are Jesus and God
"one" (or equal)? Is it true that Jesus "makes himself" God? This means that
we must examine both the earlier part of John 10 to see in what sense Jesus
and God are "equal" and the subsequent apology in 10:34-38 to see how
Psalm 82 relates to the claims of equality.
The First Forensic Proceeding fl0:l-28a)
After Jesus claimed to be the door and the shepherd (10:1-16), the
Gospel describes confusion in the crowd about these claims: Is he a demon
or a saint (10:19-21)? So intense is this popular confusion that a formal
forensic process is begun in 10:22-27 about Jesus' claims. Since the crowd,
who is an uneducated lam h-'res (7:47-49), could not possibly decide
these claims, a solemn assembly gathers "in the temple, in the stoa of
Solomon" (10:23). There it puts a formal question to Jesus: "Tell us plainly,
if you are the Messiah?" (10:24). Thus, 10:l-28a can be seen as a forensic proceeding22 which formally examines Jesus' claims:
Claim:
Jesus is the Door, Good Shepherd (10:1-16)
Judgment: Tell us plainly if you are the Christ? (10:24)
Apology: Defense of Jesus as Shepherd (10:25-27)
Jesus' defense of his claim contains no new material which proves its
truth, but is itself a judgment on his judges,23 an actual demonstration of how
his claims work.
10:1-16
1. The (true) sheep hear
his voice (10:3b)
2. 1 know my own
and my own know me (10:14)
3. The sheep follow him, for
they know his voice (10:4)
22
10:27-28a
1. My sheep hear
my voice (10:27a)
2. / know them (10:27b)
3. And they follow me
(10:27c)
Some suggestions have been made about the relationghip of John 10:22-39 and the trial
before the Sanhdrin in the Synoptic Gospels, but no analysis has been made of the Johannine
passage in terms of the formal elements of a forensic proceeding; see Paul Winter, "Luke xxii
66b-71," ST 9 (1955) 112-15; Raymond Brown, The Gospel According to John (AB 29; Garden City,
NY: Doubleday, 1966) 1. 404-6; and Rudolf Schnackenburg, The Gospel According to St. John
(New York: Crossroad, 1982) 2. 306. On forensic process in John, see J. H. Neyrey, "Jesus the
Judge: Forensic Process in John 8,21-59," Bih 68 (1987) 509-41.
23
It is vintage Johannine argument to turn a judgment against Jesus into a judgment against
his accusers (e.g., 5:31-46; 3:6-12); see J. H. Neyrey, "John IIIA Debate over Johannine
Epistemology and Christology," NT 23 (1981) 117-18. Often "judgment" in the Fourth Gospel is
self-judgment, so that if people judge Jesus incorrectly, they judge themselves.
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By Jesus' criteria of judgment, then, he proves that his judges are not his
sheep nor is he their shepherd. According to the Gospel's logic, these selfconfessed non-sheep have rejected Jesus' basic claims to be God's agent and
so are convicted of sin and unbelief (see John 3:18, 20; 5:40-45; 9:39-41;
12:46-48). Yet the forensic process is not yet finished.
The Second Forensic Proceeding fl0:28b-39)
In 10:28-30 Jesus makes newer and bolder claims. Although formerly
this Gospel claimed that believers by their own judgment come to life and
pass beyond death (3:16-19; 5:24), now Jesus asserts that he himself is the
giver of eternal life: "I give them eternal life and they never perish" (10:28a).
He asserts that "no one shall snatch them out of my hand" (10:28b).24 Thus,
Jesus now functions as the active agent of life, as giver of eternal life and as
protector of his sheep even in death. Yet these claims would put him on a
par with the all-powerful God.
10:29 states two things about God. First, God is "greater than all"25 in
virtue of God's ruling or executive power as pantocrator, despotes, and
basileus.26 Second, of God it is said, "My Father. .. has given them [the
sheep] to me and no one is able to snatch them out of the Father's hand"
(10:29). Concerning the latter remark, then, Jesus and God are alike, even
equal.
Jesus 0:28)
I give them eternal life
and they shall not perish
forever,
and no one shall snatch
them out of my hand.
To underscore the boldness of Jesus' claims, the text emphasizes that "God
is greater than all" (10:29b), thus raising God above all other creatures, be
they of no power or great power. Yet Jesus claims that he is "equal to" God
who is "greater than all," when he draws the conclusion in 10:30, "I and the
Father are hen!'
Literally hen means "one." But the context suggests that this adjective be
translated as "equal to" or "on a par with." Jesus claims far more than mere
moral unity with God, which was the aim of every Israelite; such moral unity
24
Robert Aytoun pointed out that 10:28-30 bears striking resemblance to John 17:12 f No
One Shall Snatch Them Out of My Hand; ExpTim 31 [1919-20] 475-76). While there are clear
parallels, Aytoun did not notice that 10:28-30 speaks about Jesus' power over death, but 17:12
speaks about protecting the disciples from death two quite different issues.
25
C K . Barrett dealt convincingly with the textual issue here (Gospel 381-82); see also J.
Birdsall, "John .29 JTS 11 (1960) 342-44.
2
See J. Whittaker, "A Hellenistic Context for John 10,29," VC 24 (1970) 241-44.
652
would never mean that mortals had become "god," as Jesus* remark is under
stood in 10:31-33. The very argument in John, then, understands hen to mean
more than moral unity, that is, "equality with God." By way of confirmation,
1 Cor 3:7 indicates that hen can mean "equality."27 In virtue of the com
parison noted above, Jesus claims equality with God, who is "greater than all,"
because there is "no snatching out of their hands." To what does this refer?
In the context of 10:28, Jesus claims both the power to give eternal life
so that his sheep do not perish and the power to guard them from being
snatched. "Being snatched," then, has to do with life and death, such that
Death 28 has no ultimate power over Jesus' sheep. Conversely, this implies that
Jesus has such power from God so that he is the one who gives eternal life
and rescues the dead from the snares of Death (see John 5:25, 28-29; 6:39,
44, 54; 8:51; 11:25). Since God alone holds the keys of life and death, Jesus
claims an extraordinary power which belongs exclusively to God.29 There is
substance, then, to the claim that Jesus and the Father are "equal" (10:30).
I have shown at great length that the Fourth Gospel clearly and formally
argues that Jesus is "equal to God" (5:18; 10:33) because God has given him
full eschatological power (5:21-29).30 God gave him power (1) to give eternal
life (5:21; 10:28), (2) to judge (5:22, 27; 8:21-30), (3) to be honored as
Lawmaker and Judge (5:23), (4) to have life in himself (5:26; 10:17-18), and
(5) to raise the dead and judge them (5:28-29). In fact, 5:21-29, a summary
of Jesus' eschatological power, functions as a topic statement which the
Gospel subsequently develops in chaps. 8, 10, and ll.31 The claims in
10:28-30, then, continue the exposition of Jesus' full eschatological power.
Our exegesis of 10:22-30 yields the following information. A second
forensic process begins in 10:28-30. Jesus is formally on trial, not just con
cerning whether he is "the Christ" (10:23-24), but especially about his claim
to be "equal to God" (10:30, 33). The chief issue that is contested, moreover,
concerns ultimate power over death, whereby Jesus is equal to God.
Claim:
"I and the Father are one.'" (10:30, 33), i.e., power over
death (10:28-30):
27
See J. Bernard, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel According to St John
(Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1926) 366; and Barnabas Lindars, The Gospel of John (London:
Oliphants, 1972) 370.
28
One recalls how Paul personifies Death in Romans when he speaks of "Death reigned"
(5:14, 17, 21).
29
Jewish lore notes that God gave Elijah, Elisha, and Ezekiel the key to three things that are
exclusively in God's power, viz., the key to rain, the womb, and the grave; see h. Ta1 an. 2a;
b. Sank U3a; Midr. Ps. 78.5; see also Barrett, Gospel 260.
30
See J. H. Neyrey, An Ideology of Revolt: John's Christology in Social-Science Perspective
(Philadelphia: Fortress, 1988) 9-93; a precis of this can be found in "'My Lord and My God':
The Divinity of Jesus in John's Gospel," Society of Biblical Literature 1986 Seminar Papers (ed.
. . Richards; Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1986) 154-59.
31
See Neyrey, An Ideology of Revolt, 33-34.
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the consecrated "Son of God," he does not claim less than what is claimed
by being "god" according to Ps 82:6. On the contrary, he claims more.
Yet how does the Fourth Gospel understand Ps 82:6? One stream of
critical opinion takes the citation extrinsically, on a literal level as a mere play
on words. If mortals, for whatever reason, can truly be called "gods" according
to scripture, then the term is not a priori preposterously applied to Jesus.
This type of explanation does not ask under what circumstances mortals
might be called "gods," and it sees Jesus basically engaging in an evasive
maneuver.
Such reasoning, however, does not mesh with the Johannine perspective
for several reasons. The Fourth Gospel always criticizes people who take
things literally, either Jesus' word or the scriptures. Regularly we find a
pattern where Jesus makes a statement, which his hearers misunderstand
because they take it on a literal level, which leads Jesus to issue a clarification
which exposes the spiritual or inner meaning of his words.35 It seems improbable, then, that the Fourth Gospel is dealing superficially with Psalm 82, asking readers to take its phrases and argument on a literal or extrinsic level.
This is all the more true since the Gospel constantly maintains that spiritual
vision is needed to see the inner meaning of texts from the scriptures which
Jesus fulfills (see John 2:17, 22; 6:31; 8:56, 58, etc.).
A literal reading of Psalm 82, moreover, seems inconsistent with the
more typical pattern of Johannine Christology. Wayne Meeks noted that
when something claimed about Jesus causes a reaction from the synagogue,
the Johannine community tends not to moderate its claim, but to rephrase
it in such a way as to cause even greater offense.36 Thus, if mortals may be
called "god," then Jesus, whom God consecrated and sent into the world, can
be called "Son of God," meaning "equal to God." A purely extrinsic reading
of Ps 82:6 in regard to John 10:34-36 hardly seems warranted.
How, then, does the Fourth Gospel understand and use Psalm 82? The
chief clue to a special reading of Ps 82:6 lies in 10:35, when we observe the
way the Gospel interprets Ps 82:6 as part of its argument: "If he called them
'gods' to whom the word of God came. . . ." Whoever, then, is called "god" is
so named because "the word of God came" to them. Scholars have long
argued that this refers to Israel at Sinai when God gave it the Torah, which
I think is absolutely correct.37 Yet what is the shape of the midrash on this
35
On this form in the Fourth Gospel, see Herbert Leroy, Rtsel und Misverstndnis (Bonn:
Peter Hanstein, 1968) 45-47, 53-67; and Neyrey, An Ideology of Revolt, 42-43.
36
Wayne Meeks, "The Man from Heaven in Johannine Sectarianism," JBL 91 (1972) 70-71.
37
I hasten to add that John 5:37, which alludes to the Sinai theophany, denies that Israel
actually saw God: "His (God's) voice you have never heard, His form you have never seen." This
text basically argues the repeated claim in the Fourth Gospel that no one has ever seen God (3:13;
6:46); it functions to diminish the authority of Israel's previous revealers, such as Moses, Elijah,
Abraham, and the prophets, by replacing them with Jesus, the unique revealer of God (1:18).
Such an argument does not deny that theophanies indeed took place in Israel's history, but
655
656
deathless But with the worship of the golden calf, Israel sinned, and suffered
once more the penalty for sin, which is death "You shall die like men"
(Ps 82 7)
An important variation of this midrash occurs in b *Abod Zar 5a The
context is a discussion of Deut 5 25-26 where Israel received the Sinai
revelation The author comments that they have seen God and yet still live
(recall the discussion of Exod 2018-19 above), "therefore," thev ask, "why
should we die?" This question becomes the occasion for comment about the
fluctuating power of the Angel of Death
R Jose said The Israelites accepted the Torah onlv so that the Angel of
Death should have no dominion over them, as it is said "7 SAID YE ARE
GODS AND ALL OF YOU SONS OF THE MOST HIGH' (Ps 82 6) Nov% that
vou have spoilt your deeds, ' YE SHALL DIE LIKE MORTALS" (Ps 82 7)42
Commentary the occasion is Sinai, Israel is once again called god because
deathless But now we find the explicit note that being called god and being
deathless are linked to the reception of Torah In fact, Israel chooses God's
Torah for the express purpose that the Angel of Death should not have power
over it Something else, then, is operative here which suggests that receiving
God's word (Torah) makes one holy, and if holv, then sinless, and if sinless,
then deathless
A third early midrash can help to clarify the basic lines of this interpretation of Ps 82 6-7 The context is a reflection on Deut 32 20, "I will see what
their end will be," which is seen referring to a fickle, perfidious people
You stood at Mount Sinai and said "All that the Lord hath spoken will we
do, and obey" (Exod 24 7), (whereupon) "1 SAID YE ARE GODS" (Ps 82 6),
but when you said to the (golden) calf, "This is thy god, O Israel" (Exod
32 4), I said to you, "NEVERTHELESS, YE SHALL DIE LIKE MEN'
(Ps82 7)43
Commentary at Sinai Israel received God's word of Torah ("all that the Lord
hath spoken") and became holy and sinless (" we will do and obey"), for
which reason they are called gods Although it is not explicitly stated here,
this argument assumes that holiness leads to deathlessness, which is a godlike
quality, for which reason Israel is called god Yet with Israel's new sin comes
death, the typical fate of sinful mortals ("ye shall die like men")
The basic lines of the midrashic understanding of Ps 82 6-7, then, are
clear When Israel at Sinai received God's Torah and obeyed, this led to
genuine holiness which resulted in deathlessness, hence, Israel could be
called god because deathless But when disobedient and sinful, Israel
deserved the wages of sin, that is, death, hence, Israel could be called man
42
657
On this point, see Jacob Jervell, Imago Dei (Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1960)
103,113-19. As Jervell noted, Gen 1:26 ("image and likeness of God") played a more implicit role
in the explanations of deathlessness; the more frequently cited text in this regard was Gen 3:22
("the man has become like one of us").
45
The translation is from Midrash Rahhah (H. Freedman and M. Simon; London: Soncino
Press, 1939).
658
Genesis 1-3, for it points out that God created Adam "in His image and
likeness," that is, deathless. Adam was deathless because holy and obedient
("I charged with one commandment which he was to perform and live and
endure for ever"). Adam died precisely because he sinned and lost God's holi
ness and "image." This midrash also makes clear that interpreters of Ps 82:6-7
saw Sinai as a new creation, when the obedience, holiness, and deathlessness
of Adam were restored to Israel, thus linking the Adam myth with the Sinai
myth, as the following diagram suggests.
Adam in Paradise
1. created in holiness
2. and so deathless
3. yet sinned (ate fruit)
4. and so died,
Israel at Sinai
1. reconstituted in holiness
2. and so deathless,
3. yet sinned (worshiped calf)
4. and so died.
659
660
In the face of these accusations, the Fourth Gospel denies any sin on
Jesus' part. John 10:36 represents but the most recent evidence of this
defense, as it proclaims that God consecrated Jesus. After all, God's judgment
of Jesus must surely have greater weight than that of his peers (see 5:31-46).
We have, moreover, heard of God's evaluation of Jesus elsewhere, that "The
Father loves the Son" (3:35; 5:30). Sinners, of course, find no place in God's
presence, yet Jesus was "face to face" with God (1:1-2) and in God's "bosom"
(1:18). And Jesus will return to God's presence at the completion of his
mission (13:3; 17:5, 24). God, then, judges Jesus to be sinless and worthy to
stand in the divine presence.
Nor could anyone convict Jesus of sin (8:46). His working on the sabbath
constituted no breach of God's law, but must be perceived precisely as obe
dience to God's will (5:31; 7:21-23). In fact, Jesus' very ability to open the eyes
of the blind testifies to his closeness to God (9:31-33). Jesus' holiness (6:69)
and his consecration (10:36) attest to his preeminent sinlessness or holiness.
Divine consecration of Jesus, moreover, suggests a picture of him as one
totally set aside for God's purposes 4 8 and completely obedient to God's will.
This radical image of commissioning evoked for Rudolf Schnackenburg the
sense of a person sealed with the Holy Spirit,49 a comment that makes us
recall the testimony of the Baptizer in 1:30-31. John testified that he saw
God's Spirit not only descend on Jesus but "remain on him" (1:32-33), which
suggests that divine power and holiness were no passing phenomenon for
Jesus. Because of the dwelling of the Holy Spirit on Jesus, John testifies that
he is "the Son of God" (1:34), a figure whose task was to purify others with
the Spirit which remained in him (1:33). Jesus, then, is no sinner, but God's
Holy One.
Thus far we have noted that 10:34-35 understands Ps 82:6 to mean that
obedience to God's word leads to holiness and godlikeness. As we saw with
the midrashim, this interpretation presumes some notion of deathlessness
linked with holiness. Yet it is important to pay attention to where and how
Ps 82:6 functions in the forensic structure of 10:28-36. The Fourth Gospel
uses Psalm 82 as a refutation of part of the charge. Jesus' judges judged
wrongly when they accused him of making himself god or equal to God,
because God Himself makes Jesus Son of God, just as God made Israel "god"
by delivering the Torah to it. At a minimum, then, Jesus refutes the essence
of the charge by maintaining that God makes him what he is, namely, a con
secrated servant, agent, and apostle, a person totally set apart by God for
50
sacred duty. The apology based on Psalm 82, then, argues two things: it
48
661
refutes the charge that Jesus makes himself "Son of God," even as it affirms
his radical holiness against the charge of blasphemy. But if it confounds his
accusers (10:31-33), does it explain or support the claims made in 10:28-30
which precipitated the forensic controversy in the first place?
We claimed above that Jesus is "equal to God" because of his "power over
death." In regard to this, Ps 82:6 does not seem to play a significant part.
Claim:
Equal to God: power over death (10:28-30)
Judgment: Blasphemy, you a man, make yourself a god (10:33)
Apology: Charge refuted: it is God who makes Jesus "Son of God"
because of his holiness (Ps 82:6//John 10:34-36)
Ps 82:6, then, functions in a limited way; it proves the judges' judgment is
false, but it hardly pertains to the substance of Jesus' claims in 10:28-30.
Psalm 82, moreover, would not be a satisfactory explanation for Jesus' "equality with God" according to the Fourth Gospel. Even when made deathless,
Israel always remained less than God, merely mortal; the Angel of Death
might still have power over them. Of Jesus, however, this Gospel claims that
he is no mere mortal, but a divine figure. He has power over the Angel of
Death, not vice versa. Ps 82:6 may function to prove the judges' judgment
wrong (he does not "make himself anything; God makes him "Son of God"),
but it is not exploited as an adequate explanation for the Johannine assertion
that Jesus has power over death (10:28-30). Ps 82:6 functions only to prove
that the judges' judgment is false.
What then of the forensic claims themselves? Jesus and God are "equal"
in terms of power over death. Yet is Jesus himself deathless? Whence comes
his power over death? Friend and foe both know that he died on the cross.
Friends proclaim that his death was God's will and plan (Acts 2:23; 4:28) and
that he was fully obedient to God, even unto death (Phil 2:8; Mark 14:35-36).
The Fourth Gospel, moreover, proclaims a more remarkable thing about
God's involvement in Jesus' death. In 10:17-18 Jesus asserts that God loves
him precisely because he dies: "For this reason the Father loves me, that I
lay down my life, that I may take it again" (10:17). Death is usually a sign of
God's wrath, not love. Jesus' death, then, is clearly not the result of sin, as
the midrash on Ps 82:7 argues. Nor is Jesus the helpless victim whose life is
taken from him, either by men or the Angel of Death. For, as he declares,
"No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord" (10:18a).
Furthermore, his death occurs in strict obedience to God, not as punishment
for sinfulness on his part: "This commandment I have received from my
Father" (10:18b). In 10:28-30, moreover, Jesus claims to be equal to God in
having God's own power over death. Jesus, then, while not literally deathless
himself, has full power over death.
Indisputably Jesus dies, but the Fourth Gospel steadfastly maintains that
Jesus has power over death, both the death of his followers and his own. We
noted earlier how this Gospel proclaims that Jesus has God's eschatological
662
power to the full, one aspect of which is to "give life" to others (5:21; 10:28)
and to "raise the dead" (5:25, 28-29; 11:25). Yet Jesus has power over his own
death, to lay down his life and to take it back (10:17-18); this power was
received when God gave him to "have life in himself (5:26), just as God has
life in Himself. And so Jesus is proclaimed deathless in a special way:
although he dies, he has complete power over death, his own and that of his
followers. He raises himself from death to life and he raises his followers from
death as well.
Ps 82:6 in the midrashim explains deathlessness, but in a way that is not
adequate to the claims made in the Fourth Gospel about Jesus' power over
death. For this reason, I suggest, the evangelist did not employ the full
midrashic understanding of Psalm 82 which was available to him.
IV. Conclusions and Further Questions
In summary, John 10:34-36 can be said to understand Ps 82:6 and use
it in specific ways. (1) According to 10:34-35, Ps 82:6 ("I said, 'You are gods'")
is understood to refer to Israel at Sinai when it received the Torah ("to whom
the word of God came," 10:35). (2) Implied in this understanding is the
intimate link between holiness :: deathlessness :: godlikeness. The Fourth
Gospel cites only an abbreviated form of this, holiness :: godlikeness. (3) Ps
82:6b ("sons of the Most High") is cited by Jesus when he calls himself "Son
of God" (10:36), and it refers to his godlikeness in terms of holiness (see "consecrated and sent"). (4) Ps 82:6 does not touch the substance of the claims
made in 10:28-30 which precipitated the forensic process in 10:31-39. It
functions as an adequate refutation of the erroneous judgment of Jesus'
judges, who charged that he, "a man, makes himself equal to God." This judgment is false because God makes him "Son of God." (5) According to the
apology in 10:34-36, holiness is linked with godlikeness in ways that are
appropriate to human beings, first Adam, then Israel. Jesus would be a mere
human being even if acclaimed "god/Son of God," as was Israel. But the forensic argument in John 10 claims much more. No mere human being, Jesus is
a heavenly figure who is "equal to God." His equality rests not on holiness but
on divine powers intrinsic to him, that is, full eschatological power.
(6) Jesus' claims in regard to power over death always remain important
in John 10. In this Gospel, his deathlessness51 does not formally derive from
51
The Fourth Gospel has very conflicting material about "deathlessness." Concerning disciples, one might literally take statements such as 3:16; 5:24; 6:50, 54 to mean that true disciples
do not die; some characters in the narrative are said to believe just this (8:51-53; U:21, 32). It
is even suggested that the Beloved Disciple would not die (21:23). Yet the Gospel seems to have
quickly corrected that literal reading of Jesus' words. Concerning Jesus himself, however, his
followers could never claim "deathlessness" for him, given his evident demise on the cross. Yet
they did claim that he overpowered death (8:28; 13:1-3). His resurrection from death is seen
as his own act of power (10:17-18), thus affirming his power over death, if not deathlessness itself
in another form.
663
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