Philipp F. Bartholomä, «John 5,31-47 and the Teaching of Jesus in the Synoptics. A Comparative Approach.»
Within Johannine scholarship, the assumed differences between Jesus’ teaching in John and in the Synoptics have frequently led to a negative judgment about Johannine authenticity. This article proposes a comparative approach that distinguishes between different levels of similarity in wording and content and applies it to John 5,31-47. What we find in this discourse section corresponds conceptually to a significant degree with the picture offered in the Synoptics, though couched in a very different idiom. Thus, the comparative evidence does not preclude us from accepting this particular part of Johannine speech material as an authentic representation of the actual content of Jesus’words.
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370 PHILIPP F. BARTHOLOMÄ
in the Fourth Gospel, where comparison with the other Gospels fails
us, without giving undue weight to subjective impressions†6.
In the above noted essay, Dodd set forth a modified approach for
comparing Johannine and synoptic teaching material. Two features
of this approach are especially noteworthy. First, Dodd consciously
moved away from comparing mainly individual sayings or limited
verse clusters in favor of using a larger part of a Johannine discourse
(John 5,19-30) for a test case. Second, aware that to focus only on
semantic reminiscences would unnecessarily limit the scope of his
study, Dodd chose a more comprehensive approach in order to ex-
amine whether there was conceptual overlap (i.e., similarity in con-
tent) between what Jesus says in John and the portrait found in the
Synoptics. In doing so, he observed that the concept of Jesus as both
the life-giver and the judge (prominent features in John 5), is —
though with different degrees of abstraction — also present in Matt
13,41-43, Matt 12,39-42 par., Mark 10,17-27, and several other pas-
sages. The theme of Christ’s authority to judge (John 5,22.27) is also
represented in Mark 2,10 par. and, more implicitly, in Mark 11,27-
33, or Matt 8,5-13 par.
Ultimately, Dodd concluded that “we have before us [in John
5,19-30], in theological guise, a picture of the personality and work
of Jesus which corresponds, in point after point, with the picture of-
fered by the Synoptics in a very different idiom†7. Dodd acknowl-
edged that these conclusions remain provisional “until they are tested
through the application of a similar process of analysis to other pas-
sages†8. To our knowledge, no study has been done on so broad a
scale. Thus, the purpose of this article is to respond to Dodd’s appeal
by briefly introducing a more nuanced methodology for assessing
the general relationship between John and the Synoptics. This
method will then be applied in exemplary fashion to the remainder
of Jesus’ discourse in John 5 in order to evaluate the degree of dif-
ferences and similarities between the teaching of Jesus in John and
in the Synoptics. The essential question we thereby seek to answer
is whether a negative judgment concerning the authenticity of Jesus’
words in John 5,31-47 can be legitimately based upon the differences
between the Fourth Gospel and the Synoptics. It needs to be noted
6
C.H. DODD, The Interpretation of the Fourth Gospel (Cambridge 1953) 431.
7
DODD, “The Portrait of Jesusâ€, 194.
8
Ibid., 195.