Limnor wrote: ↑Sat Feb 21, 2026 7:15 pm
I’m curious and wouldn’t mind talking about this approach. Is the idea that the disciples, following Jesus’s death (and maybe the destruction of the temple?) backwards cast a story that depicted fulfilled prophecy in a guy name Jesus? Or He never existed?
Is this Bart Ehrman adjacent? I mean I think it’s interesting—do you have more details?
I don't know Ehrman well. I take this exegesis of Matthew 12:39 from a sermon by an old friend who was then an Anglican priest. We've lost touch over the years, but last I heard from him he no longer believed in God. He never held a paying job as a priest, and in the years that I knew him he never pretended to have any more faith than he actually had at the time. I don't believe that anyone would have called him a hypocrite.
He was (and I'm sure still is) a smart guy, and he noticed that citing Jonah for his three days in the belly of the sea-beast made no sense in Jesus's Matthew 12 speech. "You won't get a sign, except for a big sign." The big plot point of the Jonah story is that Nineveh repented without a sign, just from hearing the word, and this is clearly what Jesus was talking about in the context of Matthew 12. So it's pretty easy to see Matt. 12:40 as an interpolated gloss by some later editor or reciter who wasn't tracking Jesus's actual theme but thought he had it when he noticed that Jonah was inside for three days, whoa, three days just like Jesus, if you count Friday to Sunday.
So I consider Matthew 12:40 an outright mistake. It's the kind of mistake that would easily be made by some later reciter or writer who believed that Jesus had risen from the dead on the third day, but the very obviousness of the error is evidence that the rest of this passage in Matthew came from a tradition of a saying of Jesus which was independent, as a tradition about Jesus, from the resurrection tradition. If the only Jesus that ever existed was the meme of the resurrected messiah, then this speech attributed to Jesus would surely have been more consistent.
And then there's the message itself. Whoever or whatever Jesus the historical figure may have been, Jesus the character in Matthew says something here worth considering. Why do we believe things we hear? Do we need to see signs? Or can we just recognise the ring of truth when we hear it? Do we need stronger evidence, or just better pattern recognition?
I was a teenager before it was cool.