Gospel and Testimony

Richard Bauckham
Richard Bauckham

In his 2006 Jesus and the Eyewitnesses, Richard Bauckham suggests:

that we need to recover the sense in which the Gospels are testimony. This does not mean that they are testimony rather than history. It means that the kind of historiography they are is testimony. An irreducible feature of testimony as a form of human utterance is that it asks to be trusted. This does not mean that it asks to be trusted uncritically, but it does mean that testimony should not be treated as credible only to the extent that it can be independently verified. There can be good reasons for trusting or distrusting a witness, but these are precisely reasons for trusting or distrusting. Trusting testimony is not an irrational act of faith that leaves critical rationality aside; it is, on the contrary, the rationally appropriate way of responding to authentic testimony. . . . It is true that a powerful trend in the modern development of critical historical philosophy and method finds trusting testimony a stumbling-block in the way of the historian’s autonomous access to truth that she or he can verify independently. But it is also a rather neglected fact that all history, like all knowledge, relies on testimony. (5; italics original)

Thus, it is perhaps not without irony that we find ourselves still under the sway of a certain kind(s) of testimony even when we seek most to avoid or to exercise our independence from testimony of some other kind(s) (cf. Gadamer, Truth and Method, 354; Lewis, “Meditation in a Toolshed,” 215).

Some of the links above may be “affiliate links.” If you make a purchase or sign up for a service through one of these links, I may receive a small commission from the seller. This process involves no additional cost to you and helps defray the costs of making content like this available. For more information, please see these affiliate disclosures.


One response to “Gospel and Testimony”

  1. Bryant Jacob Williams III Avatar

    I can’t find my copy of Bauckham’s book, but, if I remember correctly (?), Bauckham shows that there is a clear distinction between AUTOPTHS as used in Luke 1:1-4 and MARTURIA (and cognates) as used in John. Both mean “eyewitness,” but one deals with legal testimony especially eyewitness (MARTURIA), while the other deals also with written and legal testimony especially in written form (AUTOPTHS). Unfortunately, not all testimony is relevant nor reliable. That is why emphasis is placed by the Scripture’s use “in the mouth of two or three witnesses;” i.e. EYEBALL WITNESSES who have both SEEN and HEARD what happened.

    There is also the problem of divorcing history, science, etc. from theology. ALL history, science, literature, etc. have theological or metaphysical presuppositions behind them. Just because an author of Scripture makes a theological statement about an event does not make it not historical, scientific, etc. Thus, it behooves one to check one’s own presuppositions before making judgements on what is reliable for the purposes of testimony especially written testimony that is centuries old.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.