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Jesus and Scripture

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This volume offers a brief but reliable introduction to the use of the Old Testament in the Gospels' portrayals of Jesus.

"This balanced and informed survey of a fascinating and controversial topic—Jesus and Scripture—should serve students well. A first-rate introduction."
—Dale C. Allison, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary

"Recent study of the New Testament has demonstrated the crucial role played by Scripture in the development of the tradition. In this study of Jesus and Scripture, Steve Moyise turns to the most fundamental question of all, How did Jesus himself use it? His lucid discussion not only provides an excellent survey of the topic but also introduces students to the interlocking problems of the reliability of the tradition and the relationships of the Gospels to one another."
—Morna D. Hooker, Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity Emerita, University of Cambridge

"Steve Moyise's Jesus and Scripture begins with concise assessments of how Jesus used and understood Old Testament Scripture in the four respective New Testament Gospels. Moyise then surveys opinions on the subject from a range of scholars, from those who think Jesus made little or no use of Scripture to those who think that Jesus made extensive use of Scripture. This excellent book strikes the right balance and brings clarity to a subject that is often discussed in convoluted and confusing ways. Its value for students is obvious, but veteran scholars will also find it very helpful."
—Craig A. Evans, Payzant Distinguished Professor of New Testament, Acadia Divinity College

147 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 2010

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About the author

Steve Moyise

24 books2 followers
Steve Moyise (PhD, University of Birmingham) is professor of New Testament at the University of Chichester in Chichester, England. He is the author of Paul and Scripture and Jesus and Scripture. His other books include The Old Testament in the Book of Revelation, The Old Testament in the New, and Evoking Scripture: Seeing the Old Testament in the New.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Joshua Bremerman.
131 reviews3 followers
March 26, 2025
Note: If you come from a biblical theology school or tradition, the title can be quite misleading. The goal of this book is not to see how Jesus uses Scripture, but rather to present and evaluate different scholarly approaches to historical criticism surrounding the sayings of Jesus. In other words, the guiding question of this book is something like, "What in the Gospels did Jesus actually say?" or "When we look at quotations from the Old Testament in the Gospels, does this match the historical Jesus or the Gospel writers' theological arguments?"

As a maximalist myself, I found the minimalist and moderate arguments to be quite non-sensical, frankly. The appearance of airtight logic and argument is a very easy facade to poke through, and the fact of the matter is, both of those camps must inevitably create their own version of Jesus in their own image. Moyise readily admits that only maximalists can actually take the Gospel writers' at the their word, except for perhaps N. T. Wright.

While I completely disagree with the author's conclusions, I found his presentation of the minimalist, moderate, and maximalist camps *fairly* evenhanded and balanced. I actually felt like he did a better job arguing for the coherence of the maximalist position than some maximalists do, even though he tries to poke holes at the accuracy of the position.
25 reviews3 followers
April 29, 2013


Jesus and Scripture is a small, tidy book which seeks to “describe Jesus’ use of scripture” (5). In order to arrive at his goal, Moyise tells us: “If we are to understand Jesus’ use of Scripture we must engage in historical criticism to decide what Jesus must have said to give rise to the various accounts we find in the Gospels” (5).





What follows after this is an attempt to explain how various theological camps try to arrive at what Jesus must have said. He outlines three approaches. The maximalist approach takes God’s word as being true and the Gospel writers reliable. The moderate approach sees some of what the Gospel writers record as being true and reliable. The minimalist sees very little, if any of the gospels as being true.





After explaining these three methods of approaching the bible he then skims over the top of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John applying his own view, which is a sort of moderate view (121).





As one can easily conclude, when he so clearly states in his introduction that we “must engage in historical criticism to decide what Jesus must have said,”, even though the title of the book is Jesus and scripture, a more apt and fitting title would be ‘Jesus vs. Scripture.” For, from the opening pages he pits Mark against the “true words” of Jesus (14 et al). Then he proceeds to pit Mark against Matthew and Matthew against Luke. He concludes by positing that John isn’t even worthy of considering when trying to assemble what Jesus actually said, since “few scholars believe that we are dealing with something Jesus actually said” (70, 72, 77).





At this point it would be good to look at a specific example to see his approach. As he evaluates Mark’s gospel to ascertain what parts are really the words of Jesus he focuses in on Mark 14:24-26. He writes,






The traditional view is that Mark thinks that Jesus is referring to his second coming, that is, his return to earth in judgement (Acts 1:11; 1 Thess. 4:14). The difficulty with this view is that Mark 13 says nothing about Jesus coming to the earth, and if the allusion to Daniel 7:13 is deliberate, then it evokes the image of a figure going to God, not coming from God. (26)






Throughout the book, Moyise goes to great lengths to prove that Jesus never spoke about a return to judge the living and the dead. And this is the foundation he builds his conclusion on. (27) There are, however, flaws in his foundation. In the Aramaic in Dan 7:13 we read, וַאֲרוּ עִם־עֲנָנֵי שְׁמַיָּא כְּבַר אֱנָשׁ אָתֵה הֲוָה, “Look! He is coming on the clouds of heaven, one like a son of man.” In the original it simply says, “coming” (a Peal participle). It’s doesn’t say “coming to heaven.” It is perfectly acceptable to take these words the way that Daniel writes them. First Jesus comes to judge. Then he approaches the Ancient of Days.





There are many pages and places in his book where, without substantive proof, he throws out parts of the gospels. According to Moyise, Jesus was just exaggerating when he condemned the Pharisees. (p. 22) And he boldly tell us that Jesus never predicted Judgement Day. (26) Likewise, he tells us that Psalm 2 is just speaking about David. He omits the fact that three New Testament passages firmly establish that the Psalm is speaking about Jesus as the Son of God (Act 13:33; Hebrews 1:5; 5:5). We wonder why the writer to the Hebrews and Luke have less authority to claim who Jesus is than Moyise does.





One of the interesting aspects of the book is that, interspersed at various intervals in the book, are some criteria he made use of in determining what parts of the gospels were true. We’ll look at two of them:






The Criterion of dissimilarity: If there were practices that were “unlike anything in contemporary Judaism and was not the practice of the early Church...It has a strong case for authenticity.” (37) The problem with this criterion is that it is extremely flexible and fickle. It carries with it the bizarre fallacy that if the early church taught it, then it probably isn’t true and Jesus probably never said it. (79)

The Criterion of multiple attestation: “We can have more confidence in the historicity of an event if it is attested by more than one source. However, this is only true if the sources are independent.” (62) As an illustration of this criterion he goes on to tell us that “the authenticity of the quotation of Palm 118.22 is not increased by stating that it occurs in three Gospels, since the majority of scholars believe that Matthew and Luke took it from Mark. However, the probability is increased by noting that it also occurs in the non-canonical Gospel of Thomas.” (62) So, according to Boyise, we can’t trust the gospel writers, since they are (supposedly) drawing on the same source (Q), but we can trust the spurious Gospel of Thomas as a more reliable source. His criterion falls apart not just when it comes to what to include, but when we see what he excludes. As we saw earlier, even though in three other places in the NT we find clear passages showing that Jesus is clearly the Son of God referred to in Psalm 2 (multiple attestation), nevertheless, these passages aren’t authoritative enough for him.






If there are some benefits we can draw from this book, we would probably find them in several areas:






His stating of a principle and then expressing it.

Providing a brief summary of the basic ways that Seminaries across the world approach the bible.

His explanation of the criteria by which some people try to find ‘what Jesus really said.’






This book fails on two levels:






Logically: Again and again in this book Moyise lays down a flawed and faulty foundation and then builds on it. Throughout the book he dismissed one key doctrine held by Jesus and his church after another with the words, “most scholars [accept or reject].” There is no attempt to present the proof. Instead, we are left to rest our lives and even our souls on the whims of “most scholars.”

Biblically: Moyise openly identifies himself as a moderate. (121) But his moderate views bring him to the same place as a minimalist would. He casts aside Jesus’ return for judgement and Jesus’ vicarious atonement (132) and embraces a “darwinian evolution” of the bible. (79) After reading this book, it’s clear that there isn’t much left of Jesus to find in the bible after Moyise is finished writing about “Jesus and scripture.”






Since this book fails on both these levels, I recommend passing over this book. If you are looking for a review of biblical interpretation, Professor Kuske’s book, Biblical Interpretation: The Only Right Way is worthy of your time. So also, if you would like an honest and challenging look at the relation between Paul and the law (which Moyise introduces in his opening words but never addresses) I recommend Brian Rosner’s lectures: Paul and the Law: Keeping the Commandments of God.



Profile Image for Tommi Karjalainen.
111 reviews10 followers
April 19, 2016
I liked the approach: minimalist-moderate-maximalist. Especially the conclusion chapter was helpful summary of the views of the representative scholars. Only the maximalist portion was limited, but perhaps two is enough to make the point. The dealing with each gospel in turn was slightly chaotic, or perhaps better way to put is that its understanding would require in-depth study of the referred Bible passages. I am skeptical that many of the readers would do this.

Also, the appendix containing some rabbinic and Qumran views will be very helpful for the reader whose familiarity with the sources is limited to the Bible.
Profile Image for David Ryan.
457 reviews7 followers
October 25, 2016
Read this with my reading partner, Kerry Bart. It was good to be exposed to the ideas, but I would not call it life changing by any means. It examines the view of Jesus/the Gospel writers use of Scripture - and offers three "positions" - minimalist, moderate and maximalist. I come down in the maximalist camp.
Profile Image for Andy.
220 reviews13 followers
October 8, 2014
I'm sick to death of so-called "conservative scholars" who work with liberal presuppositions. How can one affirm the inspiration of Scripture while simultaneously affirming that the NT authors were ripping off material from other sources?
870 reviews51 followers
February 10, 2012
The book contained a number of ideas I've read elsewhere, and sadly was not very memorable to me. I finished it 3 weeks ago but can think of nothing to say about it.
112 reviews
October 11, 2014
This was a good introduction to the different interpretations of Jesus' words in the gospels.
Profile Image for Luís Branco.
Author 60 books47 followers
October 8, 2014
I really liked this book. It is short, but with a fabulous material to increase our knowledge about the relationship between Christ and the Scripture. It also gave me a fresh view of the Targun.
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