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– Gematria –
and John 2111
Another Look at Ezekiel 4710
Twenty-five years ago, two articles appeared in
JTS which argued that the
number 153 in Jn 21:11 ought to be interpreted symbolically. Both
authors put forth the hypothesis that the Fourth Evangelist—employing
the Rabbinic interpretative device,
gematria—intended to
recall two place names; [En-gedi and En-eglaim] in Ezekiel's visionary
description of outpoured waters from the new temple [47:1, 8-10]. J. A.
Emerton 'added up' the names 'gedi' and 'eglaim' to find numerical
antecedents, and Peter Ackroyd produced the same type of 'interesting
coincidence' looking at the LXX of Ezk 47:10. Subsequent treatments of
the number 153 in this passage have, for the most part, resisted this
somewhat complicated and tentative approach. Yet the case made by
Emerton and Ackroyd might be set forth afresh in light of two
significant motifs which were omitted or underplayed in their pioneering
discussions.
1.
The resurrected Christ fulfils the
role of the new Temple in Ezk 47:1-12 and dispenses living water to a
barren world. This understanding of the Johannine 'living
water' motif is based on the Western punctuation of Jn 7:37-38:
If any man thirsts, let him come to me;
and let him drink, who believes in me.
As the scripture said, 'from his belly
shall flow rivers of living water'.
Punctuated in this fashion, Christ can be construed as the source of
these eschatological rivers of living water, prophesied in the OT. From
his side will flow rivers of living water [i.e., the Spirit] only after
his glorification [i.e., his death]. This cryptic prediction transpires
in the Johannine passion narrative where the release of the Spirit
[19:30] and subsequent effluence of blood and water from the cross
[19:34] are reported. Thereafter, the life-giving water is available for
all who thirst; and, when dispensed through the disciples under the
direction of the resurrected Christ, the outpoured waters result in
eschatologically proportioned [153 in Jn 21:11 harvests of men.
Ezk
47:1-12 appears to be the most likely OT spawning ground for this
Johannine development of the 'living water' theme in Jn 7:37-39. The
original audience for this dramatic invitation from Christ would most
naturally have interpreted his brief midrashic homily against this OT
backdrop. For them, the daily water ceremony [see m.Sukk. 4.9-10]
symbolically anticipated the eschatological outpouring of living water
as depicted in Ezekiel's vision. In the third chapter of tractate
Sukkah in the Tosefta
[esp. halakoth 3-9]
the naming of the
Water Gate, through which the daily libations of the water ceremony
passed, is analysed in terms of the prophetic role of the
south gate in Ezk 47:1-9.
Through this gate will trickle the eschatological waters issuing from
the new temple—thus the water
gate. Accordingly, as the religious pilgrims observed tabernacles' water
ritual, comparisons with the voluntary streams in Ezk 47 were
inevitable. They watched intently as a flask of living water from the
pool of Siloam [i.e., water fit for a ritual immersion bath [see Pesiq.R.
16:6; Bem.R. xviii.21] passed through the water gate and eventually was
poured out on the altar, to trickle forth from the temple. Significantly
for Jn 7:38, the visionary river of Ezekiel is specifically construed in
this Tosefta passage as a river of
living water.
Jesus'
audience, perhaps just having passed through the Water Gate and
pondering the significance of the flask filled from the waters of
Siloam, would quite naturally then have related the Nazarene's phrase,
'rivers of living water', to those eschatological waters foretold by
Ezekiel. Jesus' presumption in claiming himself as the source of these
waters would indeed have startled his original audience, the
auditores Christi.
However, the lector Johannis
would have an awareness of the developing motif wherein Jesus
is the new temple [Jn
2:21, 4:21-23, cf. Rev 21:22].1
2.
The life-giving waters foretold by
Ezekiel flow into the Sea of Tiberias. Both Ezekiel and the
evangelist were describing extraordinary catches of fish; unfortunately,
one transpired on the banks of the Dead Sea and the other near the
margins of the Sea of Galilee. That these two bodies of water were quite
distinct, both thematically and geographically, was simply left
unexplained by Emerton and Ackroyd. However, this difficulty is
considerably eased by consulting the midrashic expansion of the Ezekiel
passage in Rabbinic exegesis. According to the rhetorical exchange in
t.Sukk. 3:9 concerning the term 'Arabah' [Ezk 47:8], the tumbling
eschatological streams of Ezekiel's vision flow north and enter the sea
of Tiberias rather than flow east into the Dead Sea as the MT implies.
Perhaps it is more than a coincidence of topographical idiosyncrasy that
the Sea of Galilee is referred to as the Sea of Tiberias only twice in
the NT: Jn 6:1 and here, 21:1. In any event, this striking tradition
about the location of the sea in the Arabah very possibly predates the
extant Johannine account [certainly the tradition about the peripatetic
rock which followed the Israelites in the wilderness predates the
Corinthian correspondence]. If this is the case, the proposal of
thematic connexions between Jn 21 [a miraculous draught of fish in
previously 'dead' water, pursuant to the command of the resurrected
Christ] and Ezk 47 [a thriving fishing industry along the banks of a
previously 'dead' sea, pursuant to the influx of oxygenated, life-giving
water from the new temple] becomes even more persuasive.
Conclusion.
By recording the number 153, the fourth evangelist very likely intended
to recall the fishing villages of Ezekiel's vision through the
interpretative device of gematria.
The evangelist had already presented Christ's dramatic offer of living
water—to be available only after his death—in a setting where both the
auditores Christi and
lectores Johannis
would interpret Christ's words against the backdrop of Ezekiel's vision
in 47:1-12. Furthermore, the evangelist had possibly encountered the
Rabbinic tradition in which these same waters would flow from the new
Temple into the Sea of Tiberias. Accordingly, the miraculous draught of
fish could then quite easily have been construed by the evangelist as a
profound realization, along Rabbinic lines, of Ezekiel's vision.
DR
BRUCE GRIGSBY
BIOLA
UNIVERSITY, LA MIRANDA, CALIFORNIA
1
Actually, Ezekiel's prophecy refers to the effluence of water from
underneath the temple,
i.e., the rock, Mt Moriah. Thus it might be closer to the evangelist's
intent to regard the crucified Christ as the eschatological reenactment
of the 'struck' rock in the wilderness water miracle [Ex 17:1-17]. As
Moses struck the rock to produce 'rivers of living water' [so the
phraseology of t.Sukk. 3.11 and Tg. Ps 78:16], so too was Christ pierced
with the same result. Tabernacles' water ceremony was also understood as
a symbolic depiction of the water miracle in Exodus.
THE
EXPOSITORY TIMES: MARCH 1984. VOL. 95. No. 6. pg. 177-178.
EDITOR: C. S. RODD. PUBLISHED BY T. & T. CLARK, EDINBURGH
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