In the Church and the world
international monthly
edited by Giulio Andreotti
Extract from No. 5 - 2004
Resurrection of Jesus
An event that preceded their thinking and willing
The introduction by the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to the new edition of Heinrich Schlier’s small book on the resurrection of Jesus Christ, which will be published in Italy, edited by 30Days, in collaboration with the Morcelliana publishing house
by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
I am gladdened that 30Days is making accessible to the Italian public in
a new translation the little book on the resurrection
The resurrected Jesus and Mary Magdalen, Giotto, Cappella degli Scrovegni, Padova
I am gladdened that 30Days is making accessible to the Italian
public in a new translation the little book on the resurrection of Jesusthat Heinrich Schlier published in 1968
with Johannes Verlag, the publishing house founded and directed by Hans Urs von
Balthasar , at a moment when theories that for various periods of time and in
different versions were circulating in Protestant circles, were appearing in
Catholic theology as something new and as sure scholarly acquisition just
achieved. Theories whereby Jesus was said to have risen “within the kerygma”
(according to Bultmann’s formula) or in other words that the resurrection meant
no more than the recognition by the disciples that “the cause of Jesus
continues” (according to Willi Marxsen). Schlier was an outstanding follower of
Rudolf Bultmann. In 1953, to the bewilderment of his teacher, he converted to
the Catholic Churchand said that
his conversion had come about in an altogether Protestant way and that is
through his relationship with Scripture. All his life Schlier was grateful to
Bultmann for everything he had learned from him on the way to approach the
biblical texts, and all his life he also remained closely bound to the
philosophical thinking of Martin Heidegger. Thus we are not listening to a master
of exegesis that had known the problems of modernity only from the outside, but
one who grew up in them and found his path in continual challenge to them. It might turn out useful to the reader
nowadays to begin from the last two pages of the book in which the methodical
awareness of the author emerges in a very concise way but precisely for that
reason in a very precise way also. Schlier was perfectly well aware that the
resurrection of Jesus from the dead represented a limit problem for exegesis; but
it becomes particularly clear in it that the interpretation of the New
Testament, if it means to arrive to the heart of the question, always has to do
with limit problems. Faith in the resurrection of the New Testament Scriptures
sets the exegete before an alternative that demands a decision from him. The
exegete can certainly share the opinion (become vision of the world in
historiography) of the homogeneity of all history, according to which nothing
can really have happened except what could always happen. But then he is forced
to deny the resurrection as event and must seek to clarify what lies behind,
how ideas of the kind can arise. Or he can let himself be overwhelmed by the
evidence of a phenomenon that breaks the concatenated series of events to then
seek to understand what it means. At bottom Schlier’s little book shows simply
this: that the disciples let themselves be overwhelmed by a phenomenon that
made itself manifest to them, by an unexpected reality, initially even
incomprehensible, and that faith in the resurrection sprang from that
overwhelming and, that is, from an event that preceded their thinking and
willing, that indeed overturned it. Those who read Schlier’s book will see
that the author went through the same experience as the disciples: he himself
is a person “overwhelmed by evidence of a phenomenon that made itself manifest
with naturalness”, and that is a believer, but a believer who believes
reasonably. All his life was a letting himself be overwhelmed by the Lord who
led him. Schlier does not trivially reduce the phenomenon of the resurrection
to the ordinariness of any fact whatever. The originality of this event, that
is mirrored in the singular relations thus set up by the Risen One, emerges
clearly in his book. It is not an event like all the others, but a going
outside what ordinarily happens as history. Out of this arises the difficulty
for an objective interpretation; out of this one understands the temptation to
annul the event as event so as to reinterpret it as mental fact, existential or
psychological. Though Schlier - as we have already said – leaves intact in its
particularity what is singular to the resurrection, and that is what in the
last analysis is incomprehensible to us, he nevertheless kept intact - faithful
to the testimony of the texts and to the evidence of that beginning – “the
irreversibility and the irreducibility of the sequence: ‘apparition of the
Risen One’ – ‘kerygma’ – ‘faith’”; that by resurrection one understands “an
event, that is a concrete historical event”; or, put another way, that “the
word of those who see the Risen One is word of an event that goes beyond the
witnesses”. Since the temptations of 1968 are today no less present than
they were then, today also this is a very useful book, that I hope will win
many readers.