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Bultmann's Jesus is not kerygma for the same reason that his _Theologie des Neuen Testaments_ is not kerygma \-\- namely, because it is theology, i.e., existentialist interpretation of kerygma, as distinct from kerygma itself. (Significantly, Bultmann says explicitly that "one can speak of the proclamation of Jesus only as kerygma" \[_Glauben und Verstehen_ 1:172\].) Of course, _Jesus_ could be said to be _indirect_ kerygma in the same sense in which all theology is "indirect address."

But, surely Bultmann's Jesus is not Christian theology, because Jesus' proclamation is not Christian kerygma? In an important sense, indeed, it isn't. Bultmann is consistent in pointing out that "Jesus himself was not a 'Christian,' but from a historical standpoint stood within Judaism (although, to be sure, as one who broke through Jewish legalism)." Consequently, Jesus' kerygma is Jewish kerygma and Bultmann's Jesus, accordingly, is Jewish theology -- in the sense in which his Theologie des Neuen Testaments is Christian theology.

But there is another sense, perhaps even more important, in which Bultmann's Jesus is Christian theology after all. Actually, there are two somewhat different senses in which this may be claimed.

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But if this is one sense in which _Jesus_ could be said to be Christian rather than Jewish theology (and one may reasonably claim that it is in this sense that Bultmann reckons Jesus' appearance and proclamation among the necessary historical presuppositions of the theology of the New Testament \[_Theologie des Neuen Testaments_: 2\]), there is yet another sense in which this could be said. By Bultmann's own express account, what he means by "Jesus" in this book \-\- and, in his view, all that anyone could reasonably mean by the name, given the nature of the sources upon which any talk of Jesus must depend \-\- is "the complex of ideas" of which Jesus is represented as the bearer in the earliest stratum of the synoptic tradition (_Jesus_: 15 f.). But this means, then, that, strictly speaking, Bultmann's Jesus is the Jesus of the Jesus-kerygma; and allowing (1) that one can indeed distinguish such a form of kerygma; and (2) that it is as much a form of _Christian_ kerygma as the Christ-kerygma (or the Jesus-Christ-kerygma), there can hardly be any objection to saying that Bultmann's _Jesus_ is Christian theology because it is, in fact, the existentialist interpretation of the Jesus-kerygma of the earliest Christian community.

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