Vermes was born in Makó, Kingdom of Hungary, in 1924 to a family of HungarianJewish descent:[6][7] Terézia Riesz, a schoolteacher, and Ernő Vermes, a liberal journalist.[8][9] The Vermes family was of Jewish background but had given up religious practice by the mid-19th century.[8][10] All three were baptised as Roman Catholics when he was six;[6] referring to his parents' conversion, he defined it as a way to escape from the rising tide of anti-Semitism in Europe[6][7][10] (see also Interwar period). In an interview with Rachel Kohn of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 1999 he stated: "In fact, I never was anything but a Jew with a temporary sort of outer vestment. I realized I ought to recognize my genuine identity."[7] Nonetheless, his mother and father were murdered in the Holocaust in 1944.[6][7]
Vermes attended a Catholic seminary.[6][7] When he was eligible for college, in 1942, Jews were not accepted into Hungarian universities.[7] After the Second World War he became a Catholic priest, but was not admitted into the Jesuit or Dominican orders because of his Jewish ancestry.[10][11] Vermes was accepted into the Order of the Fathers of Notre-Dame de Sion,[8] a French-Belgian order which prayed for the Jews.[7] Later he moved to Paris, where he studied under the Hungarian born French Jewish scholar Georges Vajda, a graduate of the Rabbinical Seminary of Budapest.[7]
After researching the Dead Sea Scrolls in Paris for several years,[8] Vermes had met Pamela Hobson Curle,[7][10][12] a poet and scholar, disciple of the Neo-HasidicJewish philosopherMartin Buber,[7][10] and the two fell in love. She was married and the mother of two children, but her marriage was in the process of ending.[7][10] In 1958, after her divorce, and after Vermes left the priesthood, they married, remaining together and often collaborating on work, until her death in 1993.[7][10] He also renounced Christianity and embraced his Jewish identity,[7][10] although not religious observance.[10] He took up a teaching post at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne.[8]
Vermes was one of the first scholars to examine the Dead Sea Scrolls after their discovery in 1947, and is the author of the standard translation into English of the Dead Sea Scrolls: The Dead Sea Scrolls in English (1962).[14] He is one of the leading scholars in the field of the study of the historical Jesus (see Selected Publications, below) and together with Fergus Millar and Martin Goodman, Vermes was responsible for substantially revising Emil Schurer's three-volume work, The History of the Jewish People in the Age of Jesus Christ,[15] His An Introduction to the Complete Dead Sea Scrolls, revised edition (2000), is a study of the collection at Qumran.[16]
Until his death, he was a Professor Emeritus of Jewish Studies and Emeritus Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford, but continued to teach at the Oriental Institute in Oxford. He had edited the Journal of Jewish Studies[17] from 1971 to his death, and from 1991 he had been director of the Oxford Forum for Qumran Research at the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies.[18] He inspired the creation of the British Association for Jewish Studies (BAJS) in 1975 and of the European Association for Jewish Studies (EAJS) in 1981 and acted as founding president for both.
Vermes was a Fellow of the British Academy; a Fellow of the European Academy of Arts, Sciences and Humanities; holder of an Oxford D. Litt. (1988) and of honorary doctorates from the University of Edinburgh (1989), University of Durham (1990), University of Sheffield (1994) and the Central European University of Budapest (2008). He was awarded the Wilhelm Bacher Memorial Medal by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1996), the Memorial Medal of the city of Makó, his place of birth (2008) and the keys of the cities of Monroe LA and Natchez MS (2009). He received a vote of congratulation from the US House of Representatives, proposed by the Representative of Louisiana on 17 September 2009.
On 23 January 2012 Penguin Books celebrated at Wolfson College, Oxford, the golden jubilee of Vermes's The Dead Sea Scrolls in English, which has sold an estimated half-a-million copies worldwide. A "Fiftieth anniversary" edition has been issued in the Penguin Classics series.
Vermes was a prominent scholar in the contemporary field of historical Jesus research.[19] The contemporary approach, known as the "third quest", emphasizes Jesus's Jewish identity and context.[19] It portrays Jesus as founding a renewal movement within Judaism.[19]
Vermes described Jesus as a 1st-century Jewish holy man, a commonplace view in academia but novel to the public when Vermes began publishing.[8] Contrary to certain other scholars (such as E. P. Sanders),[20] Vermes concludes that Jesus did not reach out to non-Jews. For example, he attributes positive references to Samaritans in the gospels not to Jesus himself but to early Christian editing. He suggests that, properly understood, the historical Jesus is a figure that Jews should find familiar and attractive.[19] This historical Jesus, however, is so different from the Christ of faith that Christians, says Vermes, may well want to rethink the fundamentals of their faith.[19]
Important works on this topic include Jesus the Jew (1973), which describes Jesus as a thoroughly Jewish Galilean charismatic, The Gospel of Jesus the Jew (1981), which examines Jewish parallels to Jesus's teaching[16] and Christian Beginnings (2012), which traces the evolution of the figure of Jesus from Jewish charismatic in the synoptic Gospels to equality with God in the Council of Nicea (325 CE). He also expounded this theme in the controversial television miniseries, Jesus: The Evidence (Channel 4, 1984).
Vermes believed it is possible "to retrieve the authentic Gospel of Jesus, his first-hand message to his original followers."[21]
The historical Jesus can be retrieved only within the context of first-century Galilean Judaism. The Gospel image must therefore be inserted into the historical canvas of Palestine in the first century CE, with the help of the works of Flavius Josephus, the Dead Sea Scrolls and early rabbinic literature. Against this background, what kind of picture of Jesus emerges from the Gospels? That of a rural holy man, initially a follower of the movement of repentance launched by another holy man, John the Baptist. In the hamlets and villages of Lower Galilee and the lakeside, Jesus set out to preach the coming of the Kingdom of God within the lifetime of his generation and outlined the religious duties his simple listeners were to perform to prepare themselves for the great event.[22]
For more details see his autobiography, Providential Accidents, London, SCM Press, 1998 ISBN0-334-02722-5; Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham MD, 1998 ISBN0-8476-9340-6.
^Shepherd, Melinda C. (18 June 2020). "Geza Vermes". Encyclopædia Britannica. Edinburgh: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 24 July 2020. Geza Vermes, Hungarian-born British religious scholar (born June 22, 1924, Mako, Hung.—died May 8, 2013, Oxford, Oxfordshire, Eng.), was a leading interpreter of the "historical Jesus" as a Jewish holy man and of the Dead Sea Scrolls; Vermes's volume The Dead Sea Scrolls in English (1962) was generally considered one of the finest translations of those ancient manuscripts.
^Gerd Theissen, Annette Merz (1998), The historical Jesus: a comprehensive guide, Fortress Press (translated from the German 1996 edition). Chapter 1: Quest of the historical Jesus, pp. 1–16.
^ abcdeVermes, Geza. The authentic Gospel of Jesus. London, Penguin Books. 2004. Epilogue. pp. 398–417.
^Sanders, E. P. The historical figure of Jesus. Penguin, 1993.
^Vermes, Géza, "The great Da Vinci Code distraction", in The Times, 6 May 2006. Article reproduced in Vermes, Searching for the Real Jesus: Jesus, The Dead Sea Scrolls and Other Religious Themes, SCM Press, 2009, ISBN978-0334043584.
^Vermes, Geza (2010). The Real Jesus: Then and Now. Augsburg Fortress, Publishers. pp. 54–55. ISBN978-1-4514-0882-9. The historical Jesus can be retrieved only within the context of first-century Galilean Judaism. The Gospel image must therefore be inserted into the historical canvas of Palestine in the first century CE, with the help of the works of Flavius Josephus, the Dead Sea Scrolls and early rabbinic literature. Against this background, what kind of picture of Jesus emerges from the Gospels? That of a rural holy man, initially a follower of the movement of repentance launched by another holy man, John the Baptist. In the hamlets and villages of Lower Galilee and the lakeside, Jesus set out to preach the coming of the Kingdom of God within the lifetime of his generation and outlined the religious duties his simple listeners were to perform to prepare themselves for the great event. [...] The reliability of Josephus's notice about Jesus was rejected by many in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, but it has been judged partly genuine and partly falsified by the majority of more recent critics. The Jesus portrait of Josephus, drawn by an uninvolved witness, stands halfway between the fully sympathetic picture of early Christianity and the wholly antipathetic image of the magician of Talmudic and post-Talmudic Jewish literature.