Hermann Samuel Reimarus (22 December 1694 – 1 March 1768) was a German philosopher, philologist, and Enlightenment thinker who held the position of professor of Hebrew and Oriental languages at the HamburgGymnasium from 1727 until his death. A proponent of naturalistic deism, he advocated for a rational worship of God based on reason and empirical evidence, rejecting miracles, revelation, and supernatural doctrines as incompatible with natural religion.Reimarus's most significant work, the Apologie oder Schutzschrift für die vernünftigen Verehrer Gottes (Apology or Defense for the Rational Worshipers of God), composed around 1760 but left unpublished during his lifetime due to its radical content, systematically dismantled orthodox Christian claims. In it, he portrayed Jesus as a Jewish reformer with political ambitions to overthrow Roman rule and establish an earthly kingdom, whose death as a failed messiah prompted his disciples to fabricate the resurrection and divinity narratives to sustain the movement and secure their own positions.[1] These arguments, disseminated posthumously through anonymous fragments edited and published by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing between 1774 and 1778 as the Wolfenbüttel Fragments—particularly "Von dem Zwecke Jesu und seiner Jünger" (On the Intentions of Jesus and His Disciples)—ignited fierce theological debates and initiated the modern critical quest for the historical Jesus by distinguishing the human figure from the Christ of faith.[1]Beyond biblical criticism, Reimarus advanced Enlightenment thought through publications on logic (Vernunftlehre, 1756), natural theology (Abhandlungen von den vornehmsten Wahrheiten der natürlichen Religion, 1754), and animal psychology (Betrachtungen über die Triebe der Thiere, 1760), where he classified instincts empirically and argued for a mechanistic understanding of nature under a rational Creator, influencing later philosophy and biology. His cautious public persona masked these heterodox private convictions, reflecting the tensions of rational inquiry against established religious authority in 18th-century Germany.
Early Life and Education
Family Background and Upbringing
Hermann Samuel Reimarus was born on December 22, 1694, in Hamburg, a prosperous Hanseatic free city known for its commercial vibrancy and emerging intellectual circles. His father, a teacher at the Academic Gymnasium of the Johanneum—a leading institution for classical studies—provided his early education, emphasizing foundational knowledge in theology, Latin, and Greek. This home-based instruction reflected the family's Lutheran orientation and commitment to scholarly rigor, typical of Hamburg's educated burgher class.[2]Reimarus's upbringing unfolded in this environment of disciplined learning, transitioning from paternal tutoring to formal schooling at the Gelehrtenschule des Johanneums, where he studied under Johann Albert Fabricius, a renowned philologist and later his father-in-law. The Johanneum's curriculum, centered on ancient languages, history, and biblical exegesis, fostered Reimarus's proficiency in Hebrew and Oriental studies from a young age. Amid Hamburg's relative religious tolerance and exposure to Enlightenment precursors via trade and scholarship, his early years laid the groundwork for a career bridging traditional theology and rational critique.[3]
Academic Formation in Philosophy and Theology
Reimarus received his initial education in Hamburg from his father, a teacher of ancient languages, until approximately age twelve, after which he attended the prestigious Gelehrtenschule des Johanneums.[4] There, he benefited from instruction by the renowned classical and biblical scholar Johann Albert Fabricius (1688–1736), whose expertise in philology and textual criticism profoundly shaped Reimarus's early interests in ancient languages and rational inquiry into religious texts.[4] This grounding in humanistic scholarship provided a philological foundation that complemented his subsequent theological pursuits, emphasizing empirical analysis over dogmatic interpretation.In 1714, at age twenty, Reimarus enrolled at the University of Jena, studying theology, philosophy, and ancient languages, with a particular focus on the latter two disciplines as tools for theological examination.[5] His philosophical formation drew from the rationalist tradition of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646–1716) and Christian Wolff (1679–1754), whose emphasis on systematic reason and natural principles informed Reimarus's rejection of supernatural revelation in favor of deistic natural religion.[4] Theological studies at Jena exposed him to orthodox Lutheran doctrines, yet his engagement with Wolffian methodology—prioritizing logical deduction from observable phenomena—fostered a critical stance toward revealed religion, setting the stage for his later critiques.By 1716, Reimarus had advanced to become a Privatdozent in philosophy at the University of Wittenberg, where he lectured on rational principles and ethics, honing his ability to integrate philosophical reasoning with theological questions.[5] This period solidified his commitment to a mechanistic worldview grounded in empirical observation, influenced by emerging physico-theological arguments that viewed divine order as discernible through nature rather than scripture.[4] His academic trajectory thus bridged traditional theology with Enlightenmentrationalism, prioritizing causal explanations derived from first principles over faith-based assertions.
Academic and Professional Career
Professorship and Institutional Roles
In July 1723, Reimarus accepted the position of rector, or headmaster, of the Grosse Stadtschule, the principal city school in Wismar, Mecklenburg.[6] He served in this administrative and educational leadership role for four years, overseeing instruction in a secondary institution that prepared students for university studies.In 1727, Reimarus relocated to Hamburg and assumed the professorship of Hebrew and Oriental languages at the Gymnasium Illustre, a leading academic Gymnasium also known as the Gymnasium Johanneum.[7] This appointment marked the beginning of his long-term tenure at the institution, where he taught advanced philological subjects to elite pupils until his death on March 1, 1768, spanning 41 years.[8] The Gymnasium, founded in 1529, emphasized classical languages, rhetoric, and humanities, aligning with Reimarus's expertise in Semitic studies derived from his training at the University of Jena.[6]Reimarus's role extended beyond classroom instruction; as a senior faculty member, he influenced curriculum development in Oriental philology and helped maintain the Gymnasium's reputation as a hub for Enlightenment-oriented scholarship in northern Germany. His position provided institutional stability, allowing him to pursue independent research while fulfilling duties in a publicly funded school under Hamburg's senatorial oversight.
Reimarus served as professor of Hebrew and Oriental languages at the Hamburg Gymnasium Illustre from 1727 until his death in 1768, where he delivered extensive lectures on Hebrew grammar, Aramaic, Jewish antiquities, and Old Testamentexegesis, including courses on Hebrew idioms in 1730–1731 and difficult passages from the Hebrew Bible in 1731–1732.[6] His teaching emphasized hermeneutica sacra and textual criticism, drawing on sources like August Pfeiffer's Critica Sacra and Hadriani Reland's Antiquitates Sacrae Veterum Hebraeorum (1708), with at least 20 iterations of lectures on Hebrew antiquities recorded up to 1768.[6] This role positioned him as a leading figure in Hamburg's scholarly community, fostering a circle that included antiquarians and orientalists, and earning him membership in the Petersburg Academy of Sciences in 1761 for his Oriental scholarship.[6]In Hebraistics, Reimarus produced early linguistic analyses, such as De differentiis vocum Hebraicarum (Wittenberg, 1717), which examined Hebrew synonyms like adam versus ish and verbs such as pa'al and bara', applying philological methods to distinguish nuances in biblical vocabulary.[6] He contributed to biblical commentary by editing and enhancing Johann Adolf Hoffmann's work on the Book of Job, published as Neue Erklärung des Buchs Hiob in 1734, adding a philological paraphrase from chapter 3 onward and incorporating insights from scholars like Albert Schultens and Samuel Bochart on Semitic roots and natural history.[6] Reimarus also scrutinized specific Hebrew terms in his unpublished Apologie (drafted mid-1730s to 1768), interpreting Yam Suph (Exodus) as referring to reeds or shrubs rather than a miraculous sea crossing, critiquing rabbinic estimates of the Tabernacle's molten sea capacity, and analyzing shiloh in Genesis 49:10 as potentially messianic or tribal, while questioning traces of polytheism in elohim.[6] These efforts reflected his commitment to empirical textual analysis over dogmatic exegesis, engaging Jewish sources like Maimonides, Abravanel, the Talmud, and Midrash alongside Christian Hebraists such as Johannes Buxtorf and John Lightfoot.[6]Reimarus's philological work extended to classical texts, notably his two-volume edition of Cassius Dio's Historiae Romanae (1750 for volume 1, 1752 for volume 2), where he collated Vatican and Medicean Greek manuscripts, corrected earlier editions by Xylander and Leunclavius, and integrated Johann Albert Fabricius's notes with references to biblical and Jewish antiquities.[6] This project involved decades of correspondence with Cardinal Angelo Maria Querini from 1736 to 1754 and a critical Epistola (1746) against Matteo Noris's edition, demonstrating rigorous source criticism and collation techniques.[6] Earlier, during travels, he published Plethonis libellus de fato (Leiden, 1721), an edition of the Byzantine philosopher's work on fate, showcasing his command of Greek philology.[6] He applied similar methods to New Testament Greek in the Apologie, critiquing forms like the pluperfect ēgorasan in Mark 15:46 against Semitic influences.[6]In Oriental studies, Reimarus's lectures on Antiquitates Hebraicae covered sacred, political, and domestic Jewish customs, using Conrad Iken's 1732 textbook and Reland's framework, while proposing alternative biblical geographies such as a route via Lacus Sirbonis for the Exodus Red Sea crossing, informed by Arabic and Aramaic etymologies like faq'a ("to split").[6] His inaugural Hamburg lecture in 1727, De studiis Graecarum literarum atque humanitatis apud priscos Hebraeos, explored Greek influences on ancient Hebrews, bridging Oriental and classical traditions. Though no standalone Arabic publications are attested, his proficiency in Oriental languages encompassed Syriac, Coptic, and Arabic sources for biblical critique, critiquing Jean Le Clerc's Ars critica (1708) and referencing travel accounts for empirical verification of ancient practices.[6] These contributions underscored philology's role in grounding theological claims in linguistic and historical evidence, influencing later biblical criticism through methodological rigor rather than isolated texts.[6]
Core Philosophical Positions
Deistic Natural Religion and Rejection of Revelation
Reimarus advocated a form of deistic natural religion grounded in rational observation of the natural world, positing that the existence of a providential God could be demonstrated through a posteriori arguments from design and order in nature.[4] In his 1754 publication Die vornehmsten Wahrheiten der natürlichen Religion, he employed teleological reasoning, citing examples such as the instinctive behaviors of animals—like bees constructing hives—as evidence of divine providence and purpose, thereby establishing core religious truths including God's benevolence, human immortality, and moral obligations without reliance on supernatural claims.[4] This framework emphasized God's continuous governance through immutable natural laws, rendering interventions unnecessary and incompatible with a rational creator.[9]Central to Reimarus's rejection of revealed religion was the assertion that such doctrines, including miracles and scriptural prophecies, violate the fixed order of nature established by God, making them philosophically impossible and superfluous to genuine piety.[9] He contended that miracles contradict reason by presuming divine disruption of self-sustaining laws, which a wise deity would neither require nor enact, as natural religion already provides sufficient ethical guidance through innate human faculties and observable consequences of actions.[4] Revelation, in his view, introduces inconsistencies and historical improbabilities that undermine rational inquiry, positioning natural religion as the pure, uncorrupted alternative aligned with empirical evidence and moral utility.[9]In the unpublished Apologie oder Schutzschrift für die vernünftigen Verehrer Gottes, composed over decades and reflecting his private convictions, Reimarus extended this critique to argue that revealed traditions like Christianity pervert the simplicity of natural theology by demanding acceptance of unverifiable mysteries over reason's verdict.[4] He maintained that true worship consists in virtuous conduct and intellectual pursuit of natural truths, displacing any need for ecclesiasticalauthority or dogmatic assertions, as these foster superstition rather than authentic devotion to the divine architect of the cosmos.[9] This stance privileged causal regularity in nature as the ultimate revelation of God's will, rendering supernatural narratives not only improbable but actively detrimental to human progress.[4]
Analysis of Animal Instinct Versus Human Reason
Reimarus articulated his distinction between animal instinct and human reason primarily in his 1760 treatise Allgemeine Betrachtungen über die Triebe der Thiere, hauptsächlich über ihre Kunsttriebe, where he analyzed animal behaviors as products of innate, divinely implanted drives (Triebe) rather than acquired knowledge or rational deliberation.[10] These drives encompass basic impulses for self-preservation, reproduction, and nutrition, as well as specialized "art drives" enabling species-specific aptitudes, such as the precise nest-building of birds or web-spinning of spiders, executed without prior experience, reflection, or instruction.[5] Reimarus emphasized that such mechanisms operate mechanically, akin to pre-programmed faculties, demonstrating purposeful design attributable to a rational Creator who endows each species with instincts suited to its mode of life, thereby refuting Epicurean chance or purely material explanations.In contrasting animals with humans, Reimarus maintained that animal drives, while enabling apparent cleverness or "artistry," lack the capacity for abstraction, conceptual understanding, or progressive improvement, rendering behaviors fixed, imperfectible, and confined to sensory imagination without true cognition.[11] He critiqued sensualist philosophers like Condillac for erroneously attributing human-like skill acquisition to animals through sensory experience alone, arguing instead that animal actions stem from unreflective, God-given tendencies that achieve ends efficiently but without foresight or adaptability beyond instinctual bounds.[5] Humans, by contrast, possess reason as a higher, perfectible faculty—elevated from instinctual roots but transcending them through reflective judgment, logical inference, and the formation of general ideas, allowing for learning from experience, ethical discernment, and innovation unattainable in brute creation.[12]This dichotomy underpinned Reimarus's broader deistic natural theology, wherein animal instincts evidenced teleological causation and divine wisdom in nature's economy, while human rationality conferred moral agency and responsibility, grounding ethics in immutable natural laws discernible by unaided reason rather than revelation.[13] By preserving a sharp ontological boundary—animals as instinct-driven automata, humans as rational agents—Reimarus opposed views blurring the divide, such as those ascribing representational clarity or linguistic capacity to beasts, insisting that empirical observation of animal limitations (e.g., inability to generalize or err-correct beyond drives) corroborated reason's uniqueness in man.[11] His framework thus integrated causal realism, tracing complex behaviors to efficient instinctual causes while attributing ultimate origins to intelligent design, influencing subsequent Enlightenment debates on cognition without conceding rational parity across species.[10]
Ethical and Political Thought Grounded in Natural Law
Reimarus grounded his ethics in natural law, deriving moral obligations from rational insight into God's providential order discernible through nature and teleological reasoning. In Abhandlungen von den vornehmsten Wahrheiten der natürlichen Religion (1754), he argued that a firm conviction in God's existence as first cause and benevolent creator imposes duties of gratitude and virtue, as human flourishing depends on aligning actions with divine wisdom evident in the world's design.[4] This framework rejected reliance on revelation for morality, positing instead that natural religion suffices to establish universal principles like benevolence and justice, essential for individual perfection and social preservation.[4]Central to Reimarus's moral philosophy was the immortality of the soul, which incentivizes ethical conduct by linking virtue to posthumous reward under God's governance, thereby ensuring accountability without empirical miracles. He emphasized emulation of divine attributes—such as goodness and order—as the basis for human duties, viewing vice as self-undermining deviation from natural teleology.[4] Unlike theological systems tying ethics to scriptural commands, Reimarus's approach privileged empirical observation of animal instincts and human reason to affirm innate moral sentiments, though he critiqued Epicurean materialism for undermining providential morality.[13]Politically, Reimarus extended natural law to advocate religious toleration and civic stability, interpreting universal moral precepts—like the Noahide laws—as binding on states to protect rational worshippers, including deists, from fanaticism. In unpublished works such as the Apologie oder Schutzschrift für die vernünftigen Verehrer Gottes (c. 1760s), he urged governments to foster civic virtue by safeguarding natural religion's adherents, arguing that persecution contradicts the providential harmony observable in nature.[4] He viewed political authority as a rational extension of natural law, tasked with enforcing moral order to prevent societal disorder, while critiquing priestly influence that elevates revealed doctrines over reason-derived equity. This perspective aligned with Enlightenment calls for enlightened rule but prioritized deistic rationality over democratic upheaval, emphasizing stability through universal ethical consensus.[4]
Key Publications and Unpublished Works
Lifetime Publications on Reason and Religion
Reimarus's principal published work on the rational foundations of religion was Abhandlungen von den vornehmsten Wahrheiten der natürlichen Religion (Treatises on the Principal Truths of Natural Religion), first issued in 1754 and comprising nine dissertations.[14] In these, he defended the core tenets of deistic natural theology—such as God's existence inferred from the order and purposiveness of nature, the immortality of the soul, and moral obligations derived from reason—against materialist objections raised by figures like Lucretius, Buffon, and Maupertuis.[15] Reimarus employed empirical observations of natural phenomena, including teleological arguments from final causes in biology and physics, to argue that reason alone suffices for religious knowledge without reliance on supernaturalrevelation, though he publicly framed natural religion as harmonious with Christian doctrine to avoid controversy.[16]In 1756, Reimarus released Die Vernunftlehre (Doctrine of Reason), a systematic treatise on logic and epistemology that extended his rationalist critique to challenge orthodox reliance on biblical revelation. This work outlined principles of clear thinking and evidence-based inquiry, positing human reason as the supreme arbiter of truth and implicitly subordinating scriptural authority to philosophical scrutiny; it emphasized probabilistic reasoning from sensory data and analogy, rejecting dogmatic faith in miracles or mysteries as incompatible with rational consistency. While not overtly anti-Christian, the text advanced a deistic worldview by prioritizing innate rational faculties over historical or prophetic claims, influencing later Enlightenment debates on the limits of theology.Reimarus also contributed indirectly to discussions of reason in religion through Allgemeine Betrachtungen über die Triebe der Thiere (General Observations on the Drives of Animals), published in 1760, where he distinguished instinctual behavior in animals—governed by mechanical drives—from humanrationality as evidence of divine endowment. This empirical study, drawing on observations of animal physiology and behavior, reinforced his natural theology by portraying reason as a uniquely human capacity for moral and metaphysical insight, aligned with a providential order discernible through science rather than scripture. These lifetime publications maintained an outwardly conciliatory tone toward established religion, concealing Reimarus's deeper skepticism expressed only in private manuscripts.
The Apologie: Structure and Suppressed Content
The Apologie oder Schutzschrift für die vernünftigen Verehrer Gottes is a manuscript exceeding 1,400 pages, drafted by Reimarus over three decades from around 1735 to 1767, with a fair copy completed in 1767–1768.[17] Its structure divides into an initial positive exposition defending deistic natural religion—grounded in reason, empirical observation of nature, and arguments for God's existence, providence, immortality of the soul, and moral duty—followed by an extensive negative critique targeting the foundations of revealed religion.[18] The critique systematically addresses the Old Testament's historical and moral inconsistencies, the impossibility of miracles violating uniform natural laws, the failure of messianic prophecies, and the unreliability of New Testament accounts, culminating in an analysis of Jesus as a Jewish political revolutionary whose death prompted the apostles to invent resurrection claims for personal gain and communal survival.[18][19]Reimarus deliberately suppressed the full Apologie during his lifetime, recognizing its potential to incite severe backlash in an era dominated by Lutheran orthodoxy and state-enforced confessional conformity in Germany; he entrusted copies only to family members under strict secrecy oaths.[20] After his death in 1768, his children maintained this suppression, providing limited access to select intellectuals like Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, who received a copy in 1774 but was bound by promise not to publish wholesale.[21] Lessing circumvented this by anonymously excerpting and editing seven fragments from the manuscript's most incendiary sections—focusing on toleration of deists, the apostles' self-interested fabrication of doctrine, inconsistencies in resurrection narratives, and the non-miraculous intent behind early Christian origins—while omitting the lengthy philosophical defenses of natural theology and broader historical surveys of Judaism and pagan religions that comprised much of the earlier divisions.[22] These suppressed portions, emphasizing Reimarus's first-principles derivation of ethics and cosmology from observablenature rather than scripture, were not publicly available until Gerhard Alexander's critical edition in two volumes appeared in 1972.[6] The selective fragmentation distorted the work's balanced apologetic intent, amplifying perceptions of outright irreligion over its core aim to reconcile rational piety with empirical reality.[23]
The Wolfenbüttel Fragments and Immediate Aftermath
Anonymous Publication by Lessing
Following Hermann Samuel Reimarus's death on March 1, 1768, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, who had obtained a manuscript copy of the Apologie oder Schutzschrift für die vernünftigen Verehrer Gottes from Reimarus's daughter Elise Reimarus around 1767, decided to disseminate key portions despite the family's explicit prohibition against publication. Appointed librarian of the ducal library in Wolfenbüttel on May 1, 1770, Lessing exploited his position to frame the excerpts as anonymous discoveries from the library's unpublished holdings, thereby shielding both himself and the Reimarus family from direct accountability while advancing radical critique of Christian doctrine. This stratagem allowed Lessing to present the material under the rubric of scholarly curation rather than overt advocacy, though contemporaries quickly suspected his involvement due to stylistic and contextual clues.The publications appeared serially in Lessing's journal Beyträge zur Geschichte und Literatur, gezogen aus den Schätzen der herzoglichen Bibliothek zu Wolfenbüttel (Contributions to History and Literature, Drawn from the Treasures of the Ducal Library at Wolfenbüttel). The first fragment, "Über die Absicht Jesu und seiner Jünger" (On the Intention of Jesus and His Disciples), was issued in volume 7 in October 1774, arguing that Jesus sought political liberation from Roman rule rather than spiritual salvation, with the resurrection fabricated by disciples to perpetuate the movement. Lessing followed with additional excerpts, including defenses of deism and assaults on biblical miracles, culminating in a seventh fragment in 1778 that revisited the disciples' motives and resurrection claims. These seven installments, totaling excerpts from the Apologie's most provocative sections, ignited the "Fragments Controversy" without revealing Reimarus as the author during Lessing's lifetime.Lessing's editorial interventions were minimal but strategic: he added prefaces defending the fragments' historical value and his duty to publicize rare manuscripts, while occasionally interjecting commentary to provoke debate, such as questioning orthodox interpretations of scripture. By maintaining anonymity, Lessing not only preserved the Reimarus family's social standing in orthodoxHamburg but also amplified the text's impact through plausible deniability, fostering widespread theological unrest across German intellectual circles. The ploy succeeded initially, as the fragments circulated as purported library finds, though posthumous revelations confirmed Reimarus's authorship after Lessing's death in 1781.
Content Challenging Christian Orthodoxy
The Wolfenbüttel Fragments, excerpts from Reimarus's unpublished Apologie oder Schutzschrift für die vernünftigen Verehrer Gottes (Apology or Defense for the Rational Worshipers of God), mounted a systematic critique of revealed Christianity by subjecting Gospel narratives to historical and rational scrutiny. Reimarus contended that the New Testament accounts of Jesus's life, death, and resurrection were inconsistent and fabricated, arguing instead for a naturalistic explanation grounded in human motives and discrepancies among sources. He rejected miracles as violations of uniform natural laws, positing that any supernatural claims must yield to empirical evidence and reason.[1]In the fragment "Von dem Zwecke Jesu und seiner Jünger" (On the Intention of Jesus and His Disciples), published in 1778, Reimarus portrayed Jesus as a Jewish nationalist aiming to establish a temporal messianic kingdom through political and military means, consistent with Old Testament expectations of a liberator-king who would restore Israel's independence from Roman rule. He cited Jesus's triumphal entry into Jerusalem on a donkey, recruitment of disciples for an imminent revolt, and predictions of the kingdom's arrival (e.g., within the lifetime of his generation) as evidence of this worldly agenda, rather than a spiritual or eternal realm. Following the crucifixion—interpreted as punishment for sedition—Reimarus argued the disciples, initially despondent and scattered, invented resurrection appearances to salvage their movement, shifting doctrine from earthly revolution to otherworldly salvation to retain followers and gain influence. This transformation, he claimed, explained the divergence between Jesus's militant rhetoric (e.g., calls to buy swords in Luke 22:36) and the apostles' later pacifist theology.[1]Reimarus further dismantled the resurrection narrative by highlighting contradictions across the Gospels, such as varying reports of tomb visitors (one woman vs. multiple), the sequence of events, and post-resurrection appearances (e.g., to individuals vs. groups). He dismissed the disciples as unreliable witnesses, noting their fear-induced flight during the arrest (Mark 14:50), Peter's denial (Mark 14:66-72), and absence from the crucifixion, which undermined claims of martyrdom-inspired truthfulness. Proposing a "conspiracy theory," Reimarus suggested the empty tomb resulted from disciples or sympathizers removing the body to simulate a supernatural departure, motivated by self-preservation and the prospect of perpetuating a lucrative religious enterprise; he contrasted this with the apostles' later prosperity and authority in the early church. Supernatural explanations were rejected outright, as resurrection would contradict observable biological decay and require suspending rational laws without corroborating non-biblical evidence.[24][1]Additional fragments assailed prophetic fulfillment and doctrinal innovations, arguing Old Testament messianic prophecies anticipated a conquering Davidic king, not a suffering servant or divine incarnation, and that Gospel writers retroactively twisted texts (e.g., Isaiah 53, Psalm 22) to fit events. Reimarus viewed Trinitarianism, vicarious atonement, and eternal punishment as Hellenistic accretions alien to Jesus's monotheistic Judaism, incompatible with deistic natural religion's emphasis on a benevolent creator accessible through reason alone. These arguments prioritized causal realism—events driven by humanagency over divine intervention—and empirical inconsistencies over theological harmonization.[1]
Initial Public Reactions and Debates
The publication of the initial Wolfenbüttel Fragments by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing in 1774, beginning with "Über die Duldung der Deisten" (On the Tolerance of Deists), provoked limited immediate backlash, as the plea for religious tolerance toward non-Christians appeared relatively mild compared to later excerpts.[21]Orthodox responses remained subdued initially, with Lessing noting in correspondence the theologians' prolonged silence, interpreting it as hesitation until new ideas supplanted established doctrines.[6] By January 1777, however, as additional fragments critiquing Old Testament miracles—such as the Israelites' passage through the Red Sea—emerged, sharper refutations arose from Lutheran orthodoxy, targeting the anonymous author's rationalist assault on scriptural historicity.[6][25]The controversy, known as the Fragmentenstreit, intensified with the 1778 release of "Von dem Zwecke Jesu und seiner Jünger" (On the Intention of Jesus and His Disciples), which portrayed Jesus as a failed political messiah whose followers invented the resurrection to sustain their movement after his execution.[25] Johann Melchior Goeze, Hamburg's chief orthodox pastor, launched personal attacks on Lessing in pamphlets, branding him a destroyer of faith and demanding suppression of the material, thereby shifting focus from the fragments' content to Lessing's editorial responsibility.[25][26] Lessing countered by defending the pursuit of historical truth against confessional rigidity, engaging Goeze in a series of acerbic exchanges that highlighted tensions between Enlightenment criticism and ecclesiastical authority.[25][27]Other theologians joined the fray: Johann Daniel Schumann orchestrated broader campaigns against both the unidentified author (later revealed as Reimarus) and Lessing, emphasizing the fragments' threat to core doctrines like miracles and resurrection.[6][28] Johann Salomo Semler observed the fragments' destabilizing effect, noting widespread insecurity and skepticism among younger clergy exposed to such rational dissections of biblical narratives.[6] Figures like Georg Christoph Silberschlag rebutted specific claims, such as the logistical implausibility of the Red Sea crossing, in works defending Christianity's rational foundations against deistic naturalism.[6] Lessing, while publishing the excerpts, distanced himself from outright endorsement, framing his role as facilitating public discourse rather than advocacy.[28]The debates spilled into print across Germany, involving additional critics like J.C. Döderlein and J.D. Schumann, who refuted the fragments' portrayal of early Christianity as fraudulent innovation rather than divine revelation.[28] Escalation prompted institutional intervention: in 1778, the Duke of Brunswick withdrew Lessing's censorship privileges at Wolfenbüttel to curb potential unrest, underscoring the perceived danger of the fragments to social and religious order.[6] These exchanges, though rooted in 18th-century German Lutheran contexts, exposed fractures between orthodox literalism and emerging historical-critical methods, with responses often prioritizing doctrinal preservation over engaging Reimarus's philological evidence.[25][6]
Broader Reception and Controversies
Defenses from Enlightenment Thinkers
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, the German playwright and philosopher who anonymously published excerpts from Reimarus's Apologie as the Wolfenbüttel Fragments between 1774 and 1778, emerged as the foremost Enlightenment defender of the work amid ensuing controversies. While Lessing diverged from Reimarus on key points—such as rejecting the hypothesis that Jesus's disciples stole the body to perpetrate a resurrection fraud—he praised the fragments for compelling theologians to engage historical evidence over dogmatic assertions, thereby advancing rational discourse on Christianity's origins.[29] In Lessing's view, the publication exposed inconsistencies in orthodox interpretations, prompting critics to substantiate claims empirically rather than rely on revelation alone.[30]Lessing's defense intensified during his public feud with orthodox pastor Johann Melchior Goeze, who denounced the fragments as atheistic propaganda in writings from 1777 onward. Responding in a series of eleven counter-pieces collectively known as Anti-Goeze (published March to July 1778), Lessing eschewed direct apologetics for Reimarus's theses in favor of upholding principles of free inquiry and press freedom. He argued that theological disputes should occur openly in the public sphere, unhindered by censorship or clerical authority, as suppression would impede the pursuit of truth through reason and debate.[25] This stance aligned with Enlightenment ideals of intellectual autonomy, positioning the fragments controversy as a test case for rational critique against institutional religion.Though explicit endorsements from continental philosophes like Voltaire or Diderot remain undocumented in contemporary records, Reimarus's emphasis on natural religion, rejection of miracles post-creation, and historical analysis of Jesus as a failed political messiah found tacit sympathy among deistic circles valuing empirical scrutiny over supernatural claims. Lessing's interventions thus amplified the fragments' impact, fostering a legacy of biblical historicism that influenced later rationalist theologians, even as direct public support remained cautious amid risks of censorship and social backlash in 18th-century Germany.[30]
Rebuttals from Orthodox Theologians
Johann Melchior Goeze, senior pastor of St. Catharine's Church in Hamburg and a leading voice of Lutheran orthodoxy, issued the most prominent rebuttals to the Wolfenbüttel Fragments, denouncing them in multiple publications from 1777 onward as "the most violent blasphemy" against Christianity rather than mere rational critique. Goeze argued that Reimarus' naturalistic deism, which rejected miracles as violations of uniform natural laws, presupposed a mechanistic worldview incompatible with divine omnipotence and the scriptural witness to God's intervention in history.[25] He defended the possibility of miracles by emphasizing God's sovereignty over creation, countering Reimarus' probabilistic dismissal with appeals to biblical prophecy fulfillment and eyewitness testimony as historically reliable evidence.[25]In response to the fragment Von dem Zwecke Jesu und seiner Jünger noch näher erörtert (1778), which posited that Jesus pursued a failed political messiahship and that his disciples invented the resurrection to sustain their movement—possibly by stealing the body—Goeze employed dialectical methods to vindicate the Gospel accounts. He contended that the disciples' rapid transformation from cowering fear to courageous preaching, coupled with their willingness to face martyrdom, rendered Reimarus' conspiracy theory psychologically and motivationally implausible, as deliberate deceivers would not endure persecution for a known fabrication. Goeze further insisted that the empty tomb and post-resurrection appearances, corroborated across multiple sources, provided stronger historical attestation than Reimarus allowed, aligning with orthodox confessional standards that prioritized scriptural harmony over rationalistic skepticism.[25]Goeze's critiques extended beyond doctrinal defense to accuse Lessing of irresponsibly amplifying deist irreligion through publication, potentially eroding public piety in an era of confessional fragility.[25] Other orthodox figures, including precursors in Hamburg clerical circles, echoed these refutations by framing the fragments as a direct threat to Lutheran orthodoxy's core tenets of revelation and incarnation, though Goeze's exchanges dominated the immediate polemical response.[31] These rebuttals underscored a broader orthodox resistance to Enlightenment erosion of supernatural elements in Christianity, prioritizing ecclesiastical tradition and empirical fidelity to New Testament narratives over deist accommodations to reason alone.[25]
Legal and Social Ramifications in 18th-Century Germany
The publication of the Wolfenbüttel Fragments by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing between 1774 and 1778 precipitated the Fragmentenstreit, a protracted public controversy that exposed fault lines between rationalist critique and Lutheran orthodoxy in German principalities. Legally, the most direct consequence was administrative censorship imposed on Lessing by Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, who in July 1778 revoked Lessing's longstanding privilege—granted upon his 1770 appointment as librarian at Wolfenbüttel—to publish religious writings without prior ducal imprimatur. This measure followed escalating polemics, particularly Lessing's exchanges with Hamburg pastor Johann Melchior Goeze, and aimed to curb further dissemination amid complaints from ecclesiastical authorities. Despite the revocation, Lessing evaded full compliance by publishing rebuttals through intermediaries or without formal approval, highlighting the uneven enforcement of censorship in Enlightenment-era German states where absolutist rulers balanced intellectual patronage against clerical pressure. No criminal prosecutions for blasphemy ensued against Lessing or identified associates, likely due to the fragments' anonymity, Reimarus's death a decade prior, and the decentralized nature of Holy Roman Empire jurisdictions, though such works theoretically risked penalties under prevailing statutes against "public insult to religion" in territories like Hamburg or Brunswick.[25][32][33]Socially, the fragments intensified divisions within educated elites, galvanizing conservative theologians to decry them as atheistic assaults on core Christian doctrines like the resurrection, while sympathizers viewed them as advancing tolerant, reason-based inquiry. The controversy spilled into periodicals and pamphlets across German states, fostering a spectacle of mutual accusations—Goeze branded the anonymous author a "dead dog" and Lessing an enabler of infidelity, prompting Lessing's satirical Anti-Goeze series that mocked orthodox literalism. This exchange, peaking in 1778, eroded Lessing's reputation in orthodox circles and strained relations between secular intellectuals and clergy, yet it also amplified calls for hermeneutic freedom, influencing figures like Immanuel Kant in their critiques of dogmatic authority. Among Hamburg's bourgeoisie, where Reimarus had served as rector of the Gymnasium since 1727, posthumous association with the fragments risked familial disgrace; his daughter Elise Reimarus actively opposed Lessing's actions to safeguard the family's standing in a city governed by senatorial oversight of religious conformity. Broader societal ripples included heightened vigilance against deist literature in consistories and courts, contributing to a chilling effect on overt biblical skepticism until the French Revolution's upheavals loosened constraints, though the debate ultimately eroded unquestioned scriptural authority in Protestant academies.[34][35][36]
Long-Term Influence and Legacy
Role in Initiating Historical Jesus Scholarship
Reimarus's Apologie oder Schutzschrift für die vernünftigen Verehrer Gottes, composed between 1736 and 1764 but unpublished during his lifetime, marked the inception of systematic historical-critical inquiry into the life of Jesus by applying Enlightenmentrationalism to the Gospel accounts. In the section "Von dem Zwecke Jesu und seiner Jünger" (On the Intentions of Jesus and His Disciples), released anonymously by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing in 1778 as part of the Wolfenbüttel Fragments, Reimarus rejected supernatural elements such as miracles and the resurrection as incompatible with historical probability, instead positing a naturalistic reconstruction grounded in Jewish expectations of a messianic liberator.[1][37] He argued that Jesus, as a first-century Jew, sought to fulfill prophecies of a Davidic king who would overthrow Roman rule and restore Israel's temporal sovereignty, a goal evident in Gospel passages depicting entry into Jerusalem and temple cleansing as political acts.[38][39]This approach pioneered the distinction between the "historical Jesus"—a failed political agitator whose crucifixion ended his mission—and the "Christ of faith" constructed by disciples through fabricated resurrection narratives to sustain their movement and invent a spiritualized eschatology. Reimarus contended that discrepancies in Gospelresurrection accounts, such as varying witness reports and empty tomb details, indicated invention rather than event, with disciples like Peter and John stealing the body to claim divine vindication, a theory drawing on rational dismissal of prophecy fulfillment claims.[40][41] His philological analysis of New Testament texts highlighted contradictions between Jesus's apocalyptic warnings of imminent kingdom arrival and the post-crucifixion shift to a heavenly realm, attributing the latter to apostolic deception motivated by self-preservation after their leader's execution around 30 CE.[1]Reimarus's framework initiated the "quest for the historical Jesus," influencing subsequent scholars by establishing criteria like historical plausibility and contextual embedding in first-century Judaism over dogmatic presuppositions, though his deistic biases led to an overly reductive portrait emphasizing political aims over ethical teachings. Albert Schweitzer, in his 1906 The Quest of the Historical Jesus, identified Reimarus as the starting point of this tradition, crediting him with first systematically detaching Jesus from ecclesiastical dogma to pursue an empirical biography, despite Reimarus's conclusions undermining Christian orthodoxy.[37][39] Modern evaluations affirm his role in laying groundwork for criteria-of-authenticity methods, even as later quests refined or critiqued his rationalist skepticism toward the miraculous.[41]
Reimarus's Wolfenbüttel Fragments pioneered modern biblical criticism through a philological and historical dissection of the New Testament, particularly the Gospels' resurrection narratives, which he identified as riddled with inconsistencies resolvable only by positing human invention rather than divine event.[9] He argued that the disciples, facing the collapse of Jesus's messianic expectations as a political liberator, fabricated the resurrection story to perpetuate their authority and secure personal gain, thereby distinguishing the historical Jesus—a failed Jewish revolutionary—from the later Christological dogma.[1] This methodical application of rational criteria to scriptural texts, drawing on precedents like Spinoza's Tractatus Theologico-Politicus, established a template for subsequent higher criticism, initiating the "quest for the historical Jesus" and challenging the supernatural underpinnings of Christian orthodoxy.In advancing deism, Reimarus championed natural religion as the sole authentic faith, rooted in reason's apprehension of a benevolent Creator, providential order, and innate moral duties, while rejecting miracles, prophecies, and revelations as superfluous or fraudulent accretions to humanity's ethical survival.[9] His unpublished Apologie oder Schutzschrift für die vernünftigen Verehrer Gottes (c. 1730s–1760s) systematically subordinated revealed religion to deistic natural theology, asserting that positive doctrines like Christianity introduced impure elements incompatible with universal rational principles.[23] By framing Christianity as a derivative and corrupted form of primal deism, Reimarus bolstered Enlightenment efforts to purify theology of the irrational, influencing German rationalists and aligning with broader deistic currents that prioritized empirical observation over dogmatic authority.[42]Reimarus's work fostered secularism by systematically undermining the Bible's claim to infallible divine origin, thereby elevating human reason and historical evidence as arbiters of truth and promoting ethical systems detached from ecclesiastical mediation.[9] The fragments' exposure of religious narratives as products of pragmatic deception rather than transcendent reality eroded institutional religion's monopoly on moral and historical interpretation, contributing to a secular intellectual trajectory where public discourse increasingly favored causal explanations grounded in observable phenomena over faith-based assertions.[43] This rational demystification, disseminated through Lessing's publications from 1774 to 1778, normalized skepticism toward orthodoxy in 18th-century Germany, laying causal groundwork for later secular movements that decoupled governance, science, and ethics from theological presuppositions.[9]
Evaluations in Modern Scholarship
In modern scholarship, Hermann Samuel Reimarus is widely recognized as the pioneer of the historical-critical quest for Jesus, initiating a methodological shift toward rational analysis of the Gospels that separated the historical figure from ecclesiasticaldogma. His Wolfenbüttel Fragments, particularly "On the Intention of Jesus and His Disciples" (1778), applied Enlightenment principles to argue that Jesus was a first-century Jewish messianic claimant focused on political liberation from Rome, whose death led disciples to fabricate resurrection narratives and divine claims to preserve the movement. This approach marked a foundational milestone by emphasizing discrepancies in Gospel accounts and prioritizing naturalistic explanations over supernatural ones, influencing subsequent biblical criticism despite its deistic framework.[44][1]Critics, including N.T. Wright, assess Reimarus' reconstruction as portraying a "fanatical and politicized" Jewish reformer whose eschatological program failed, with disciples resorting to fraud—a view seen as antithetical to the New Testament's portrayal and driven by anti-Christian presuppositions rather than comprehensive evidence. Most contemporary historians reject specifics like the body-theft theory as speculative and lacking corroboration beyond Gospel variances, attributing them to Reimarus' rationalistic bias against miracles, which presupposes naturalism without empirical justification for dismissing eyewitness testimony criteria used in modern historiography. While his denial of the resurrection's historicity persists in secular scholarship influenced by similar assumptions, empirical analyses of early creedal formulas (e.g., 1 Corinthians 15:3-7) and non-Christian sources challenge such dismissals by affirming a core empty-tomb tradition.[1]Some scholars partially rehabilitate Reimarus by aligning his emphasis on Jesus' political-apocalyptic aims with findings from the "third quest," as in Douglas E. Oakman's The Political Aims of Jesus (2012), which argues Reimarus correctly identified a disjuncture between Jesus' worldly messianic intentions—evidenced by actions like the temple cleansing—and the post-Easter spiritualization by followers. Oakman integrates social-scientific models and references E.P. Sanders, Bart Ehrman, and Wright to support a revised version: Jesus as a "worldly-wise peasant" challenging imperial power structures, though not via outright rebellion. This evaluation highlights Reimarus' prescience in questioning harmonized Gospel narratives but critiques his overreliance on deism, urging integration with archaeological and sociological data absent in the 18th century. Overall, his legacy endures as a catalyst for rigorous source criticism, tempered by recognition of philosophical biases that skewed causal inferences toward secular rationalism.[41]