Chapter-5.
Circumcision and Revelation; or, The Politics of the Spirit
Universal Man Confronts Difference: The Crisis in Galatia
The argument that I have begun to develop is that it is productive to
read Paul as a Jewish cultural critic. My suggestion is that there is a great deal in his
letters that suggests that the primary motivation, not only for his mission but indeed for
his conversion, was a passionate desire that humanity be One
under the sign of the One God a universalism, I have claimed, born of the
union of Hebraic monotheism and Greek desire for unity and univocity. In this chapter I
would like to continue making the case for this as a plausible reading of Paul (especially
in Galatians) and also to begin to explore some of the cultural issues that the Pauline
move was to raise. We see Paul here actually confronting and attempting to deal with real
social issues to which his theory gave rise. As E. P. Sanders has pointed out,
When it came to cases, Paul's easy tolerance, which he effortlessly
maintained in theory it is a matter of individual conscience what one eats
and whether one observes days' could not work. It was not only
a matter of individual conscience, it turned out, but of Christian unity, and he judged
one form of behavior to be wrong. The wrong form was living according to the
law (1983, 178).
The major argument of this book, then, is that what drove Paul was a
passionate desire for human unification, for the erasure of differences and hierarchies
between human beings, and that he saw the Christian event, as he had experienced it, as
the vehicle for this transformation of humanity. Paul operated with what I call an
allegorical hermeneutic (of language, of the Jews, of history, of Christ) which was fully
homologous with an allegorical anthropology and axiology. The text which establishes this
understanding of Paul's gospel most clearly is his Letter to the Galatians, which is
entirely devoted to the theme of the new creation of God's one people, the new Israel
through faith and through the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ. In my reading of
selected passages from that letter in this and the next chapter, I wish to establish the
plausibility of two claims: (1) that the social gospel was central to Paul's ministry,
i.e., that the eradication of human difference and hierarchy was its central theme, and
(2) that the dyad of flesh and spirit was the vehicle by which this transformation was to
take place. In the opening paragraph of the letter, the prescript, the major themes of
Paul's thought are introduced and particularly the nexus between Christology and the
mission to the gentiles.
An apostle not from men
Paul, an apostle not from men nor through a man, but through Jesus
Christ and God the Father who raised him from the dead.
Dyadic opposition is introduced in this, the very first sentence
of Galatians. Paul is not a human apostle but an apostle of the risen Christ. As
commentators have pointed out, the form of the expression is certainly strange and very
pointed rhetorically. Accordingly some exegetes have argued that Paul must be directly
addressing his opponents' charge here, that is, that they had indeed charged him with
being an apostle from men, the Church in Jerusalem, and that, therefore, he should submit
to the authority of his principals (Bruce 1990, 72 73; Longenecker 1990, 4).
Betz has already dismissed this interpretation, as had Burton long before, as there is no
evidence anywhere else that this was the nature of the charge, and to assume that every
bit of pointed rhetoric found in Paul is in direct response to the opponents seems
methodologically unnecessary and therefore unsupportable (Betz 1979, 39, 65). Further,
this reading makes sense of only one of the two parallel phrases ( from
men ), and not the other. This interpretation does, however, have the
advantage of taking account of the energy of this expression, which the suggestions of
Betz and Burton do not. In my reading, Paul here, in the prescript, in his very
identification of himself, provides a proleptic summary of his entire theme and argument.
Paul is not an apostle from men, that is, not from those who are authorities
in the flesh, as it were, those who have known or are related
physically to Jesus, a man, but he is the apostle through the
resurrected Christ in the spirit, and from God who raised him.
This interpretation, which is plausible in itself, not least because it makes sense of
both halves of the chiasm, does in fact provide an answer to the otherwise attested charge
against Paul, to wit, that his apostleship was inferior because he had never had contact
with the historical Jesus (Burton 1988, 5; Betz 1979, 39). Paul's argument is to be taken
as a direct counter to such charges as the following from the Pseudo-Clementine
Homilies:
You see now how expressions of wrath have to be made through visions
and dreams, but discourse with friends takes place from mouth to mouth, openly and not
through riddles, visions, and dreams as with an enemy. And if our Jesus appeared to you
also and became known in a vision and met you as angry with an enemy, yet he has spoken
only through visions and dreams or through external revelations, but can any one be made
competent to teach through a vision? And if your opinion is, That is
possible, why then did our teacher spend a whole year with us who were
awake? How can we believe you even if he has appeared to you, and how can he have appeared
to you if you desire the opposite of what you have learned? But if you were visited by him
for the space of an hour and were instructed by him and thereby have become an apostle,
then proclaim his words. (Betz 1979, 333)
Even if, as seems plausible, this text is a later Jewish Christian text
written in response to Paul and not the occasion of his response, I think it still
indicates well what the nature of the conflict between Paul and his Jerusalem opponents
would have been like. There is, after all, other evidence, from within Paul, for such a
view. The allegory of the lower and the upper Jerusalem (Galatians 4:21 31)
points in this direction. Moreover, in 2 Corinthians 5:16 Paul insists that his community
no longer knows (that is, recognizes!) Christ according to the flesh but only recognizes
Christ according to the spirit. To my mind, that polemic is similar to what we have in
Galatians against those who claim that their authority derives from closeness, even family
ties, with Jesus, the Jew born of a woman. Finally, it has been suggested that Romans
1:3 4 ( Concerning His son who was born of the seed of David
according to the flesh, and declared to be the son of God in power, according to the
spirit of Holiness, by the resurrection from the dead ) represents a Pauline
gloss on a liturgical formula of the early Church for describing Jesus as the son of David
and thus as ethnically Jewish. Paul reverses the value of this formula by insisting that
this refers only to Jesus' birth according to the flesh, while according to the Holy
Spirit, Jesus is the son of God thus rendering his ethnic and family ties, if not
worthless Romans 9:5 , of decidedly less importance! Paul's
genius is to be found in this: That which his Jewish Christian opponents cited as the
defect in his authority becomes for him precisely its point of greatest strength. I am not
imputing to Paul a mere rhetorical or political ploy but an argument which fits perfectly
with the entire structure of his thought. Maintaining the structure of binary oppositions
that I have cited above in Chapter 1, the apostleship of Peter and James is of an inferior
nature, because it is only from Jesus in the flesh (a man); it is the human teaching of a
human teacher, while Paul's revelatory vision is not of the human Jesus but of Christ
according to the spirit.
Or am I seeking to please men?
Or am I seeking to please men? If I were still pleasing men, I would
not be Christ's slave. For I would have you know, brothers, that the gospel preached by me
is not human in nature. For I did not receive it from man, nor was I taught, but through a
revelation of Jesus Christ.
In direct counter to the charge of the Jewish Christians that I have
just cited, Paul argues that while their gospel is only a human teaching, and therefore
not truly a gospel but only a teaching like any other, his gospel came directly through a
revelation of Jesus, that is, of course, Jesus in the spirit (Longenecker 1990, 5). The
defect in his apostleship has been turned into its very source of strength.
I did not confer with flesh and blood
For you have heard of my former way of life in Judaism ¦and
that I advanced in Judaism beyond many among my people who were of the same age, since I
was far more zealous for the traditions of my forefathers. But when it pleased him who had
set me aside from my mother's womb and called me through his grace to reveal his son in
me, in order that I might preach him among the gentiles, immediately I did not confer with
flesh and blood, nor did I go up to Jerusalem, to those who were apostles before me.
Betz understands these claims of Paul's to be in a philosophical
tradition whereby the autodidact and the pneumatic is superior to the one who has received
teaching through sane and rational means. I would like to argue that the burden of Paul's
argument is different. Once more, on my view, he is contrasting the source of knowledge of
his Jerusalem opponents, Peter and James, with his own, and his opponents are found
wanting. Why precisely does Paul mention here his zeal and his advancement in learning of
the traditions of his forefathers? I think it is because the precise claim that Peter and
James had made against him is, in effect, that they have a paradosis of Jesus which
Paul does not. Paul then says: If it is paradosis that is required, then I have had a
greater paradosis than yours. If all that the coming of Christ means is some correctives
to the teaching of traditional Judaism, of the traditions of the Fathers, then what did it
accomplish? If there has not been a fundamental change in the structure of salvation, then
the sacrifice of Jesus on the cross would have been in vain, as Paul will say openly later
on. The source of my knowledge, he says, is not of the same type as the source of
knowledge that I had when I was advancing in the traditions of genealogical fathers, but
rather the direct revelation in the spirit of Christ is in me. Paul's next
sentence immediately I did not confer with flesh and
blood is now fully intelligible, whereas until now it has been
held to be puzzling. As Betz puts the problem: Strangely, he does it first
of all negatively, saying what he did not do: immediately I did not
confer ¦'. It is obvious that Paul wants to underscore his immediate reaction to
the call. Why does he not simply state his obedience, as he does in Acts
26:19 20? The negative statement is indeed mysterious (Betz
1979, 72). This is one of the points where I believe that my interpretation solves
exegetical problems which previous theses have not: Paul's
negative statement is exactly the essence of his argument.
Paul is emphasizing the superiority of his gospel precisely because it has no human, no
fleshly, origin but only the content of the revelation of Christ in him. Therefore, he did
not go up to Jerusalem or consult with flesh and blood (a calque on the normal
Hebrew expression ××“× ×¨×©×¤ for human beings, as
opposed to God), having been vouchsafed a source of knowledge so far superior to the
knowledge that the flesh and blood possessed. Paul's usage of this precise term here is
not fortuitous, since for him, as we have seen, Jesus according to the
flesh and Israel according to the flesh are both
technical terms. He is making the case for his dualist hierarchy, here at the level of
epistemology. Paul's revelatory experience was, indeed, of supreme importance to him, as
we shall also see below in discussing Galatians 3. To deny the supreme importance to him
of this experience would be to call Paul a liar, something which is entirely against my
intent. The issue is not whether Paul was a mystic but rather what function his mysticism
played in the formation of his doctrine and practice.
Paul sets up here the argument that will serve him well throughout the
letter: If business is to continue as usual, with the traditions of the Fathers in place
and observance of the commandments still required, and, moreover, with the Church claiming
another sort of flesh-and-blood paradosis as well, then what possible purpose did the
crucifixion serve? Notice that this obviates the old exegetical question of the
relationship between Paul's vision of the risen Christ and the content of his gospel (cf.
Betz 1979, 64 65). The vision and gospel are one, because the vision of the
risen Christ is what enabled Paul to understand the allegorical structure of the entire
cosmos as the solution to the problem of the Other and thus to set out on the road to
Arabia, in order that I might preach him among the gentiles.
Conference in Jerusalem: Confrontation in Antioch
(2:1 2:14)
The famous and notoriously difficult reports of Paul's two
face-to-face confrontations with the leaders of Jewish
Christianity must be understood in the light of an overall construction of
Pauline thinking. The crux of the matter, to my mind, is the question of when (or indeed
whether) Paul argued that circumcision and observance of such commandments as the laws of
kashruth were abrogated not only for ethnic gentiles but for ethnic Jews as well. I
suggest that for the logic of Paul's theology, which was complete in its entirety from the
first moment of his revelation, there was not the slightest importance to the observance
of such rites for Jews or gentiles. This does not mean, however, that such observances and
their historical meanings are coded by Paul as bad. They are
simply lower on the hierarchy of values and thus sacrificeable to a higher cause. My
interpretation is somewhat different in nuance from that of Davies, who writes:
Nevertheless, although the universalism that we have noticed was implicit in
the depth of Paul's experience of God in Christ from the first, its explicit formulation
in thought was a slow process, and its strict logical expression in life was never
achieved (1965, 58). Davies further regards the
inconsistencies of Paul as engendered by unresolved personal
conflicts: In fact, both in life and thought, the Book of Acts and the
Epistles of Paul reveal a conflict between the claims of the old Israel after the flesh
and the new Israel after the spirit, between his nationalism
and his Christianity. It is, indeed, from this tension that there arose most of the
inconsistencies that have puzzled interpreters of Paul; and it is only in the light of the
Judaism of the first century A.D. that this is to be
understood (59). I would argue that Paul's
universalism was complete from the first moment, and that
Galatians, one of the earliest of his letters, demonstrates this. On the other hand, his
dual valorization of both spirit and body did not allow him to discount entirely the
claims of the literal, physical Israel according to the body. I will make a similar case
in Chapter 8 vis-Ã -vis gender also. In my view, the tension is not a residue of
unresolved inner conflict in Paul so much as a necessary tension of his ontology,
hermeneutics, and anthropology even his christology which are,
for me, all strongly parallel.
Owing, therefore, to Paul's conviction that literal observance was
merely irrelevant, being only in the flesh (i.e., it was not sinful striving for
works-righteousness à la the Lutheran tradition), he was willing to allow Jews to
continue observing such commandments if they chose to, until such observance conflicted
with the fundamental meaning and message of the gospel as Paul understood it, namely,
the constitution of all of the Peoples of the world as the new Israel (Segal 1990,
215 16; Sanders 1983, 178; compare Davies 1984, 139). Paul says as much when
he writes in 1 Corinthians 7:19 that neither circumcision nor uncircumcision is anything.
The practices themselves are adiaphora; it is their interference with the one-ness of the
new Israel that disturbs the apostle. The two most obvious such conflicts possible would
be any attempt to suggest to the gentiles that in order to be full members of the People
of God they must observe the commandments of the Law, such as circumcision and the rules
of kashruth, or any observance on the part of Jewish Christians which would lead to a
social split and hierarchical structure for the relations between ethnic Jews and gentiles
within the Church, thus defeating Paul's whole purpose. In the light of this consideration
I think we can read the accounts of Jerusalem and Antioch confrontations with Peter and
his associates.
At stake at the Jerusalem conference was the first of the two possible
threats to the integrity of Paul's gospel, namely, the claim of the Jewish Christians that
gentiles must be circumcised (which alone counts as conversion to Judaism) in order to
join the People of God. Yielding or losing this point would, indeed, have resulted in his
having run in vain, just as losing the analogous point now with the Galatians would also
result in his and their having run in vain (cf. 3:4), because the whole content of Paul's
gospel, as I have understood it, is that the physical observances that constitute the
physical Israel as the People of God have been transmuted and fulfilled in the
allegorical signification in the spirit, thereby constituting the faithful gentiles as
Israel in the spirit. This is why it is absolutely vital for Paul that he prove that he
has not given in on the question of circumcision as a conversion ritual and requirement,
and the ocular proof of Titus's uncircumcision makes that point as no other could:
Yet not even Titus who was with me was compelled to be
circumcised (Galatians 2:3).
This also provides us with an explanation of the difficult expression at
2:6, that what they were makes no difference to me, God does not show
partiality. I emphatically endorse, with Betz,
the position of a long line of scholars who believe that Paul means to
refer to the life of the apostles before Pentecost: they may have had fellowship with the
historical and, in particular, with the resurrected Jesus-Messiah; they themselves or
others may base their reputation upon that fellowship; or James may even be a relative of
the [ Christ according to the flesh ] (cf. 2 Cor 5:16), [yet]
God did not pay attention to these historical qualifications when he called Paul. (Betz
1979, 93)
The operative word here is historical,
because history to be sure, the concept is somewhat
anachronistic for Paul has the same valence as according to the
flesh. Israel according to the flesh appealed to history to validate its
claim that it alone was the People of God, so once more, as above, were Paul to accept the
claim of superiority on the part of Peter and James owing to knowledge of the historical
Jesus, and even worse to genealogical connection with him, he would have completely
undermined and destroyed the point of his whole mission and spiritual life. Again we see
Paul's cultural/religious politics and his political struggles converging brilliantly at a
single point, the point of distinction between that which is merely
and that which is
Ïνεῦμα.
In the incident at Antioch we see the conflict over the other possible
threat to Paul's gospel of inclusion of the gentiles qua gentiles in the People of God,
that is, the disruptiveness of Jews and gentiles having different and inherently divisive
food practices, when they are living together in the same community as they are at
Antioch. According to the narrative that Paul presents, Peter himself had realized this
originally, and he also had eaten together with the gentiles, which certainly means he had
eaten the non-kosher food of the gentiles. Otherwise, there would have been no violation
at all of Jewish Law. As Betz puts it, he [Peter] had the same theological
convictions as Paul, but he did not dare to express them (Betz 1979, 108).
This provides strong evidence in my view that Paul himself had not ever agreed (at least
not in his heart) that there were really two gospels, one to the circumcision (and
preaching circumcision) and one to the uncircumcision (and preaching uncircumcision). His
statement about the Jerusalem conference to the effect that there were two gospels simply
reflects the compromise agreement that he made and not his true theological understanding.
Else, how could he possibly object to Peter, the apostle to the circumcision, continuing
or returning to the performance of Jewish rites? Since Paul's concern was to include the
gentiles and not to disabuse the Jews of their outmoded notions, he was able to conclude
the agreement on those terms, as long as it did not threaten his mission (Engberg-Pedersen
1992, 688 89). Peter, by acceding to the demands of the people
from James that he return to Jewish food practices, provided that threat
(cf. the excellent formulation of Betz [1979, 112]), and Paul met it vigorously.
It is not by works of the Law that all flesh will be
justified
We who are Jews by birth and not sinners from Gentiles know that a
human being is not justified by works of the Law except through faith in Christ Jesus. So
we have also come to believe in Christ Jesus [καὶ
ἡμεá¿Ï εἰÏ
ΧÏιÏÏὸν 'ÎηÏοῦν
á¼ÏιÏÏεύÏαμεν], in order
that we might be justified by faith in Christ [á¼Îº
Ïá½·ÏÏεÏÏ
ΧÏιÏÏοῦ] and not by works of the Law, since it is
not by works of the Law that all flesh will be justified. If, however, we who are seeking
to be justified in Christ are also found to be sinners, is Christ then a servant of sin?
This can never be. For if I establish again what I have dissolved, I set myself up as a
transgressor.
This passage is only intelligible, in my view, if it is addressed to
Peter. It is irrelevant to me whether it was actually said to Peter at Antioch or whether
it is a hypothetical speech reconstructed by Paul for the benefit of the Galatians, but
its implied addressee is certainly Peter. He is using the language of Jewish Christians to
argue against them, for Paul himself, of course, does not regard the gentiles as
essentially sinners as opposed to Jews. He thus states: You and I were born Jews and under
the Law. That is, according to Jewish theology as we have known it until now, we already
possessed the means to salvation. We had no need of justification by faith, according to
that very theology. But we, you and I, came to the realization that that theology
was mistaken, and that by works of the Law, no one would be justified. Therefore, we
turned to faith in Christ Jesus (Hays 1985, 85). Now, if you by your actions imply that we
have been sinners in abandoning the Law, that very Law which you and I have confessed is
inadequate to redeem, then is our faith in Christ the testimony of sin? Clearly not so!
However, by reestablishing that which you have dissolved namely, by returning
to the observance of the Jewish food rituals and taboos you have confessed
yourself to be a transgressor, have set yourself up as a
transgressor by doing so. As for me, it is the very opposite.
It seems to me that a major interpretative issue has been often missed
in the commentaries on Galatians, to wit, answering the question of why Paul is
reciting here the entire narrative of the conference in Jerusalem and the confrontation at
Antioch. To my mind, this lengthy narration is only intelligible if it is intended as a
sort of parable or analogy of the situation in which the Galatians now find themselves.
The application of the present verse to the situation of the Galatians is crystal clear.
If you now take on yourself the obligations of the Law, you are then declaring that until
now you have been sinners, and thus undermining completely the doctrine of justification
by faith, and it will have all been in vain. The crucial issue for Paul is not the
theological question of what pleases God, but rather is the relations of the Jews and the
Nations (Hays 1985, 84). Paul is convinced that the Jewish-Christian doctrine of
justification by faith, which he assumes as a given both by him and his
opponents, provides the answer to this question, for in faith,
all people are one, while in practices they are divided into different tribes. Accordingly
Paul argues with Peter: Since you have come to the realization that these works are
insufficient for justification and that what is necessary is faith, why, then, do you
continue to insist (or allow yourself to be bullied into insisting) that works are
necessary? You thus defeat the whole purpose of Christ's coming, which was to free us from
the practices of Israel in the flesh by teaching us of their allegorical meaning for
Israel in the spirit, through his crucifixion which revealed his own dual nature and thus
figured our transformation.
It is really only at the very end of his letter that Paul reveals the
application of the Antioch parable to the Galatians situation: It is those
people who wish to make a nice appearance in the flesh that compel you to be
circumcised only so that they may not be persecuted because of the cross of
Christ. For not even the circumcisers themselves keep the Law, but they want you to be
circumcised, in order that they may boast in your flesh
(6:12 13).
This is absolutely the key passage to the understanding of Paul's
opponents in Galatia. It has to be read in the context of Paul's narration of the events
at Antioch, which as I emphasized above (not originally, of course) is recited by Paul as
an analogy, almost a typology, of the events in Galatia. Paul's opponents are not actually
Jewish Christians who insist on circumcision for salvation but essentially are in
consonance with Paul's theology; they hold that circumcision is not necessary. When
pressed, however, by the contemporary antitype of the men from
James, they have their gentile proselytes circumcised in order to escape
persecution, that very persecution that Paul himself alludes to when he writes,
But if I, my brothers, still preach circumcision, why am I still
persecuted? (5:11) These men, themselves, do not keep the Law, nor do they
intend that their converts will keep the Law they are essentially in
agreement with Paul but they cave in to pressure from the conservative wing
of the Jerusalem church. The analogy with Peter's behavior in Antioch is perfect, as well
as with Paul's charge against Peter: How can you ask these people to be circumcised when
you do not yourself keep the Law? The charge is not of hypocrisy, but of not standing firm
in that which is absolutely essential to the Christian message in Paul's view (Cosgrove
1988, 132 39). As I have already observed, the term
boast in Paul is often better translated have
confidence in or rely on than
boast about. Paul is adamant in his integrity. If the
Galatians accept circumcision, the whole purpose of the Christ event is destroyed. It will
all have been in vain. When Paul tells them, Look, I, Paul, tell you that if
you become circumcised, Christ will be of no benefit to you. I testify again to every man
who has become circumcised, that he is obliged to do the whole law
(5:2 3), his point is that by becoming circumcised they reject the message of
the Law of Faith or the Law of Christ, which he goes on to detail in the next and final
chapter. Willy-nilly, they will be acceding to the Jewish Christian doctrine of James and
his followers that only through entrance into the Law (that is, conversion to Judaism) can
anyone be saved. By showing their lack of faith in the power of the cross to save, they
give up their right to salvation by the cross, as opposed to Paul himself who writes,
But far be it from me to boast [again, to have confidence in] anything but
the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which [the cross] the world has been crucified
to me and I to the world (6:14). Paul ends his letter on a note of absolute
insistence: For neither circumcision nor uncircumcision is anything, but a
new creation (6:15). Only by entering into the new creation of Christ's
spiritual body, that is, into the New Israel that came into existence with the crucifixion
of his fleshly body, is anyone saved. When that fleshly, Jewish body (born of a Jew, under
the Law) was crucified, then the new spiritual universal body was created, thus erasing
the difference between the circumcised and the uncircumcised.
The Meaning of Justification
The term justification itself must be explicated. I have
suggested that Paul shares this terminology and even the specific term justification by
faith with his Jewish-Christian opponents, here personified by Peter. It is important
to realize, moreover, that the term justification itself is not a novum of
Christianity but simply a basic Jewish notion. It refers to the situation of the believer
at her last judgment (whether eschatological or merely after death is irrelevant here),
when the question is: Will I be acquitted by the divine court? Justification means
acquittal. The Greek is a calque (loan translation) on the Hebrew קדצ×,
which means both to be just or righteous and to be declared or recognized as
just or righteous. In addition, there is already biblical speculation on how one
becomes justified, whether through God's justice or through his mercy. The novelty of
Christianity is that faith in Christ is what counts (either alone or in combination with
works) at the divine Assizes. Paul's thought is therefore primarily soteriological, and
his determination is that all shall be saved by the same means. Such ethnic practices as
circumcision and refraining from eating shrimp could not possibly be the mechanism by
which Scythians and Celts (in Galatia) would be acquitted at the Last Judgment, because
these practices are specifically Jewish, whereas, as Sanders precisely formulates it,
Christ is the end of the law, so that there might be righteousness for all
who have faith. And therefore, according to Paul:
God's righteousness is, through Christ, available on the basis of
faith to all on equal footing. If God's righteousness is the righteousness which is by
faith in Christ and which is available to Gentile as well as Jew, then the Jewish
righteousness which was zealously sought is the righteousness available to the Jew alone
on the basis of observing the law. Their own righteousness,
in other words, means that righteousness which the Jews alone are privileged
to obtain rather than self-righteousness which consists in
individuals presenting their merits as a claim on God.
It is because it is God's righteousness that it could not possibly be
for Jews alone, as Paul explicitly says in Romans 3:29: Is God the God of
the Jews alone? To support this construction of the theology, detailed
exegesis of Paul's hermeneutic is necessary.
Paul's Midrash
Now, although I am claiming in this book that in one major way Paul's
hermeneutic stands in opposition to midrash, in another way he is very much within a
midrashic tradition. The fundamental hermeneutical stance which he takes to the text is
allegorical; that is, the language and even its apparent referents are understood as
pointing to a reality beyond themselves. This is then an entirely different orientation to
language from midrash in which the concrete reality both of the language and the history
which it encodes is absolutely primary. Paul, however, seems very able indeed to make use
of midrashic techniques of manipulation of biblical language. In a sense, this is
exactly what we would expect of Paul if we take his descriptions of himself seriously. A
Hellenistic Jew, thoroughly imbued with the ideology of middle-platonism but just as
thoroughly trained in contemporary Palestinian biblical hermeneutics, would perhaps
predictably produce biblical interpretation that is Hellenistic in ethos but often
Pharisaic in method. The following section of Galatians provides some excellent examples
of Paul's use of midrashic method.
The first example of how important this observation is for understanding
Paul is Galatians 2:16. It has already been recognized that the argument of this verse is
dependent on Psalms 143:2, but I think that the full measure of the midrash has not yet
been appreciated (Betz 1979, 118). Even James Dunn, who has made this verse the
cornerstone of his argument, and with whose approach I largely agree, has not fully
plumbed the depths of this verse (Dunn 1990, 183 214). Paul assumes as a given
of his argument that works do not justify. This is not, then, what he is trying to prove
here. What the commentators seem to have missed is that Paul is not reading Psalms 143:2
alone but together with its preceding verse. The two verses are:
|
Lord, hear my prayer, listen to my supplication in your faith. Answer me in your
justice. |
|
Do not reproach your servant with statute, for no living being will be justified
[declared just] before you. |
I think that Paul's only extravagant exegetical move here is to read
your faith as faith in You. All
the rest of his doctrine then follows. No living being will be justified (= acquitted)
before you by statute ; therefore, we are dependent on our
supplication in faith in order for us to be answered by Your justice (= justification,
acquittal).
This interpretation accomplishes several purposes. First of all, I think
that it definitively establishes Dunn's point that justification here is simply the Jewish
doctrine of vindication by God and not transfer terminology. Second, it strongly argues
for Dunn's other main point, that what is bothering Paul is the ethnic exclusivity of
Torah-righteousness. The word ×פש×, which I have translated
statute, in other contexts in Psalms itself, refers precisely
to the Jewish Law of the Torah which explicitly marks off the Jews from others.
He has spoken his words to Jacob, his laws and statutes to Israel. He
has not done so for any other nation, and statutes, they do not know
(Psalms 147:16 17). Accordingly Paul's interpretation of these verses is just
perfect for his argument. David is asking for God to acquit him on the basis of his
supplication in faith, because if no human being can be righteous, then failure to keep
the statutes (which are specifically and explicitly special to Israel) cannot be the
determining factor of salvation. All this becomes a powerful argument in favor of the
replacement of works of the Torah, Jewish ritual observances
by faith, and Paul's argument against Peter is complete. Note that David's supplication to
God to answer me in Your justice is paradoxically that he come
to judge not on the basis of statute but on the basis of
faith!
While with regard to the specifics of the midrash, I have departed from
Dunn's reading, it should be emphasized that in respect to the content, I am in full
agreement with him, and I believe that this reading only strengthens his point that
works of the law, epitomized in this letter by circumcision, are precisely
acts of the flesh. To insist on circumcision is to give a primacy to the physical level of
relationship which Paul can no longer accept (Dunn 1990, 199). The only
thing that puzzles me is why Dunn, having come this far, writes by that
course, Paul will not intend a dualism between spirit and matter, however dualistic his
antithesis between spirit and flesh may seem later on in Galatians 5. ¦But
the word flesh also embraces the thought of a merely human
relationship, of a heritage determined by physical descent, as in the allegory of
Galatians 4 (199 [emphasis added]). On the contrary, it is precisely the
dualism between flesh and spirit which makes possible this very allegory, so this is
exactly what Paul intends. This physical descent is an affair
of matter, just as spiritual kinship is an affair, tautologically, of the spirit, so there
is no but here. And this is just what makes Paul's gospel new
vis-Ã -vis traditional Jewish ideologies of sin and redemption (including this very
Psalm), which, as has been often shown, also presuppose the need for God's mercy, since
no one can be completely righteous. What is new in Paul is not the notion that one
cannot be justified by acquiring merits but the notion that faith is the spiritual
signified of which convenantal nomism is the material signifier, and that in Christ the
signified has completely replaced the signifier. As Dunn has put it, The new
age calls for a practice of the law (including circumcision)that need not include the
outward rite (Dunn 1988, 121). Physical relationship = physical
practices (circumcision the very symbol of genealogy) = literal meaning, but spiritual
relationship (Israel in the spirit) = faith = allegory. It is in this sense that Paul can
appear to be abrogating the Law at the same time he claims to be fulfilling it; he
fulfills the alleged allegorical sense, while abrogating the literal (doing). The
allegorical is universal while the letter is particular. The allegorical gives life, but
the letter kills.
Circumcision and the Spirit: The Meaning of Pauline Conversion
A very important line of modern Pauline scholarship regards Paul's
conversion experience as primary and derives all of Paul's reflections from that
fundamental moment. In its religious form, this view is simply that Christ appeared to
Paul, and Paul drew the consequences of this revelation. In its secular form, this way of
thinking about Paul has been considered most elaborately by Alan Segal in his Paul the
Convert (1990). Segal applies insights from the social psychology of conversion and
argues by analogy to modern conversion experiences that only after conversion to the new
religion does the convert identify what was wrong with her
previous religion. It seems to me, however, that whether or not converts can account for
why they converted or whether or not it is possible to predict who will convert to another
religion, it is nevertheless the case that some social or psychological factors must have
prepared the potential conversion or mystical experience. In Paul's case, when it is
possible to identify a theme of critique of the previous religious system which is
plausible in itself in other words, which corresponds to what we know of that
system and corresponds, moreover, to other contemporaneous critiques it seems
to me a violation of Occam's razor to assume that this critique had not motivated the
conversion, and not vice versa. While the experience of being in the Spirit as a mystical
event is certainly essential in Pauline religion, as my discussion of Galatians 3 below
will show, I do not think that Paul's own mystical experience was unprepared for by his
past.
The principal area of difference is that I place much less weight on
Paul's mysticism than Segal does. Although I am impressed by Segal's argument that Paul
provides precious evidence for mysticism in first-century Judaism, I am not persuaded that
this is the primary explanatory category for Paul's texts and activities (1990,
34 72). This is not to say that I deny either the reality of Paul's mystical
experience or its significance within his religious life; all I would deny is its primacy.
For Segal the experience of ecstasy was cardinal, and the christological interpretation a
later phenomenon of Paul's experience in a Christian community. This leaves somewhat
unexplained Paul's turn to that very Christian community, which Segal argues can be
explained through the psycho-sociological study of modern conversion experience:
A convert is usually someone who identifies, at least retrospectively, a
lack in the world, finding a remedy in the new reality promulgated by the new
group (1990, 75). My problem is, of course, with at least
retrospectively. If there were no perception of lack in the world, then why
would the convert be a religious quester to start with? I
think we must begin, then, with the lack, that which I have called the critique.
Since I do not imagine that Paul was psychologically abnormal,
I ask what were the cultural and social conditions that led Paul to have such an
experience? None of this, however, denies the reality or the central importance of the
mystical experience as providing precisely the solution to the plight.
In an article otherwise quite compatible with the view of Paul adopted
here, Segal writes, Paul himself essentially is converted by his vision of
Christ from the perspective of a Pharisee, a right-wing one at that, to a perspective that
is more characteristic of left-wing Pharisees and more
Hellenistic Jews (Segal 1992). I find this an
improbable formulation and strongly prefer a view which would perceive in Paul a conflict
to begin with, one which his evident Greek linguistic culture would have prepared, which
was resolved by his conversion. In Paul, I argue, the agony preceded the ecstasy.
Nevertheless, no rich and responsible reading of Paul can ignore the vital role that
pneumaticism does play in his thought, the Spirit not only as a hermeneutic principle but
also as a vital force and experience in Christian life. Here, I wish to show that these
two aspects of the meaning of spirit in Paul are homologous
and contribute together to the production of the same system of meanings. N. T. Wright has
suggested just the right balance in my view, in defining Pauline
theology :
If we were to specify the content of this set of beliefs, it would be
natural to begin with definitely Jewish categories, since Paul by his own admission
continued to understand his work from the standpoint of one who had been a zealous
Pharisaic Jew; and that would mean grouping them under the twin heads of Jewish theology,
viz. monotheism and election, God and Israel. Indeed, my underlying argument throughout my
discussion of Paul, here and elsewhere, is that his theology consists precisely in the
redefinition, by means of christology and pneumatology, of those two key Jewish doctrines.
(1992a, 1, 7)
Galatians 3 is the chapter in which Paul's pneumaticism, summed up by
the phrase baptism in the Spirit, is most richly shown,
although, interestingly enough, the term does not occur in this letter. The
relevant context begins, however, in chapter 2 of that epistle.
For through the Law I died to the Law
For through the Law I died to the Law, in order that I might live for
God. I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives
in me; and what I now live in the flesh I live in faith in the Son of God who loved me and
gave himself up for me.
Paul's paradoxical formulation here is a crux. What does it mean to
say that through the Torah he died to the Torah? My suggestion is that this must be
understood in the light of Paul's paradoxical opposition of the true Torah to that which
is understood as Torah by other Jews, as we have seen in our reading of Romans 2 above.
Paul's whole argument there is that there is a true Law (the Law of faith; 3:27), and that
this Law is different from the false Law of the observances of physical rites and the
trust in physical genealogical connection. The true Law is the spiritual, allegorical,
inward interpretation of the external, which is only its sign. In our verse in Galatians,
Paul is arguing exactly the same proposition and giving it its christological foundation
as well. Through the true meaning of the Law, which was revealed in the crucifixion and
resurrection of Christ as a hermeneutic key and as a mysterious transformation, I
have died to the old (mis)understanding of the Law as the outward observance which makes
one (so I thought) a real Jew. Paul is referring here to the christological apocalypse he
experienced and which, I will argue, the Galatians experienced as well. This
interpretation is certified by the phraseological identity of the á¼Î½
á¼Î¼Î¿á½· both places (Betz 1979, 124). This is gnostic in the
etymological sense of a knowledge which transforms the person of the knower entirely.
Bultmann's descriptions of the Hellenistic mystic fit Paul perfectly at this moment:
Man is related to the other world by participation in it. Something in
him has come from that other world, that world of light. Depending on which mythical or
cultic tradition determines the thought patterns, it is there from the very beginning as a
primeval portion of light that has descended into matter, or it is the result of some
change or influx due to a sacrament or an ecstatic experience. This something in man is
regarded as the essential element in the one born again. And yet it has no necessary
connection with the empirical man, with his acts and his fate. (1967, 19 20)
This is very close indeed to the Pauline discourse on the meaning of
dying with Christ as an ecstatic experience and baptism as a sacrament in Galatians.
Paul follows this with a remarkable and necessary corollary to his
argument. His Jerusalem opponents could certainly have argued something to the effect that
while it is true that Christ's coming has redeemed the spirit, we who still dwell in flesh
must observe the Torah in order to control the flesh and make it as well obedient to God's
will. Paul counters this by saying that the very dwelling in the flesh is only apparent.
In reality, he is no longer living in the flesh but in a hidden spiritual existence called
Christ living in me. A passage from the Corpus hermeticum, Chapter xiii, cited by
Bultmann, provides an extraordinary parallel (however Bultmann himself quite puzzlingly
fails to note this parallel):
Seeing in myself an immaterial vision, produced by the mercy of God, I
have left myself in order to enter into an immortal body, and I am now no longer what I
was, but I have been begotten in the intellect. This cannot be taught, and it cannot be
seen by means of the material elements through which we see below. This is why I am no
longer concerned with this initial created form which was my own. I have no more color,
cannot be touched, and do not extend in space; all that is foreign to me. Now, my child,
you see me with your eyes, but what I am you cannot understand when you look at me with
your body's eyes and with the physical sight. It is not with those eyes that anyone can
see me now, my child. (Bultmann 1967, 18 19)
Note the extraordinarily clear platonistic influence on this passage as
well. Although Paul has not physically died, it is Christ who lives in him. He was
crucified with Christ, and he has been transformed into the sort of being that Christ was,
only apparently fleshly but through faith entirely spiritual. Observances in the flesh
would seem, then, totally irrelevant. The practical consequence of this can
be either libertinism or asceticism (Bultmann 1967, 21). It is easy to see
how the Corinthians misunderstood such preaching.
Having begun in the spirit, are you now finishing up in
the flesh?
You foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you, before whose eyes Jesus
Christ crucified was so vividly portrayed. This only do I want to learn from you: did you
receive the Spirit by works of the Law or by the hearing of faith? Are you so foolish?
Having begun in the spirit, are you now finishing up in the flesh? Have you experienced
such things in vain? If so, it really was in vain. Does he, therefore, who supplies the
Spirit to you and who works miracles in you [do so] by works of the Law or by the hearing
of faith?
Paul is arguing here that the Galatians have partaken of exactly the
same sort of transformative experience that Paul himself underwent, and now, in contrast
to him, they wish to nullify it. He does not deny the grace of God. For if
justification came through Law Christ has died in vain (2:21), but they, by
their desire to accept the Law, do deny the grace of God and show that Christ has died in
vain.
I suggest that this before your eyes
suggests a platonic eyes of the mind, in which visions are
seen. Paul's depiction here is the implementation of enargeia. In any case, the
analogy between Paul's own vision of the crucified Christ and that of the Galatians is
enhanced by the use of á¼Î½ ὑμá¿Î½,
in you, which echoes the á¼Î½
ἑμοί by which Paul describes his own experience. The
hearing of faith has been much discussed (Hays 1983,
143 45). Does this refer to God's act of proclamation (which the Greek
allows) or the human act of hearing? I think that it is both, understood as a single act.
Paul exploits the very ambiguity of the Greek in order to make an extraordinarily rich and
multivalent claim. This hearing, because it is
of faith, I would suggest is a hearing with the ears of the
soul like the seeing with the eyes of the mind. God declares, and the humans
hear, in one soteriological (and mystical) moment of Paul's preaching and the Galatians'
baptismal response. This double motion of God's faith and human faith will connect the
rest of the chapter as well. In Abraham we find both the promise, which will be fulfilled
through the coming of Christ into the world, and the faith in the promise, which is
fulfilled by people entering into Christ faithfully. The beginning and the end of
Galatians 3 hold together perfectly, as Hays has already argued, albeit on somewhat
different grounds (1983, 193 214). Because the spirit is given through faith
and not by works of the Law, therefore, There is no Jew or Greek in
Christ, á¼Î½ ΧÏιÏÏá¿·, which
I take to be virtually equal in force to in the spirit, á¼Î½
ÏνεύμαÏι.
The ratio, spirit is to flesh as faith is to law, is here made
absolutely explicit, thus establishing the dualist movement of Paul's thought.
Spirit here is functioning in two very closely related senses,
which contribute enormously to the effectiveness of the argument. On the one hand,
obviously, Paul is referring to the Holy Spirit which manifests itself as a gift in the
life of the Galatian community, but, on the other hand, he coordinates with it spirit as
one of the poles of the dyad: flesh / spirit. We then get another one of the analogical
equations that Paul, following common Hellenistic usage, finds so useful and
so obvious that they often do not need to be explicitly drawn. Cosgrove remarks that
The Spirit/ flesh antithesis is put to a wide variety of uses by the
apostle; it is not simply another way of expressing the polarity between faith and works
of the law (1988, 46). True enough, but at the same time, I would argue that
whenever Paul uses a dichotomy of this sort and spirit/flesh is one of the
most powerful for him all of its associated, analogical dichotomies are being
called into play at the same time. Since flesh means literal
observance (works) and especially circumcision in the flesh,
spirit means faith, so it is absurd in Paul's view,
almost a contradiction in terms, to expect manifestations of the Spirit to be the product
of works. They belong on opposite sides of the dualist hermeneutical structure. I think we
do better to listen closely to the rich overtones of Pauline language, the way its
polysemy increases its power, rather than trying to resolve the ambiguities at every
moment.
The final two sentences, which have been the occasion of much exegesis,
make perfect sense on my reading, for as I have argued, Paul's concern is that any notion
of the obligatory nature of physical observances makes nonsense of the completion of the
meaning of such observances in the spiritual signifieds. So if the Galatians now accede to
the notion that they must be perfected in the flesh, they
would render the gifts of the spirit in vain. If
so then means, If you do this thing and have yourselves
circumcised. Since the Galatians have not yet done so, it is simply a
conditional. If they do not make this grave error, then it will not have been in vain. I
would tentatively suggest that Paul's opponents here had been promoting a doctrine that
vision in the Holy Spirit is only available to the circumcised.
From My Flesh I Will See God
From rabbinic texts albeit quite a bit later than
Paul we actually learn of the view hypothesized as a genuine Jewish
theologoumenon. Some of the Rabbis read circumcision as a necessary preparation for seeing
God, the summum bonum of late-antique religious life (Boyarin 1990a). This is, of
course, an entirely different hermeneutic structure from platonic allegorizing, because
although a spiritual meaning is assigned to the corporeal act, the corporeal act is not
the signifier of that meaning but its very constitution. That is, circumcision here is not
the sign of something happening in the spirit of the Jew, but it is the very event
itself and it is, of course, in his body. Moreover, as I have argued
elsewhere, for the rabbinic formation, this seeing of God was not understood as the
spiritual vision of a platonic eye of the mind, but as the physical seeing of fleshly eyes
at a real moment in history (1990a). Thus, even when it spiritualizes, the rabbinic
tradition does so entirely through the body. Spirit here is an aspect of body, almost, I
would say, the same spirit that experiences the pleasure of sex through the body, and not
something apart from, beyond or above the body.
Elliot Wolfson has gathered the rabbinic (and later) material connecting
circumcision with vision of God:
It is written, This, after my skin will have been peeled
off, but from my flesh, I will see God [Job 19:26]. Abraham said, after I
circumcised myself many converts came to cleave to this sign. But from my
flesh, I will see God, for had I not done this [circumcised myself], on what
account would the Holy Blessed One, have appeared to me? And the Lord
appeared to him [Genesis Rabbah 48:1, 479].
As Wolfson correctly observes there are two hermeneutic moves being made
simultaneously in this midrash (1987b, 192 93). The first involves
interpretation of the sequence in the Genesis text of Genesis 17:1 14, which
is the description of Abraham's circumcision and Genesis 17:23 ff., which begins,
And The Lord appeared to Abraham in Elone Mamre. The midrash,
following its usual canons of interpretation, attributes strong causal nexus to these
events following on one another. Had Abraham not circumcised himself, then God would not
have appeared to him. This interpretation is splendidly confirmed by the Job verse. The
Rabbis considered the Book of Job, together with the other Holy Writings, to be an
exegetical text that has the function of interpreting (or guiding interpretation of) the
Torah. In this case, the verse of Job, which refers to the peeling off of skin, is taken
by a brilliant appropriation to refer to the peeling off of skin of circumcision, and the
continuation of the verse, which speaks of seeing God from one's flesh, is taken as a
reference to the theophany at Elone Mamre. The reading of sequence of the Torah's text is
confirmed by the explicit causality which the Job text inscribes. Circumcision of the
flesh peeling of the skin provides the vision of God. As Wolfson
remarks, this midrash constitutes an interpretation of circumcision that directly counters
the Pauline one: The emphasis on Abraham's circumcision ¦can only be
seen as a tacit rejection of the Christian position that circumcision of the flesh had
been replaced by circumcision of the spirit (enacted in baptism) (1987b,
194). The physical act of circumcision in the flesh, which prepares the (male) Jew
for sexual intercourse, is also that which prepares him for Divine intercourse. It is
hard, therefore, to escape the association of sexual and mystical experience in this text.
The strongly eroticized character of the experience of seeing God,
established by the interpretation of circumcision, is made virtually explicit in another
(later) midrashic text, Numbers Rabbah 12:10, also cited by Wolfson (1987b,
196 97):
O, Daughters of Zion, go forth, and gaze upon King Solomon, wearing
the crown that his mother made for him on his wedding day, on his day of bliss [Song
of Songs 3:11]: It speaks about the time when the Presence rested in the Tabernacle.
Go forth and gaze, as it is said, And all the
people saw and shouted and fell on their faces [Leviticus 9:24].
The daughters of Zion, those who were distinguished by
circumcision, for if they were uncircumcised they would not have been able to look upon
the Presence. ¦And thus it says, Moses said: This is the thing which
the Lord has commanded that you do, in order that the Glory of the Lord may appear to
you [Leviticus 9:6]. What was this thing ? He
told them about circumcision, for it says, This is the thing which caused
Joshua to perform circumcision [Joshua 5:4]. ¦
Therefore, Moses said to them, God commanded Abraham, your father, to
perform circumcision when He wished to appear to him. So in your case, whoever is
uncircumcised, let him go out and circumcise himself, that the Glory of the
Lord may appear to you [Leviticus 9:6]. Thus Solomon said, O
Daughters of Zion, go forth and gaze upon King Solomon, the King who desires
those who are perfect, as it is written, Walk before Me and be
blameless [Genesis 17:1], for the foreskin is a blemish upon the body.
This is indeed a remarkable text, not least for the blurring of gender
which it encodes in its interpretative moves. Consistently with the entire midrashic
enterprise of interpreting the Song of Songs, the verse in question is historicized as
well. It is taken to refer to the event described in Leviticus 9, in which the entire
People of Israel had a marvelous vision of God. This event is interpreted as a wedding
between God and Israel, as are other moments of revelatory vision of God, such as the
hierophany at Mount Sinai. The verse of Song of Songs that refers to King Solomon's
wedding is taken, then, as an interpretation of the wedding day between God and Israel
described in Leviticus. But complications begin. By a typical midrashic pun, King Solomon
(Schelomo) is turned into God, the King who requires perfection (Schelemut).
If the male partner is God, then the female partner must be Israel. Accordingly, the
Daughters of Zion are Israel. However, this also results in a
gender paradox, for many of the Israelites who participated in that Divine vision were
men. Those very Daughters of Zion are accordingly understood as males. The word
Zion (Hebrew Tsiyyon) is taken as a noun derived from
the root ts/y/n, to be marked, and accordingly the Daughters of Tsiyyon are read as
the circumcised men of Israel.
I would like to suggest that more than midrashic arbitrariness is at
work here, for the mystical experience au fond, when experienced erotically, often
involves (in the West?) gender paradox. The mystical experience is interpreted as a
penetration by the Divine word or spirit into the body and soul of the adept. This is
accordingly an image of sex in which the mystic is figured as the female partner. This
paradoxical gender assignment (when the mystic is biologically male) is a problem for
erotic mystic imagery (Eilberg-Schwartz 1991). Verna Harrison has described a similar
issue in the work of Gregory of Nyssa:
When the human receptacle is described allegorically in terms of
sexuality, it has to be represented as female. It is no accident that in his first work, On
Virginity, and in one of his last, the great Commentary on the Song of Songs,
Gregory chooses feminine language to speak of the human person, especially in describing
our relations with God, which for him are the definitive aspect of human identity and
existence. ¦In the treatise On Those Who Have Fallen Asleep, he speculates
that in the resurrection human reproductive faculties may be transformed into a capacity
to become impregnated with life from God and bring forth various forms of goodness from
within oneself. This suggests that although human persons can be either male or female in
this world and will be neither male nor female in the next (cf. Gal. 3.28), on a different
level they all relate to God in a female way, as bride to Bridegroom. (Harrison 1992,
118 19)
My perhaps too bold suggestion is that our midrashic text is related to
the same paradox of mystical experience. Circumcision is understood by the midrash text as
feminizing the male, thus making him open to receive the Divine speech and vision of God.
My interpretation of this midrash is that of medieval mystics (E. Wolfson 1987b, 198 ff.):
R. Yose said, Why is it written, And the Lord will pass over
the door [literally opening] [Exodus 12:23]? ¦ Over the
opening, read it literally as opening'! That is, the opening
of the body. And what is the opening of the body? That is the circumcision
(Zohar 2, 36a, cited in E. Wolfson [1987b, 204]). Although this text is a pseudepigraph of
the thirteenth century, I am suggesting that the idea is already embryonic in the
midrashic text, in which circumcised men are daughters. The
mystic pseudepigraph would then be making explicit that which is implicit in the earlier
formation. Thus, we have indeed evidence for the possibility of a Jewish (and Jewish
Christian) view that regarded circumcision as necessary preparation for experiencing the
Spirit. Note once more how that view is grounded precisely in the flesh.
From my flesh [my circumcised penis] I will see God. Were such
a view current among Paul's opponents in Galatia we would easily understand his charge,
Having begun in the spirit, are you now finishing up in the
flesh? The reason that this suggestion must be very tentative is that, as
far as I know, the only evidence for such a doctrine is post-Pauline and therefore could
very well be interpreted as a response to Paul. Nevertheless it remains very
attractive to me to speculate that such a doctrine already existed among the
Jews and thus the Judaeo-Christians, for then Paul's argument
here has enormous force. They are telling you that only the circumcised can
see God, but you yourselves have already experienced visual experiences in the Holy
Spirit, so their claim is shown to be a lie! Moreover, since the spirit is higher than the
flesh, and you have already jumped (from the very beginning) to that level, will you now
return to the lower level of the flesh? Another possibility is that
Paul is simply contrasting two forms of initiation as such: the higher one, baptism, which
is in the spirit, and the lower one, circumcision, which is in the flesh. It may even be
that Paul's crucial flesh / spirit dyad is initially generated by this very opposition. In
any case, it enters into a very rich texture of associations and meanings in his thought
that go far beyond the moment. One way of saying this and of seeing
it would be to understand this fundamental opposition as reproduced entirely
at every moment in his discourse, as its foundational, structuring, generating
key symbol.
Freedom or Anarchy?
In order to understand Paul, surely one of the key texts is Galatians
5:14. Paul's rhetoric in this passage is apparently confusing and has led interpreters to
directly opposing conclusions. In verse 14 For the whole law is
fulfilled in one word, You shall love your neighbor as
yourself he seems to be upholding the Law. But
just a few verses later, in verse 19 he seems to speak of the Law as irrelevant:
But if you are led by the Spirit you are not under the law.
Some have seen here (in verse 14) an apparent contradiction to his view that the Law is
abrogated; after all, he cites the Law here and ordains that it be kept in some sense or
other, while others with equal justice see this passage as the center of Paul's
attack on the Law. Some of these interpreters have gone so far
as to regard 5:14 as ironic. A third view sees Paul as
contradicting himself within the space of three verses. E. P. Sanders contributed a
searching discussion of these passages in Paul. He has well demonstrated the inadequacy of
all earlier interpretations (1983, 93 105; Thielman 1989,
50 54). He shows that Hans Hübner's distinction between the
whole law (5:3) as the Jewish Law and all the
Law (5:14) as a Law which has nothing to do with the Jewish Torah is
impossible (Sanders 1983, 96). He moreover shows that the notion that Paul distinguishes
between the Law perverted (by Jews) and the Law as it was intended does not hold because
Paul never refers to Jewish practice of the Law as perverted. There is, moreover, as
Sanders demonstrates, little in Paul to commend the view of Bultmann and his followers
that Paul condemns the Law pursued for salvation, while he upholds the (same) Law pursued
for the fulfilling of God's will, that it is the inner disposition of the person that
counts (85 86). On the other hand, as in other cases, I find Sanders's
objections to the current interpretations stronger than his own exegetical
suggestions his analysis of the plight is better than his solution. In this
case, I think he starts off very well by observing that for Paul the observance of loving
one's neighbor (Galatians 5:14) (and particularly in its concrete manifestation of bearing
her burdens [6:2]) constitutes the real way to fulfill the
law (97). Moreover, even though Pharisaic/rabbinic teachers also cite
Leviticus 19:18 as a summary of the Law, none other than Paul (or such as Philo's extreme
allegorizers) advocated that its observance replaced circumcision and the rest of
the concrete Law. Sanders's summary of the problem is exemplary: There is,
then, appreciable tension between the view that Christians are not under the law at
all they have died to the law, not just to part of it and not just to the law
as perverted by pride, but to the law as such and the view that those in
Christ fulfill the law not just aspects of it, and not just the law when
pursued in the right spirit (99). Sanders, however, comes to the conclusion
that both positions cannot be maintained in detail. Obviously
an interpretation which makes sense of both of Paul's statements would be superior to one
that cannot. I think that Galatians 5:14 (and its associated texts) can be strongly read
in the context of the general interpretation of Pauline thought that this book proposes.
To be sure, Paul does not propose a distinction between the Law pursued
in the right spirit and the Law perverted. In this, as I have said, Sanders completely
convinces me. But Sanders's parallel denial that there is no distinction in Paul between
the letter and the spirit of the Law does not convince. On the one hand, Sanders precisely
distinguishes between two interpretations of the Pauline antinomy: (1) you are not under the
Law, but nevertheless you are under a law, the Law of Christ, which commands love
of the neighbor; and (2) you are not under the Law, but nevertheless you should fulfill
it, not by being circumcised, but by loving your neighbor; that is real fulfillment.
He argues that the second is by far the more likely
meaning (98). On the other hand, he is unable in my opinion to explain what
it means to fulfill the Law without being circumcised. Sanders is effectively throwing up
his exegetical hands when he writes with regard to 1 Corinthians 9:19 21,
Christians both stand in a right relationship to God and live in accordance
with his will, but [this] is no more thought through in a systematic way than Gal. 5:14
and Rom. 8:4 (100). To bridge this gap, I submit that only a hermeneutic
approach will do, one that understands that the Law is one But
the readers would not understand that Paul intends by law in
5:14 and 6:2 a law which is entirely distinct from the other one
(98) but at the same time finds a way to relate systematically between that
which is being affirmed and that which is being denied about the Law in Paul. My claim is
that there is ample evidence throughout the corpus that what is being affirmed is the
spiritual sense the universal Law of Christ, of love, of
faith and what is being denied is the literal, carnal sense the
Jewish Law of circumcision, kashruth, and the Sabbath. This solution is explicitly denied
by Sanders, who claims that Paul does not define Christian behavior as
keeping the spirit of the law as distinct from observing it
literally (101). But Paul does as Sanders himself
admits draw such a distinction at several prominent places. Why should Romans
2:29, which I have interpreted in detail in the previous chapter, not be understood as
proposing precisely this distinction, whereby true
circumcision is a matter of the heart and the spirit and not of the penis? The Jew who is
one inwardly and not outwardly would be precisely the one who is characterized by loving
his neighbor as himself and not by watching what he eats. Paul's references to
circumcision not made with hands also strongly support
precisely this interpretation, that Paul distinguishes between the physical and the
spiritual interpretations of the Law and affirms the latter while denying the significance
of the former. Once more, the physical observances correspond to difference, to the
particular, while the spiritual interpretations are understood by Paul to correspond to
sameness, to the universal.
Indeed, The law, for Paul, is not only the will of God, it
is the will of God as revealed in Jewish Scripture, but only, as Sanders
notes by implication, after the veil has been removed. This veil is the carnal veil that
occludes precisely the spiritual, inner meaning. In this way, we understand Paul's
excision from the Law of precisely that which was particularly Jewish and thereby
problematic for his project of the new universal Israel, without necessitating an
assumption of either inconsistency or, worse, expediency, as Sanders is forced to by his
insistence that Paul himself offered no theoretical basis for the de facto
reduction of the law (102 03). The same point has been made in
somewhat different terms by Westerholm. Sanders argues that Paul's point in Romans
10:5 8 is that Moses was incorrect (41).
Westerholm is absolutely accurate in asserting, But Moses could not be
incorrect for Paul (1988, 145n.16). Therefore,
there must be a rationally explicable theoretical basis for his approach to the Law. I
hold that he did offer such a basis and did so, moreover, over and over again in his dyads
of spirit/ flesh, spirit/ letter, inner/outer. Sanders agrees that 1 Corinthians
7:19 Neither circumcision nor uncircumcision, but keeping the
commandments of God is one of the most amazing
sentences that he ever wrote (1983, 103). But he seems to think that it is
possible to interpret Paul without accounting for that amazing sentence: He
seems to have held together his native view that the law is
one and given by God and his new conviction that Gentiles and Jews stand on equal footing,
which requires the deletion of some of the law, by asserting them both without theoretical
explanation (103). I will not propose that everything in Paul must hang
together or that different circumstances may not ever have provoked somewhat different and
partially contradictory responses, but I believe that here we can supply a theoretical
explanation that precisely eliminates such a gross contradiction.
The point that Paul wishes to make here is that Christian freedom must not
be interpreted as permission to do everything and anything. Paul already anticipates the
sort of misunderstanding of his gospel with which he would
have to deal in 1 Corinthians. It would have been easy to misunderstand Paul's railing
against the Law as a claim that there is no Law at all, but this is not what Paul ever
meant. What he meant is that there is an outer aspect to the Law, the
doing of the Law, which was special to the Jewish People alone
and which has been abrogated in Christ, and an inner, spiritual aspect of the Law which is
for everyone and which has been fulfilled in Christ and is thus entirely appropriately
styled as the Law of Christ (6:2). The Law of
Christ is the allegorical, spiritual fulfillment of the letter of the Law of
Moses, the Law according to the flesh (Hays 1987). Flesh has
two seemingly opposite but paradoxically coordinated meanings for Paul; it is commitment
to the literal, outward doing of the Law on the one hand, and it is sinning through the
flesh on the other. These two are not, of course, identical, but they are related. Both of
them are opposed in some sense to the spirit which alone provides assurance of fulfilling
the Law (that is the spiritual referent of the Law, which is love). The apparent
contradictions in Paul remarked by various commentators are, on this interpretation,
entirely illusory (Barclay 1991, 140 and n.113). Paul's expression here is thus no more
contradictory of itself or of anything else in Paul than For in Christ Jesus
neither circumcision nor uncircumcision is of any avail, but faith working through
love (Galatians 5:6). Paul has in effect taken common sentiments of Judaism
to the effect that the purpose of the whole Torah and its Laws can be summed up in one
ethical/spiritual principle and drawn the logical conclusion suggested by his allegorical
scheme, namely, that the spiritual signified can replace its literal signifier completely.
This, then, counts for him as fulfilling the Law while the outward observances are the
doing of the Law also referred to as being under the Law.
Galatians 5:14 and 19 are thus in perfect consequence. The Christians
are not á¼Î½Î¿Î¼Î¿Ï, without Law, nor ὑÏο
νόμον, under the Law. Instead, they are ἔννομοÏ
ΧÏιÏÏοῦ, in the Law of Christ (1 Corinthians
9:20 21), which also proves that ὑÏο
νόμον is in opposition to ἔννομοÏ
ΧÏιÏÏοῦ) (Barclay 1991, 126 27). They
are not lawless, nor under the Law (Galatians 5:19), but subject to the Law of Christ,
which alone counts as fulfilling the Law (Galatians 5:14). This perspective helps
us solve, as well, another outstanding problem in Pauline interpretation, the nature of
the Law of Christ. Is the Law of Christ a reference to
Jesus actual teachings or not (Barclay 1991, 126 35; Hays
1987)? Does Î½á½¹Î¼Î¿Ï here mean law at
all, or perhaps only principle ? In my view, these questions
are obviated, because the Law of Christ refers to the Law according to the spirit, the Law
of faith working through love, which enjoins those practices of agape which Jesus has also
in his person taught. The Law of Christ is thus the Law transformed by Christ's
crucifixion and exemplified by his behavior. Faith and love without
doing are fulfillment, while doing without faith and love is
nothing. Paul is thus completely consistent. It is thus that Paul can say:
Neither circumcision counts for anything nor uncircumcision is anything but
keeping the commandments of God (1 Corinthians 7:19). Rabbinic Jews,
understandably, reacted quite negatively to such sentiments. In the next chapter I will
continue close reading of Galatians with a view to answering the question of whether
Paul's discourse on the so-called curse of the Law is as
anti-Judaic as it has often been claimed to be by both Jewish and Christian readers.
Notes
1. For a somewhat different account of the
interrelationships of these elements, see Smith (1990, 141).
2. For a very judicious discussion of the
question of whether Paul responds to these documents or they are later polemics against
Paul, see Davies (1965, 50 51). See also Gager (1983, 125).
3. Luke 1:32 is of significance here, for it
simultaneously describes Jesus as the son of God and David as the father of Jesus. The
formula is thus the same. Luke simply does not feel the need to supply the hermeneutic
gloss, according to the flesh, with regard to Jesus' human genealogy.
]
4. This last argument was pointed out to me by
Ruth Clements.
5. If the Peter/Paul opposition as I describe
it seems to prefigure the later controversies between orthodox and gnostic Christians,
that is no accident, as I read Paul as a moderate gnostic,
somewhere between the monadic corporeality of the Jerusalem church and the extreme
spirituality of the later true Gnostics. Cf. Wedderburn: [Views of Jesus's
resurrection] of Christians seem to range through a whole spectrum from the accounts of
the crucified body being restored to life, wounds and all (cf. Lk. 24.37 42);
Jn 20.25,27), through Paul's account in 1 Cor 15 which seems to suggest that the
resurrection appearances were of the same kind as his own conversion experience
(1987, 192 93 [emphasis added]). And again there:
Epiphanius mocks the Valentinians as denying the resurrection of the dead,
saying something mysterious and ridiculous, that it is not this body which
rises, but another rises from it, which they call spiritual,
( Mysterious and ridiculous perhaps, but still very
Pauline) (215 and see also 216 18). Moreover, this controversy
between Peter/James and Paul had political implications similar to those of the later
schism as well. See Pagels (1978, 415 30).
6. See, however, αι=!μα καὶ
Ïá½±ÏÎºÎ±Ï contrasted with gods in Polyaen. Strat., III,
11, 1 cited in TDNT VII, 99.
7. See next section for further discussion of
this point.
8. I absolutely agree with Betz (71) that
Paul's á¼Î½ á¼Î¼Î¿á½¶ here has to be understood as
referring to a vision and will further support it later. The question of
internal or external is irrelevant
in my opinion. In either case, Paul is referring to a vision with the eyes
of the mind. See further discussion below.
9. Elizabeth Castelli has asked what is at
stake in this claim for me, since I make it so emphatically. The answer is that I wish to
disrupt what I believe to be a false antithesis between theological and sociological
understandings of Paul. While my reading of Paul is one that interprets his work as
responsive to particular situations in the churches to which he is writing, and therefore
within the modern sociological tradition of Pauline scholarship, at the same time I find
it generated by a consistent theological mainspring as well. In this, again, I think that
my method of reading Paul, as well as my particular constructions, are perhaps closest to
those of F. C. Baur.
10. It is important, however, to note that
from a rabbinic Jewish perspective, this very stance puts Paul into direct conflict with
Judaism. It is not tolerance of Judaism to say that for
Jews it is a matter of indifference whether or not they are circumcised. This is a
dismissal of Pharisaic/ biblical Judaism entirely.
11. The perspective here is substantially the
same as that of Sanders (1983, 177).
12. I find it impossible to follow the
argument of Watson, who writes that Paul claims in Gal. 2:14 that in eating
with Gentiles, Peter has been living like a Gentile (á¼Î¸Î½Î¹Îºá¿¶Ï),
and if taken literally this would mean that Peter and the Jewish Christians of Antioch had
abandoned the observance of the law and their Jewish identity. But it is hard to imagine
the apostle to the circumcised doing this, and it is perhaps more likely that Paul has
exaggerated the extent of Peter's departure from the law. ¦The example
given eating with Gentiles perhaps suggests a relaxed attitude
toward the law on the part of the Antiochene Jewish Christians, rather than a complete
renunciation of the law (Watson 1986, 33). Watson goes on to write, however:
It is therefore probable that at Antioch too, Gentile Christians were
exempted from the Jewish food-laws, a claim that certainly contradicts the
first one. If Peter had been eating with those gentile Christians, then certainly it means
that he was eating the same food as they, and if they were exempted from the Jewish food
laws, then he also was eating non-kosher food, which constitutes in itself a renunciation
of the Law. See also Sanders (1990, 170 89), who has completely discredited
the view that James would have encouraged Peter to stop eating with gentiles because of a
putative gentile impurity. As Sanders has shown, even the existence of such a category of
impurity was very much contested and apparently the Shammaites, to whom Paul
is often assigned, were against the notion while in any case, the fact of
impurity would not prevent one from eating with a person, certainly not in Diaspora, where
all are impure (172 76). Moreover, as Sanders demonstrates beyond a shadow of
a doubt, only certain very extreme texts proscribe table fellowship with gentiles if the
food is kosher (on this point, see also Segal: There is no law in rabbinic
Judaism that prevents a Jew from eating with a gentile [1990, 231] and
Fredriksen: The discussions preserved in the Mishnah that detail the correct
procedure on such occasions [of Jews and gentiles eating together] attest to the frequency
with which they occurred [1988, 151]). Of the alternatives which Sanders
suggests for what Peter was transgressing in James's eyes, I find most attractive the
notion that he was eating non-kosher food of some sort (185 86). Sanders's
reason for assuming that the most plausible interpretation is that James did not want them
to eat with gentiles, because close association might lead to contact with
idolatry or transgression of one of the biblical food laws, seems to me less
likely, precisely because the gentiles that Peter was eating with were Christians, and
either their food was kosher or it was not. Presumably, it was not. Furthermore, it would
hardly behoove James to choose the most extreme and marginal version of Jewish practice
(precisely on Sanders's account). This is even more the case on the second of Sanders's
choices, namely, that some people had a general reluctance to eat any
Gentile food. This does not mean that Peter had necessarily eaten pork or
shellfish of which Sanders is probably right in assuming that hardly any Jew would eat,
but could easily refer to meat not slaughtered properly and the like. Any of these would
count as living like gentiles.
13. As I argue below, this point provides key evidence, also, as to
the identity of the opponents in Galatia. Sanders has put this
in a somewhat more positive light: It was probably Peter's responsibility to
the circumcised, which might be hindered if he himself were not Torah-observant, not
disagreement with Paul's mission as such, which led him to withdraw from the Gentiles in
Antioch (Sanders 1983, 19, and see there 177).
14. Compare the reading of Gager (1983,
33 35).
15. In spite of our generally different
interpretations of Galatians as a whole, I quite agree with Cosgrove (1988,
133 39) on the interpretation of this passage.
16. The difference between Hays's view and
mine is that he understands Paul's interlocutors here to be Jews who have adopted the
doctrine of justification by faith but not abandoned the Law, whereas I see Paul as
arguing against Jews who, having adopted the doctrine, initially drew the conclusion that
the Law was no longer obligatory or important but then went back to Law observance for
communal reasons to which Paul objects. I think that this interpretation renders his
argument here and later more coherent and strong. I certainly agree with Hays when he
says, In both of these letters [Galatians and Romans], Paul treats the
doctrine of justification by faith as an agreed-upon premise from which he can
construct his position about the relations between Jews and Gentiles and the role of the
Law in the life of the Christian community.
17. For the position that Paul is referring to
Peter's actions here, see Cosgrove (1988, 138), who interprets exactly as I do, and
Barclay (1991, 80 and n.13).
18. My view is very close to that of Gaventa
1986.
19. For this interpretation, see below n.20.
20. Jewett (1970, 204 06)
interprets in a similar fashion, adducing, moreover, a highly convincing historical
background to this group. There are certain differences, however, between our
interpretations, and while I think that there are some considerations which favor
Jewett's, others favor my version. Jewett argues that the agitators truly believed in
circumcision as a necessity for salvation, and that when Paul says they do not keep the
Law, he means the Law as he (Paul) understands it (201). This accounts better than my
interpretation for the statement that the agitators are promoting another gospel. On the
other hand, it seems to me clear from these verses that Paul is claiming that were it not
for their fear of persecution, the agitators would not be pressing the Galatians to
convert at all. This tension in his account is exemplified in the following sentence:
The nomistic Christians in Judea would have ample reason to boast if they
could induce the Gentile churches to enter the ranks of the circumcised, for such an
achievement would release them from a mortal threat levelled against all who dared to
associate themselves with the ungodly and the uncircumcised (206).
(Presumably, Jewett would argue that this only means that they would have no interest in
converting gentiles at all nor care what they do, a proposition I for one find less
than convincing.) Once it be admitted that the agitators wish to circumcise the Galatians
to avoid persecution and not because they believe in the necessity of the gentiles being
circumcised for salvation, then it seems best to consider them the anti-type of Peter as
presented in the Antiochene parable that is, essentially on Paul's side against
James and the even more extreme Palestinian nomistic Christians but afraid of
persecution. Finally, I am not persuaded by Jewett's quite brilliant argumentation that
the Galatians were libertines. The entire rhetoric of the letter suggests the opposite,
that they were strongly drawn to nomism, and as I have suggested elsewhere, that the last
part of the letter has to do with a danger that Paul perceives of misunderstanding of his
call to Christian freedom. Jewett reads too much, in my opinion, into the phrase
being completed in the flesh and into the use of
days for Sabbaths and holidays. The latter is actually quite
attested in rabbinic Hebrew parlance.
21. An attractive alternative explanation for
this passage is that offered by Segal:
If you receive circumcision, you are bound to follow the entire law
because you have converted to Judaism. Paul says that what is necessary is that all
be transformed by the spirit, which is in modern parlance a different kind of conversion.
It follows that if you are not circumcised you do not have to keep the whole law. But it
does not follow that you do not have to keep parts of it; we have seen that many Jews and
Christians assumed that part of the law was encumbent upon non-Jews who wish to live with
Jews. He even tells us that the Christians who are making this deal are not as pious as
Pharisees. And as an ex-Pharisee he has nothing but contempt for that
position. ¦So his argument appears to us to be very subtle, but it may have been
exceedingly clear to those living in the social situation he addresses. He says that if
you want to be Jewish you have to go way beyond what the circumcisers are doing. You
need to become a Pharisee, as Paul himself was a Pharisee. Evidently, he sees their
ordinary Judaism as a kind of watered-down Judaism. They keep some of the laws but not
others. And they do not practice the pieties of the Pharisees. This is a kind of
hypocrisy. (Alan F. Segal, Universalism in Judaism and
Christianity, unpublished paper, 1992)
I have the following difficulties with this elegant reading. First
of all, what evidence is there that a sort of partial observance of the Law was
characteristic of an alleged ordinary Judaism ? Second, what
evidence is there that when Paul says the whole law, he is
referring to the pieties of the Pharisees and not to those
observances which were the province of all groups of first-century Jews, at least in
Palestine? Third, I find that this interpretation is less responsive to the context of the
letter to the Galatians than mine in that it does not account for the analogy between the
situation of the circumcisers and that of Peter in the Antioch encounter and thus makes
the appearance of the narration of that incident less compellingly relevant. On at least
some hermeneutic principles, that alone would lead to preference for the explanation
offered in the text.
22. I do not think therefore that
justification has so much to do with getting
in or staying in (pace Sanders) as in
being saved at the end. It is conceivable that according to some versions of Christianity
(and indeed, some versions of Judaism not rabbinic), being in is sufficient
for being saved, but they are still logically distinct categories. Cf. Wright (1992a, 2
and esp. 148), who conflates the two concepts. As its Hebrew contexts show,
justified simply means, declared
just, which may or may not be a function of membership in the covenantal
community. Although I find much exciting and necessary in Wright's work (which reached me
just as I was completing this manuscript), his understanding of justification seems to me
to seriously weaken his overall claim that Paul is not dealing with soteriology. Somehow
the two elements of covenantal theology and individual salvation will have to be
integrated in future work. I, moreover, think that justified
works perfectly well as a translation of the Greek (and Hebrew). See below in this chapter
for an actual Hebrew source for this usage in Paul.
23. But Sanders also quotes approvingly Heikki
Räisänen's comment: The Jews' establishment of their own
righteousness ¦is ¦identical with their rejection of Christ,
and the root of the evil lies in a christological failure, not in an
anthropological one (Räisänen 1980, 71). Sanders has seemingly
abandoned his correct (in my opinion) insight that their own
righteousness means the righteousness which devolves on them simply by
virtue of being Jewish, and thus contains a trenchant critique of
Judaism not, I agree, on the basis of the false merit-grace
distinction and has, therefore, nothing to do with their
rejection of Christ. It is precisely an
anthropological (read ethical) failure, but not one of
works-righteousness! See also Sanders: It is the Gentile question and the
exclusivism of Paul's soteriology which dethrone the law (1977,
496 97). Once we have admitted the first (the gentile question), however, we
have no need of the second (Paul's exclusivism), and I would argue that the latter is,
therefore, an epiphenomenon of the first factor.
I think, moreover, that the interpretation of Paul offered here goes a
long way toward answering the objections and contradictions that have led Räisänen
to his extreme position on Paul's alleged incoherence. To take
one example: Vis-à -vis Romans 2, Räisänen has argued that it is inconsistent
to claim on the one hand that all have sinned and, on the other, that there are gentiles
who have kept the Law. This is, however, no contradiction at all once we realize that it
is not individuals of whom Paul speaks but groups. All have sinned, Jews and gentiles
alike, but individual Jews as well as gentiles have kept the Law. Therefore,
all Jews and gentiles as groups are equal in the sight of God!
Incoherence (as well as coherence) is an artifact of hermeneutics (pace Räisänen
1986, 103ff.).
24. Below I will argue that rabbinic Judaism,
which we know, of course, only from post-Pauline writings, elaborated a different response
to this ethico-spiritual challenge.
25. See also Segal (1990, 277 and 281).
Campbell, citing Davies, seems also to have gotten this just right:
Although Paul exploits Hellenistic forms and literary genres, he takes
seriously the scriptures of his people and seeks to deal with the problem in their
terms employing rabbinical and other methods to do justice both to this new
emergence, the Christian community, and its matrix, the Jewish people.
26. First, I am not persuaded of the necessity
for the interpretation that Paul substitutes all flesh for
all that lives as an interpretative gloss and then derives
from that the principle that works do not justify, since works are of the flesh. (To be
sure, it is not impossible that such a midrash lies behind Paul's interpretation
here. Dunn has made as good a case for it as can be made, here and also in Dunn [1988,
155].) I find it most plausible that in Paul's Bible the text had ÏαÏα
Ïá½±Ïξ and not the ÏÎ±Ï Î¶á¿¶Î½ of
the Septuagint. This position is certainly supported by the fact that Paul's version of
the text is cited in 1 Enoch 81.5 as well (Charles 1913, 169). I read Paul's argument,
therefore, as both deeper and more straightforward than this.
27. Indeed, it is not to be excluded that
faith of Jesus Christ Ïá½·ÏÏιÏ
ἸηÏοῦ ΧÏιÏÏοῦ
here means Jesus Christ's faithfulness, and then Paul is not even making this exegetical
extravagance. This would bring the interpretation in line with the use of the same psalm
in Romans 3, for which see Hays 1980. Against this interpretation, however, is the fact
that Paul here does seem to be strongly asserting the necessity of human faith in
Jesus Christ: Even we have had faith in Christ Jesus, in order to be justified by the
faith of Christ καὶ ἡμεá¿Ï εἰÏ
ΧÏιÏÏὸν ἸηÏοῦν
á¼ÏιÏÏεύÏαμεν, ἵνα
δικαιÏθῶμεν á¼Îº
Ïá½·ÏÏεÏÏ
ΧÏιÏÏοῦ. I do not dispute, therefore, the notion
that there is a faithfulness of Jesus Christ of which Paul speaks; rather I wish to
disclaim a view that would hold that it follows from this that the faith of humans in
Jesus is not, for him, significant.
One could easily interpret that the human faith in Christ is answered by
his faithfulness, a perfectly rabbinic notion of measure for measure הד××
×“×’× × ×”×“××, one of the most
frequently attested of all theologoumena in rabbinic thought. Westerholm has adduced
several other passages (curiously, not this one) in which it is quite clear that the faith
in question is human faith in Christ and not Christ's faithfulness toward humans (1988,
111 12). It may be that in all of these places the same movement of הד××
×“×’× × ×”×“×× is present. Indeed,
even Romans 3:22 can be taken to show this very movement from the faith of the human to
the answer of God's faithfulness: The righteousness of God through the faith of Jesus
Christ for all who believe δικαιοÏύνη δὲ
θεοῦ διὰ Ïá½·ÏÏεÏÏ
ἸηÏοῦ ΧÏιÏÏοῦ εἰÏ
ÏάνÏÎ±Ï ÏοὺÏ
ÏιÏÏεύονÏαÏ. (See the
discussion of the analogous Galatians 3:22 by Richard B. Hays [1987].) Although in the
earlier work, Hays did not pay attention to this double or dialogical movement of
faithfulness, in his later work he does (1989, 40 41). The doctrine of
justification by faith remains intact although, to be sure, not in its
Reformation form of sola gratia. See also Watson (1986, 199n.89) and especially
Barclay (1991, 78n.8).
28. I accordingly think that Thielman (1989,
64 65), who sees here a Pauline argument that no one can keep the Law, has
quite missed the point. Also, this interpretation completely obviates Segal's claim that
justification has to do with conversion in first-century Judaism or that
Paul could have learned the language of justification from his Christian
compatriots after he entered the Christian community (1990, 177).
29. See Dunn (1990, 207), where he replies to
Räisänen on this precise point but fails to use this (to my mind) decisive argument.
30. Westerholm has also made the point that
the inability of humans to be justified by works, because they could not or would never
fulfill the Law adequately, was a traditional prophetic claim (1988, 163 64).
In a sense, his argument about Paul is similar in structure to mine, although very
different in conclusion. Taking this traditional theological motif as primary, he argues
that Paul went beyond the Prophets in discovering a radical solution. I hardly think that
the fact that inability to keep the Law was not an invention of Paul should be relegated
to a postscript (pace Westerholm 1988, 163); it is
crucial to realize that, this plight having become a common
theme of Jewish writing, Paul alone or nearly alone arrived at
the conclusion that faith was now a fully adequate surrogate for keeping the commandments.
One point that must be made clear, however, is that my reading of Paul
as motivated by the question of the inclusion of the gentiles is most emphatically not a
sociological one that locates his writing in the practical problems of the first-century
church (pace Wrede, as cited by Westerholm 1988, 167), but one that is as
theologically based as Westerholm's account of a Paul motivated by the failure of the Law
to provide an antidote to the poison of sin. Where Westerholm writes that the
fundamental principle affirmed by Paul's thesis
of justification by faith, not works of the law, is that of humanity's dependence on
divine grace; and that conviction, it may safely be said, underlies everything Paul
wrote, I would substitute for the fundamental principle the conviction that
all humanity is one in the eyes of God and must be saved in the same way, a conviction
that, it may safely be said, underlies everything that Paul wrote. The alternative, then,
between Paul the profound theological thinker and Paul the practical church politician is,
in my view, a false one. I find Westerholm's interpretation compelling, as I do, of
course, find my own as well. The question remains whether they are incompatible. Perhaps
the ultimate solution will be an understanding of Paul that sees him as operating on both
levels at once.
31. In Romans 3:22, which I have discussed
briefly in note 27 above, this motive is explicit also, for immediately after asserting
that God's righteousness comes to all who believe through the faithfulness of Jesus
Christ, Paul asserts: For there is no distinction οὠγάÏ
á¼ÏÏιν διαÏÏολή, a
declaration that prepares the way for the end of the chapter, in which he insists that
there can be no discrimination in the way that God justifies Jews and gentiles, because he
is the God of the whole world, and therefore the circumcised and the uncircumcised are all
justified on account of their faith.
32. Dunn misses this point again when he
writes that the phrase á¼Î½ ÏαÏκί
used in the same passage (Rom. 2.28) denotes not merely the physical as opposed to the
spiritual, but also the people of Israel in terms of physical identity and racial
kinship (1990, 222). In my view, these are not two separate meanings at all,
but two sides of the same coin. The physical is the people of Israel in terms of physical
identity and racial kinship, and the spiritual is the allegorical interpretation of that
identity and kinship in the Body of Christ.
33. Thus, when Paul writes in
Rom. 3:21 that now, apart from Law the righteousness of God has been
manifested, witnessed by the Law and the Prophets, he is making a
claim that anyone who had ever prayed Psalm 143 from the heart would instantly recognize:
God's saving righteousness, for which the psalmist had hoped, has at last appeared. The
witness of the Law and the Prophets to the righteousness of God is not merely, as
Christians have sometimes strangely supposed, a witness concerning a severe retributive
justice; rather, it is a witness concerning God's gracious saving power, as Psalm 143
demonstrates (Hays 1989, 52).
34. Menahem Lorberbaum has made an interesting
alternative suggestion, namely, that what Paul is saying here is that his former life
under the Law was equivalent to a crucifixion which prepared him for the resurrection with
Christ.
35. In this sense Alan Segal's
characterization of Paul's experience as conversion is certainly
justified.
36. Bultmann himself, after setting out the
parallels, claims to discredit them. While I do not think that Paul was influenced by
so-called Mystery Religions, particularly because they are unattested so early, I do think
that there are very strong parallels here. Paul could very well have been the source of
the influence, or common religious developments could have produced both. The parallels
are nevertheless illuminating, despite Bultmann's disclaimers (1967, 23 30).
Thus, Bultmann's claim that of course Paul experienced ecstasy, but for him
it is a special charism and not the specifically Christian mode of life (cf. 1 Cor.
12 14) (24) ignores in my view the very next verses of
Galatians, which I am about to discuss. What, after all, is the outpouring of the Spirit
to which Paul refers, if not ecstasy?
37. Later in Romans 6 Paul will interpret this
dying and resurrection of the individual Christian as taking place in baptism, which is
certainly (already in older Judaisms, as well as in later) a ritual of death and rebirth.
38. See my discussions below in Chapters 7 and
8.
39. Cp. Gaston and Gager (1983, 234) on this
verse. Gager himself seems somewhat skeptical.
40. Cp. again the passage quoted above: Now,
my child, you see me with your eyes, but what I am you cannot understand when you look at
me with your body's eyes and with the physical sight. It is not with those eyes that
anyone can see me now, my child (Bultmann 1967, 19).
41. This is how Murray Krieger describes this
figure as used by Phillip Sidney with reference to Psalm 114: Enargeia, the
verbal art of forcing us to see vividly. Through the eyes of the
mind' an appropriately Platonic notion we are shown the coming
of God and his unspeakable and everlasting beauty. Here, then,
are words invoking a visible presence, though, of course, to the eyes of the
mind alone. Though God's may be only a figurative entrance through His
personified creatures, the poet makes us, as it were, see this
entrance. He is there, in His living creation, and absent no longer (Krieger
1979, 601).
42. This important point was suggested to me
by my student, Cecilia Mahoney, who thus independently arrived at one of the important
insights of Cosgrove's book (1988), namely, that Paul and the Galatians shared a
charismatic experience. I accordingly disagree with Betz (133) who writes:
Paul does not reflect upon the difference between himself and the Galatians;
his conversion was the result of a vision of Christ and not, as it is for them, of the
hearing of the Christian message. I would argue that Paul is explicitly
connecting the two experiences via the eyes of the mind. Cosgrove and I, however, reach
very different interpretations of Galatians starting from our independently arrived at
common assumption that the Galatians have had important pneumatic experiences similar to
those of Paul and occasioned by his preaching. For these differences, see below passim.
43. Note that this simply obviates the
distinction between Ïá½·ÏÏιÏ
ΧÏιÏÏοῦ as faith in Jesus or Jesus
faith, as both are necessary moments in the same motion. See above, n.27. I reject as well
the opposition between imitating Abraham's faith and
participating in Christ, who is Abraham's seed, which Boers
sets up, as cited in Dunn (1990, 202).
44. I entirely agree with Cosgrove that there
is no reason to assume that the Galatians must be turning to the law without
thought for the Spirit. Paul's argument would lose its entire force were
that the case. They believe that Law is compatible with spirit, and Paul is proving to
them that it is not, because the Law is of the flesh, while the Spirit (Holy) is of the
spirit.
45. I therefore disagree with Cosgrove, who
claims that circumcision is not mentioned in Galatians 3 4 (51).
46. There is one part of Cosgrove's argument
that, if I have understood it, seems to me singularly weak. His interpretation of 2
Corinthians 3:6 requires that we assume that the Super Apostles in Corinth hold that
keeping the Law is a precondition for the continued experience of the spirit
(111 12). In other words, they hold that Law and spirit are not ontologically
on the same level. But Paul opposes law and spirit as terms which are ontologically
(although not axiologically) equal. His assumptions, then, would be so incompatible with
those of his opponents that they could hardly even understand each other. In other words,
were Cosgrove's reading correct, it seems to me that Paul should have said something like:
The letter kills but faith gives the Spirit, since on his
reconstruction the desirability of the spirit is equal to both groups and the issue is
whether Law or faith brings the spirit. On my understanding, the verse makes better sense,
because the question is indeed whether the letter or the spirit is the desirable means to
life. I do not dismiss, however, the possibility that life itself means life in the
Spirit, in which Spirit has already a somewhat different sense from
spirit opposed to letter.
47. Understanding the participle οἱ
ÏεÏιÏεμνόμενοι of 6:13 in the
sense of those who advocate circumcision (Jewett 1970,
202 03).
48. For much more evidence to this effect, as well as an
interpretation and consideration of the gender issues involved, see D. Boyarin 1992b. I
think that these data are much more to the point than general claims to the effect that
Torah observance is necessary for the Holy Spirit, pace Barclay (1991, 84). Note
that Balaam, who was not Jewish and not a Law observer, was vouchsafed the Holy Spirit.
According to rabbinic tradition, he was born circumcised!
49. Here, of course, only
his is possible. Circumcision is accordingly a very
problematic moment in the constitution of gens and gender from my feminist point of view.
All I can do, however, it seems to me at present, is record that problematic. My next book
is intended to be a cultural poetics of rabbinic Jewish manhood, centering around
circumcision as a psychic structure.
50. Justin Martyr provides an excellent
example of a late-antique platonic version of seeing God with the mind's eye (Justin
Martyr 1989, 196).
51. Much of the following section is dependent on the material he has
gathered in Wolfson 1987a and b.
52. For an almost identical use of Job, see D.
Boyarin (1990b, 86).
53. Howard Eilberg-Schwartz's God's Phallus
(1994) is a brilliant phenomenology of Judaism along these lines.
54. As Wolfson so persuasively demonstrates,
however, the dominant kabbalistic trend was to understand the mystic as male and the
Divine element he encountered as female, The Shekhina, or even the Torah
represented as female. Then, the circumcision was necessary for penetration of this
female, just as it is required for human sexual intercourse (1987b, 210 11).
For the Rabbis (of the pre-medieval period), such a divine female as a solution to the
paradox of mystical gender was excluded, and only feminization of the male mystic was
possible.
55. For a much fuller account of the rabbinic
interpretations and views, see D. Boyarin 1992b.
56. The distinction between á¼Î½
ÏαÏκί as referring to circumcision or to the works of the Law
in general is a false one in my view, pace Barclay (1991, 86). The immediate issue
is circumcision, according to my hypothesis, the fleshy observance par excellence, but
circumcision itself is a synecdoche for all of the works of the Law.
57. This is a modification of a point made by
Barclay (1991, 224, and see there, 228).
58. For this term, see Ortner 1973.
59. Sanders simply refuses to apply to Paul
the very logical consideration that he utilizes in regard to Philo's allegorizers:
They did not observe the literal law, but they observed its
real intent (118n.32). Thus even when he decides
that a moment in Paul (Romans 2:29) is similar to Philo's allegorizers (131), he does
so only to deny the genuine Pauline character of the passage. The question in my mind
is what is at stake in denying this hermeneutical dimension in Paul? Why do nearly all
modern interpreters wish to exclude it?
60. See Chapter 8 below. Also, in Chapter 6 I
will argue that the specific usage that Paul made of a verse of Leviticus in Galatians
3:13 could easily have misled those who heard his preaching
into thinking that incest was permitted to Christians. I think it is this
misreading of his intentions that Paul is trying to guard
against. I am not siding with Paul here, but I do assume that
the Corinthian crisis can be explained, without assuming outside agitators in Corinth,
simply as an interpretation of Paul's preaching of freedom in the spirit as in most of
Galatians, an interpretation which he, already here, is at pains to denote as a
misinterpretation. It must be remembered that Marcion (the
heretic who rejected the Old
Testament entirely) built his edifice on Galatians, and it is not entirely
surprising that he could do so. Once more, it seems that unknowingly I have reproduced a
position very similar to that of F. C. Baur (1873 75, 1, 263).
61. I thus decline the very opposition between
these two possibilities suggested by Barclay when he writes, This genitive
should not be taken in the sense of a law promulgated by Christ but in the looser sense of
the law redefined through Christ (134). My interpretation here is
thus virtually the same as but subtly differentiated from his
(132 34). Or rather, I should say that the hermeneutic perspective I have
been defending lends considerable weight, in my opinion, to the interpretation that
Barclay proposes. Note how this interpretation subtly shifts (while substantially
accepting) the view of Hays (1987, 275) that the Law of Christ is a
formulation coined (or employed) by Paul to refer to this paradigmatic self-giving of
Jesus Christ.
62. This interpretation also has the virtue of
making sense of the talk of spirit in the continuing verses, which are now understood as
carrying both senses, that of the human spirit as opposed to the human flesh which sins,
as well as the spirit of the Law (love) as opposed to its flesh (circumcision). See also
Barclay (1991, 115), who has provided what seems to me by far the best account of the end
of v. 17. See also my discussion in Chapter 6 of Romans 13:8.
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