{"id":753,"date":"2017-11-16T15:46:57","date_gmt":"2017-11-16T20:46:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/?p=753"},"modified":"2020-11-18T12:00:50","modified_gmt":"2020-11-18T17:00:50","slug":"on-paul","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/2017\/11\/16\/on-paul\/","title":{"rendered":"The Scandal of Paul"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Jay Harris, in a review of Daniel Boyarin\u2019s <em>A radical Jew <\/em>published in Commentary Magazine of June 1, 1995<a href=\"#_ftn1\" name=\"_ftnref1\"><span>[1]<\/span><\/a><em>, <\/em>cites Edward Gibbon to point out that the idea of Paul as a universalist transcending Jewish ethnic boundaries is, at best, only part of the story.<\/p>\n<p><em>That Paul\u2019s exclusivism was more \u201cecclesiocentric\u201d than \u201cethnocentric\u201d primarily means that, as the historian Edward Gibbon noted long ago, it was socially less narrow than some forms of Jewish exclusivism; but that is a difference in degree, not in kind. <\/em><\/p>\n<p>Paul was also an apocalyptist who believed that faith in Christ was the only way to escape the coming wrath. That this way was open to both, Gentiles as well as Jews, marks his universalism. That the path was defined by faith in the Risen Christ marks his covenantal particularism.<\/p>\n<p>Paul&#8217;s letters stand apart from other early Christian literature. His writing and thinking contrast with the irenic\u00a0&#8220;proto-Catholicism&#8221; of the canonical gospels, the Book of Acts, and the other apostolic letters. It is\u00a0Paul who enabled\u00a0Protestant\u00a0thinkers from Luther to Barth to justify their own radical theologies. Modern secular intellectuals such as Alain Badiou and Giorgio Agamben as well recognize Paul as one of the most profound and outrageous thinkers of the western tradition. Generation after generation,\u00a0readers have taken\u00a0inspiration from his writings, but also attempted to harness the words of this radical apostle and bend his words to their own doctrine. Daniel Boyarin is no exception, except that he bends Paul\u2019s words openly, rather than tacitly, to his interests as a postmodern and post-Zionist Jewish reader. And yet, Paul\u00a0emerges fresh from the piles of commentary and appropriation whenever one reads him. (Classical philologian Ulrich von Wilamowitz-M\u00f6llendorf once argued that\u00a0it was Paul&#8217;s use of the Greek language that made him stand out.\u00a0No\u00a0one in antiquity wrote Greek in quite as lively a fashion as did Paul.)<\/p>\n<p>Introducing Paul\u2019s letters to first-time collegiate readers I was struck by three observations that I detail in the following. <span style=\"text-decoration: underline\">First<\/span>, Paul represents a pre-70\/pre-destruction voice of Christian discourse. This alone makes him unique among early Christian authors. <span style=\"text-decoration: underline\">Second<\/span>, Paul&#8217;s reading of scripture is both instrumental in, and emblematic for,\u00a0how his gospel inscribes Gentiles into the Judaic story of salvation. This assures him a place in the pantheon of hermeneutic genius. <span style=\"text-decoration: underline\">Third<\/span>, Paul is an awkward fit for Jewish and Christian orthodoxies. This makes him a heretic to both, Jews and Christians.<\/p>\n<ol>\n<li><strong>Paul\u2019s pre-AD 70 Voice<\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>Paul\u2019s letters, at least those widely considered authentic, represent a pre-AD 70 voice that is unique among New Testament writings. For the most part, early Christian literature was forged in the crucible of the turmoil of the Jewish war and its aftermath, which left Jews in public shame and Christians scrambling to explain in what sense they were heirs to the Israelite dispensation without being counted among those rebellious Jews. (Hence: &#8220;My kingdom is not of this world,&#8221; John 18:36)<\/p>\n<p>Early Christian\u00a0literature answers the question, who\u00a0was Jesus of Nazareth, for\u00a0believers baptized\u00a0in his name. For these believers and their instructors, Jesus of Nazareth was\u00a0son of God, son of man, and son of David. The Paul we meet in this literature, i.e., the Paul of the Acts of the Apostles, is not the Paul of his own letters. It is a usable Paul who receives his commission from, or in agreement with, the original apostles; a Paul who argues that he merely preaches what Pharisees believe as well (i.e., the resurrection of the dead); a saint protected by angels, and the instrument by which the good news is spread to the Gentiles.<\/p>\n<p>The character of Jesus of the canonical gospels was shaped by the struggle to write the story of Christian origins into and out of a Jewish world that no longer existed by the time the anonymous authors of the canonical gospels did their work. (I am greatly simplifying the situation to underscore the contrast.) Paul was still part of the world that the canonical gospels reconstruct from\u00a0an\u00a0ideological and historical distance. The matrix of their writing is no longer the Judaism of Judea and the Galilee\u00a0of Jesus and his apostles but a Roman Empire\u00a0suspicious of\u00a0Jews and their associates.<\/p>\n<p>The post-70 gospels and Acts provide the students of the apostles with a usable past, an unassailable and unchallenged chain of authority from Jesus of Nazareth, son of God, man, and David, to their own contemporary leaders and beyond. None of that was of relevance to Paul who did not foresee the emergence of an institutionalized church. Paul taught and wrote with a view to an imminent\u00a0<em>parousia<\/em> of Christ.\u00a0Paul&#8217;s\u00a0assertion to be an apostle by virtue of a divine calling challenges the privileged position of the original apostles as\u00a0projected\u00a0by the later gospels.<\/p>\n<p>As disciples of the Jerusalemite \u201cpoor\u201d or <em>evionim, <\/em>the gospel authors\u00a0had access to authentic traditions of Jesus whose sayings and parables they heard from their teachers who were among the original apostles. Given the disruptions wreaked in Jerusalem by the punitive campaign waged by Titus, the disciples may have feared that the traditions they had preserved may be lost unless they were recorded in an orderly fashion. Moreover, the proliferation of traditions and views attributed\u00a0to Jesus made it necessary to create a measure and standard of faith, a kind of proto-orthodoxy. The evangelists\u2019 job was to preserve and shape these traditions in keeping with the liturgical practices of baptism and eucharist and with the proclamation of the early proto-orthodox Christians: that the messiah suffered and died according to scripture, was resurrected on the third day, and taken up into heaven from whence he will return to judge the living and the dead.<\/p>\n<p>Paul as well received that tradition and impressed it on his readers. (See 1 Cor 15). While Paul has no interest in the teachings of Jesus, he is familiar with the eucharistic elements of Christ&#8217;s passion\u00a0 and persuades his interlocutors in and around Syria, Asia Minor, Macedonia, Greece, and Rome that Christ died and was resurrected according to scripture. Where he differs is in his mission to the Gentiles.<\/p>\n<p>Like Boyarin, I believe much is to be gained by considering Paul as part of a conversation that indicates the range of Jewish possibilities of his time even though, in hindsight, Paul may be regarded as the unwitting founder of Christianity as a \u201cworld religion.\u201d While to some, such as Paul\u2019s student Marcion, Christianity was essentially a non- or post-Judaic religion that liberated men and women drawn to that very religion from its most egregious errors and falsehoods, Paul labored to keep the salvific dispensation articulated in his gospel from exploding the dialectic linkage between scripture and its true meaning as revealed in Christ. For Marcion, the Jews were already condemned, for Paul their &#8220;hardening&#8221; (Rom 11:25) was temporary.<\/p>\n<p>Paul was not only an occasional writer but also an occasional thinker. Most of his letters speak to questions that arose after he left the communities he founded to travel to the next station on his missionary travels. (The exception is the letter to the Romans where Paul introduces himself to a community he did not found and that he is about to visit.) His discussion in Galatians of the problem of circumcision was occasioned by the confusion in the minds of the Galatians caused by emissaries from other apostles who insisted that the new brothers from among the Gentiles be circumcised in order to become full members of the community of the elect. Paul clearly thought otherwise. In the Letter to the Galatians he emphasizes that the apostles had never before obliged Gentile Christians to be circumcised. He also emphasizes the immediacy of his own authority and the divine commission of his apostolic office. In arguing against Gentile circumcision Paul cannot refer to it as an innovation and therefore odious in and of itself. Circumcision is, after all, the first covenantal obligation that applies to all male children of Abraham, according to the literal sense of scripture. Paul is therefore forced to make an argument from scripture as to why scripture itself may have obliged circumcision in the past but does not require it any longer now that the true sense of scripture has been fully revealed in Christ. He makes this argument in a world where Jews were still politically independent and where the apocalyptic expectation of Christ\u2019s imminent return seems was driven less by a looming historical cataclysm than by an inner urgency to spread the gospel to the end of the earth.<\/p>\n<p>By the time Paul writes his Letter to the Romans, the spontaneous and heated rhetoric of Galatians has matured into a comprehensive theory of redemption that makes room for both Jews and Gentiles. Paul\u2019s apocalyptic urgency seems to have cooled as well. His plan is to complete his business in Jerusalem, visit Rome and go on to Spain. In the same process Paul honed his sophistication as a reader and interpreter of scripture.<\/p>\n<ol start=\"2\">\n<li><strong>Paul and Scripture<\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>In order to bind god-fearing Gentiles and Jewish believers in Christ together into a single community of the redeemed, Paul strikes a balance between an affirmation of Jewish roots and the justification of Gentile branches. His point is not as much supersessionist as it is inclusivist, as the roots and the branches are combined in a single living organism. This \u201ctree of life\u201d \u2013 in Romans 11 Paul speaks of an olive tree and wild olive branches \u2013 is also an apt metaphor for the manner in which Paul and other early Christian authors approach scripture. In some sense this is like pouring new wine into old skins, or a turning of water into wine. For Paul it is a matter of disclosing the hitherto hidden true meaning of scripture that not only preserves scripture but elevates it from letter to spirit (2 Cor 3:6).<\/p>\n<p>Scripture, considered authoritative and immutable (i.e., no longer open to rewriting), provides the justification for Paul to argue that what appears like an innovation is not an innovation, but a meaning always intended by scripture, though unrecognized until the advent of Christ. It is this advent that, in hindsight and only for those who are not blinded or read scripture with a veil before their eyes (as most Jews do according to 2 Cor 3:14), disclosed and revealed the true meaning of scripture. It provided the hermeneutical key to unlock the scriptures.<\/p>\n<p>Paul\u2019s arguments from scripture affirm the authority of scripture, while scripture confirms his interpretation.\u00a0The Jews are not rejected as a whole or forever; their temporary rejection of Christ merely makes room for the implantation or grafting of Gentiles into the \u201ccultivated olive tree.\u201d\u00a0Scripture&#8217;s\u00a0literal referent (i.e., Israel) is therefore reaffirmed rather than transcended and superseded.\u00a0It\u00a0remains real and valid (see Rom 9:1-6). The literal meaning of scripture is not abandoned, just as the Jews are not abandoned, or the covenant dissolved. This capaciousness on Paul&#8217;s behalf must be contrasted with his own early expressions of frustration with the unbelief and rejection of his message by his fellow Jews, such as\u00a0summary condemnation of the Jews found in 1 Thessalonians 2:15-16 [NRSV], a passage rich with allusions,\u00a0including to\u00a0Gen 15:16:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em><span id=\"en-KJV-29586\" class=\"text 1Thess-2-15\"><sup class=\"versenum\">15\u00a0<\/sup>Who killed both the Lord Jesus, and\u00a0the prophets, and drove us out; they\u00a0displease God, and oppose everyone\u00a0<\/span><\/em><em><span id=\"en-KJV-29587\" class=\"text 1Thess-2-16\"><sup class=\"versenum\">16 <\/sup>by\u00a0hindering us from speaking to the Gentiles\u00a0so that they\u00a0may\u00a0be saved.\u00a0Thus they have constantly been\u00a0filling up\u00a0the measure of their sins;\u00a0but God&#8217;s wrath has overtaken them at last.<\/span><\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Paul eventually comes to believe that the providential hardening of the Jews (see 2 Cor 3:14, Rom 11:7.25) to the idea that redemption extends to the believers among the Gentiles without making them into Jews, does not erase their privileged position in this economy of salvation (see Rom 11:11). In contrast to the later\u00a0<em>ecclesia triumphans, <\/em>Paul&#8217;s thinking remains firmly framed by an apocalyptic temporality.\u00a0But while Thessalonians still operates with the dualistic notion of an absolute opposition between the children of light and the children of darkness (1 Thess 5:5), by the time he writes his letter to the Romans Paul seems to have abandoned\u00a0his contempt for\u00a0the Judean authorities that wished to prevent the spreading of\u00a0the gospel to the Gentiles.<\/p>\n<p>In the end, Paul regards the\u00a0blindness or hardening of the Jews to the gospel of Christ as a temporary scenario, a providential ruse that, in fact,\u00a0makes it possible for the gospel to be preached to the Gentiles. In later times, Christian theology\u00a0turned to a more schematic approach.\u00a0Orthodox\u00a0Christian doctrine, empowered by the Roman state, legally cemented the Jews&#8217; diminished place in society and forced them forever to enact their exile from salvation. But that is not Paul who preached faith, hope, and love as preparation for a return of creation to the ideal state that prevailed in the beginning. He did not imagine\u00a0that his all-important message of divine salvation might be absorbed into a new ideology of monarchic rule.<\/p>\n<ol start=\"3\">\n<li><strong>Paul the Heretic<\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>In the above, I compared\u00a0Paul\u00a0 with what became of the Christian movement. Others, including Boyarin, are more interested in whether Paul was a good Jew or a bad Jew, or whether his gospel was within or beyond the range of Judaic possibilities of his time. Both of these debates are somewhat beside the point. They presuppose that Christianity and Judaism are different religions, and that mixing the two is illegitimate, as it muddies clearly established boundaries.<\/p>\n<p>We take it for granted that Paul was a Christian. But Paul asserts that he wants to be understood as a Jew, even a good Jew, and better than most. We can accept this as an indication that, for Paul at least, the ways of Judaism and Christianity had not yet parted. His whole purpose is to argue that his mission to the Gentiles was the necessary extension of the gospel, just as the gospel was the true meaning of the scriptures. In other words, what he was doing was, in his mind at least, continuous with the meaning and essence of Judaism, biblical revelation, scriptures and divine purpose all along. He may have been operating on the margins of the Judaic possibilities of his time and to some he clearly crossed a line. But in his own mind he was simply true to God\u2019s personal revelation to him, which he understood as a prophetic calling.<\/p>\n<p>It is\u00a0interesting to me that, in many ways, Paul also seems out of the doctrinal bounds established by the later orthodox councils of the bishops. His Christology is &#8220;adoptionist,&#8221; or perhaps Arian, i.e., he sees\u00a0the crucified\u00a0Christ as\u00a0a &#8220;son of God&#8221; in the ancient sense of a divine son, a royal title.\u00a0It\u00a0is not evident that he has a Trinitarian understanding of the nature of God. The exact relation between God and \u201cour Lord Jesus Christ\u201d seems of little concern to him. It is not\u00a0an issue\u00a0for him because he believes in the efficacy of Christ&#8217;s death and resurrection as an eschatological event that erases the boundaries between human beings and undoes the cosmic catastrophe of sin, which came about through the transgression of the first man. He is therefore neither a typical theologian in the later sense nor\u00a0entirely orthodox. In a sense he is both a bad Jew in that he believes that the eschaton has dawned, and a bad Christian in that he does not regard Christ as equivalent to God. This makes him a <em>skandalon<\/em>, a stumbling bloc, a writer difficult to stomach if and when we are concerned with established orthodoxies.\u00a0This explains why, even in his own time, he caused consternation not just among the\u00a0Judean\u00a0authorities who accused him of various transgressions and, willy-nilly, handed him over to the Romans, but also among the apostles. The Letter of James attests to the fact that Paul\u2019s doctrine of justification by faith was offensive to the pillar of the church in Jerusalem. And yet Paul\u2019s letters are in the New Testament. It is this fact, among others, that elevates this body of early Christian literature to the level of complexity we would expect from its inclusion in what we call the Bible.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Conclusion<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><\/strong>What, then, is the place of Paul in the history of early Christianity? To whom may we compare him? Unlike the other apostles, he did not know Jesus in the flesh. Unlike James the Righteous, he was not a member of the family of Jesus. His milieu was the diaspora Judaism of Tarsus in Asia Minor (in the coastal Adana-Mersin region of modern\u00a0Turkey), not the Galilee or Judea\u00a0with\u00a0their respective anti-Roman sentiments.\u00a0Like Philo of Alexandria,\u00a0Paul read and wrote Greek, though the Book of Acts wants him to have been tutored by\u00a0a great rabbinic\u00a0sage,\u00a0Rabbi Gamliel, and Paul emphasizes that he was an outstanding, even zealous, student of\u00a0Jewish law. Like Hillel the Elder, one of the founding figures of rabbinic Judaism and a contemporary of Jesus, Paul came from the outside and ran afoul of the dominant schools of Judea. (His alleged association with Gamliel puts Paul in the tradition of Hillel.)\u00a0His teachings are informed by apocalyptic assumptions and visions\u00a0that must have been more widely shared among rabbinic Jews than we may assume\u00a0if\u00a0we measure rabbinic theology solely by the standards of\u00a0what became normative\u00a0in Mishnah and Talmud.\u00a0Palestinian midrash and Hekhalot literature offer ample evidence of the continued relevance of\u00a0elements\u00a0of the apocalyptic worldview, though stripped of their messianic urgency. Paul projects an apocalyptic urgency that remains evident in Palestinian Judaism until and perhaps past the Bar Kokhba revolt (132-135 CE), as attested in Fourth Ezra and in the biography of the great R. Akiba b. Joseph\u00a0who hailed Bar Kokhba as the messiah and was himself martyred in the struggle for the freedom of Jerusalem.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps Paul\u00a0was a kind of John the Baptist\u00a0for the Gentiles. He\u00a0was not himself the messiah, or a son of God, but he prepared the way for the second and last coming of\u00a0the Lord Jesus Christ, the divine messenger of human salvation. Like John, he preached the forgiveness of sins. Unlike John, he preached to both Jews and Gentiles. His proclamation anticipated, and wanted to usher in,\u00a0a new humanity founded\u00a0on Christ&#8217;s resurrection, a humanity where it no longer mattered whether you were\u00a0a Jew or a Gentile, free-born or slave, male or female.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps it is most telling, in this respect, that Paul himself denies that he was sent to baptize (1 Cor 1:17). He says this\u00a0right after he acknowledged that he did baptize some of the Corinthians. His point, as usual, is\u00a0polemic. Paul&#8217;s\u00a0worries that the believers in Corinth are losing the main point over questions of ritual and party affiliation. Clearly, his message made little sense to those who tried to press his meaning into the forms of conventional religion.\u00a0In response he admits to his folly.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em><span id=\"en-ESV-28367\" class=\"text 1Cor-1-20\"><sup class=\"versenum\">20\u00a0<\/sup>Where is the one who is wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the debater of this age?\u00a0Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world?<\/span>\u00a0<span id=\"en-ESV-28368\" class=\"text 1Cor-1-21\"><sup class=\"versenum\">21\u00a0<\/sup>For since, in the wisdom of God, the world did not know God through wisdom, God decided, through the\u00a0foolishness of our proclamation,\u00a0to save those who believe.<\/span>\u00a0<span id=\"en-ESV-28369\" class=\"text 1Cor-1-22\"><sup class=\"versenum\">22\u00a0<\/sup>For\u00a0Jews demand signs and Greeks\u00a0desire wisdom,<\/span>\u00a0<span id=\"en-ESV-28370\" class=\"text 1Cor-1-23\"><sup class=\"versenum\">23\u00a0<\/sup>but we\u00a0proclaim Christ\u00a0crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and\u00a0foolishness to Gentiles,<\/span>\u00a0<span id=\"en-ESV-28371\" class=\"text 1Cor-1-24\"><sup class=\"versenum\">24\u00a0<\/sup>but to those who are the called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ\u00a0the power of God and\u00a0the wisdom of God.<\/span>\u00a0<span id=\"en-ESV-28372\" class=\"text 1Cor-1-25\"><sup class=\"versenum\">25\u00a0<\/sup>For\u00a0God&#8217;s\u00a0foolishness is wiser than human wisdom, and\u00a0God&#8217;s weakness is stronger than human strength.<\/span><\/em><span id=\"en-ESV-28372\" class=\"text 1Cor-1-25\">\u00a0[1 Cor 1: 20ff NRSV]<\/span><em>\u00a0<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-align: left\">No wonder Paul is difficult to classify. Radical Jew, inventor of Christianity as a world religion, whatever we call him, his voice still rings fresh.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\"><span>[1]<\/span><\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.commentarymagazine.com\/articles\/a-radical-jew-by-daniel-boyarin\/\">https:\/\/www.commentarymagazine.com\/articles\/a-radical-jew-by-daniel-boyarin\/<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Jay Harris, in a review of Daniel Boyarin\u2019s A radical Jew published in Commentary Magazine of June 1, 1995[1], cites Edward Gibbon to point out that the idea of Paul as a universalist transcending Jewish ethnic boundaries is, at best, only part of the story. That Paul\u2019s exclusivism was more \u201cecclesiocentric\u201d than \u201cethnocentric\u201d primarily means [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1355,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[1],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/753"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1355"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=753"}],"version-history":[{"count":46,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/753\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1020,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/753\/revisions\/1020"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=753"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=753"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.bu.edu\/mzank\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=753"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}