|

The life of St. Paul may be conveniently considered
under the following heads:
I. PRELIMINARY
QUESTIONS
II. LIFE AND WORK OF PAUL
III. THEOLOGY OF ST. PAUL
I. PRELIMINARY QUESTIONS
A. Apocryphal Acts of St. Paul
Professor Schmidt has published a photographic copy, a transcription, a
German translation, and a commentary of a Coptic papyrus composed of about
2000 fragments, which he has classified, juxtaposed, and deciphered at a
cost of infinite labour ("Acta Pauli aus der Heidelberger koptischen
Papyrushandschrift Nr. 1", Leipzig, 1904, and "Zusatze" etc., Leipzig,
1905). Most critics, whether Catholic (Duchesne, Bardenhewer, Ehrhard
etc.), or Protestant (Zahn, Harnack, Corssen etc.), believe that these are
real "Acta Pauli", although the text edited by Schmidt, with its very
numerous gaps, represents but a small portion of the original work. This
discovery modified the generally accepted ideas concerning the origin,
contents, and value of these apocryphal Acts, and warrants the conclusion
that three ancient compositions which have reached us formed an integral
part of the "Acta Pauli" viz. the "Acta Pauli et Theclae", of which the
best edition is that of Lipsius, ("Acta Apostolorum apocrypha", Leipzig,
1891, 235-72), a "Martyrium Pauli" preserved in Greek and a fragment of
which also exists in Latin (op. cit., 104-17), and a letter from the
Corinthians to Paul with the latter's reply, the Armenian text of which
was preserved (cf. Zahn, "Gesch. des neutest. Kanons", II, 592-611), and
the Latin discovered by Berger in 1891 (d. Harnack, "Die apokryphen Briefe
des Paulus an die Laodicener und Korinther", Bonn, 1905). With great
sagacity Zahn anticipated this result with regard to the last two
documents, and the manner in which St. Jerome speaks of the
periodoi Pauli et Theclae (De viris ill., vii)
might have permitted the same surmise with regard to the first.
Another consequence of Schmidt's discovery is no less interesting.
Lipsius maintained -- and this was hitherto the common opinion -- that
besides the Catholic "Acts" there formerly existed Gnostic "Acts of Paul",
but now everything tends to prove that the latter never existed. In fact
Origen quotes the "Acta Pauli" twice as an estimable writing ("In Joann.",
xx, 12; "De princip.", II, i, 3); Eusebius (Hist. eccl., III, iii, 5; XXV,
4) places them among the books in dispute, such as the "Shepherd" of
Hermas, the "Apocalypse of Peter", the "Epistle of
Barnabas", and the "Teaching of the Apostles". The stichometry of the
"Codex Claromontanus" (photograph in Vigouroux, "Dict. de la Bible", II,
147) places them after the canonical books. Tertullian and St. Jerome,
while pointing out the legendary character of this writing, do not attack
its orthodoxy. The precise purpose of St. Paul's correspondence with the
Corinthians which formed part of the "Acts", was to oppose the Gnostics,
Simon and Cleobius. But there is no reason to admit the existence of
heretical "Acts" which have since been hopelessly lost, for all the
details given by ancient authors are verified in the "Acts" which have
been recovered or tally well with them. The following is the explanation
of the confusion: The
Manicheans and
Priscillianists had circulated a collection of five
apocryphal
"Acts", four of which were tainted with heresy, and the fifth were the
"Acts of Paul". The "Acta Pauli" owing to this unfortunate association are
suspected of heterodoxy by the more recent authors such as Philastrius (De
haeres., 88) and Photius (Cod., 114).
Tertullian (De
baptismo, 17) and St.
Jerome (De vir. ill., vii) denounce the fabulous character of the
apocryphal "Acts"
of Paul, and this severe judgment is amply confirmed by the examination of
the fragments published by Schmidt. It is a purely imaginative work in
which improbability vies with absurdity. The author, who was acquainted
with the canonical
Acts of the Apostles, locates the scene in the places really visited
by St. Paul (Antioch,
Iconium,
Myra,
Perge,
Sidon,
Tyre,
Ephesus,
Corinth,
Philippi,
Rome), but for
the rest he gives his fancy free rein. His chronology is absolutely
impossible. Of the sixty-five persons he names, very few are known and the
part played by these is irreconcilable with the statements of the
canonical "Acts". Briefly, if the canonical "Acts" are true the
apocryphal "Acts"
are false. This, however, does not imply that none of the details have
historical foundation, but they must be confirmed by an independent
authority.
B. Chronology
If we admit according to the almost unanimous opinion of exegetes that
Acts 15 and
Galatians 2:1-10,
relate to the same fact it will be seen that an interval of seventeen
years — or at least sixteen, counting incomplete years as accomplished —
elapsed between the conversion of Paul and the Apostolic council, for Paul
visited Jerusalem
three years after his conversion (Galatians
1:18) and returned after fourteen years for the meeting held with
regard to legal observances (Galatians
2:1: "Epeita dia dekatessaron eton"). It is true that some
authors include the three years prior to the first visit in the total of
fourteen, but this explanation seems forced. On the other hand, twelve or
thirteen years elapsed between the Apostolic council and the end of the
captivity, for the captivity lasted nearly five years (more than two years
at Caesarea,
Acts 24:27, six
months travelling, including the sojourn at
Malta, and two
years at Rome,
Acts 28:30);
the third mission lasted not less than four years and a half (three of
which were spent at
Ephesus, Acts
20:31, and one between the departure from
Ephesus and the
arrival at Jerusalem,
1 Corinthians 16:8;
Acts 20:16, and
six months at the very least for the journey to Galatia,
Acts 18:23);
while the second mission lasted not less than three years (eighteen months
for Corinth,
Acts 18:11, and
the remainder for the evangelization of Galatia, Macedonia, and
Athens,
Acts 15:36-17:34).
Thus from the conversion to the end of the first captivity we have a total
of about twenty-nine years.
Now if we could find a fixed point that is a synchronism between a fact
in the life of Paul and a certainly dated event in profane history, it
would be easy to reconstruct the Pauline chronology. Unfortunately this
much wished-for mark has not yet been indicated with certainty, despite
the numerous attempts made by scholars, especially in recent times. It is
of interest to note even the abortive attempts, because the discovery of
an inscription or of a coin may any day transform an approximate date into
an absolutely fixed point. These are the meeting of Paul with Sergius
Paulus, Proconsul of
Cyprus, about the year 46 (Acts
13:7), the meeting at
Corinth with
Aquila and Priscilla,
who had been expelled from
Rome, about 51 (Acts
18:2), the meeting with Gallio, Proconsul of Achaia, about 53 (Acts
18:12), the address of Paul before the Governor Felix and his wife
Drusilla about 58
(Acts 24:24).
All these events, as far as they may be assigned approximate dates, agree
with the Apostle's general chronology but give no precise results. Three
synchronisms, however, appear to afford a firmer basis:
(1) The occupation of
Damascus by the
ethnarch of King Aretas and the escape of the Apostle three years after
his conversion (2
Corinthians 11:32-33;
Acts 9:23-26).
-- Damascene
coins bearing the effigy of
Tiberius to the
year 34 are extant, proving that at that time the city belonged to the
Romans. It is impossible to assume that Aretas had received it as a gift
from Tiberius,
for the latter, especially in his last years, was hostile to the King of
the Nabataeans whom Vitellius, Governor of Syria, was ordered to attack
(Joseph., "Ant.", XVIII, v, 13); neither could Aretas have possessed
himself of it by force for, besides the unlikelihood of a direct
aggression against the Romans, the expedition of Vitellius was at first
directed not against
Damascus but against
Petra. It has
therefore been somewhat plausibly conjectured that Caligula, subject as he
was to such whims, had ceded it to him at the time of his accession (10
March, 37). As a matter of fact nothing is known of imperial coins of
Damascus dating
from either Caligula or Claudius. According to this hypothesis St. Paul's
conversion was not prior to 34, nor his escape from
Damascus and his
first visit to
Jerusalem, to 37.
(2) Death of Agrippa, famine in
Judea, mission of
Paul and Barnabas
to Jerusalem to
bring thither the alms from the
Church of Antioch
(Acts 11:27-12:25).
-- Agrippa
died shortly after the Pasch (Acts
12:3, 12:19),
when he was celebrating in
Caesarea solemn
festivals in honour of Claudius's recent return from
Britain, in the
third year of his reign, which had begun in 41 (Josephus, "Ant.", XIX,
vii, 2). These combined facts bring us to the year 44, and it is precisely
in this year that Orosius (Hist., vii, 6) places the great famine which
desolated Judea.
Josephus mentions
it somewhat later, under the procurator Tiberius Alexander (about 46), but
it is well known that the whole of Claudius's reign was characterized by
poor harvests (Suet., "Claudius", 18) and a general famine was usually
preceded by a more or less prolonged period of scarcity. It is also
possible that the relief sent in anticipation of the famine
foretold by
Agabus (Acts
11:28-29) preceded the appearance of the scourge or coincided with the
first symptoms of want. On the other hand, the synchronism between the
death of Herod
and the mission of Paul can only be approximate, for although the two
facts are closely connected in the
Acts, the account
of the death of
Agrippa may be a mere episode intended to shed light on the situation
of the Church of
Jerusalem about the time of the arrival of the delegates from
Antioch. In any
case, 45 seems to be the most satisfactory date.
(3) Replacing of Felix by Festus two years after the arrest to Paul
(Acts 24:27).
-- Until recently chronologists commonly fixed this important event,
in the year 60-61. Harnack, 0. Holtzmann, and McGiffert suggest advancing
it four or five years for the following reasons: (1) In his
"Chronicon",
Eusebius places
the arrival of Festus in the second year of
Nero (October,
55-October, 56, or if, as is asserted,
Eusebius makes
the reigns of the emperors begin with the September after their accession,
September, 56-September, 57). But it must be borne in mind that the
chroniclers being always obliged to give definite dates, were likely to
guess at them, and it may be that
Eusebius for lack
of definite information divided into two equal parts the entire duration
of the government of Felix and Festus. (2)
Josephus states
(Ant., XX, viii, 9) that Felix having been recalled to
Rome and accused
by the Jews to Nero,
owed his safety only to his brother Pallas who was then high in favour.
But according to Tacitus (Annal., XIII, xiv-xv), Pallas was dismissed
shortly before Britannicus celebrated his fourteenth anniversary, that is,
in January, 55. These two statements are irreconcilable; for if Pallas was
dismissed three months after
Nero's accession
(13 October, 54) he could not have been at the summit of his power when
his brother Felix, recalled from Palestine at the command of
Nero about the
time of Pentecost,
arrived at Rome.
Possibly Pallas, who after his dismissal retained his
wealth and a
portion of his influence, since he stipulated that his administration
should not be subjected to an investigation, was able to be of assistance
to his brother until 62 when
Nero, to obtain
possession of his
goods, Nero
had him poisoned.
The advocates of a later date bring forward the following reasons: (1)
Two years before the recall of Felix, Paul reminded him that he had been
for many years judge over the Jewish nation (Acts
24:10-27). This can scarcely mean less than six or seven years, and
as, according to
Josephus who agrees with Tacitus, Felix was named procurator of
Judea in 52, the
beginning of the captivity would fall in 58 or 59. It is true that the
argument loses its strength if it be admitted with several critics that
Felix before being procurator had held a subordinate position in
Palestine. (2)
Josephus (Ant., XX, viii, 5-8) places under
Nero everything
that pertains to the government of Felix, and although this long series of
events does not necessarily require many years it is evident that
Josephus regarded
the government of Felix as coinciding for the most part with the reign of
Nero, which began
on 13 October, 54. In fixing as follows the chief dates in the life of
Paul all certain or probable data seem to be satisfactorily taken into
account: Conversion, 35; first visit to
Jerusalem, 37;
sojourn at Tarsus,
37-43; apostolate at
Antioch, 43-44; second visit to
Jerusalem, 44 or
45; first mission, 45-49; third visit to
Jerusalem, 49 or
50; second mission, 50-53; (1 and 2 Thessalonians), 52; fourth visit to
Jerusalem, 53;
third mission, 53-57; (1 and 2 Corinthians; Galatians), 56; (Romans),
57; fifth visit to
Jerusalem, arrest, 57; arrival of Festus, departure for
Rome, 59;
captivity at Rome,
60-62; (Philemon;
Colossians;
Ephesians;
Philippians), 61;
second period of activity, 62-66; (1
Timothy; Titus),
second arrest, 66; (2
Timothy), martyrdom, 67. (See Turner, "Chronology of the N. T." in
Hastings, "Dict. of the Bible" Hönicke, "Die Chronologie des Lebens des Ap.
Paulus", Leipzig, 1903.
II. LIFE AND WORK OF PAUL
A. Birth and Education
From St. Paul himself we know that he was born at
Tarsus in Cilicia
(Acts 21:39),
of a father who was a Roman citizen (Acts
22:26-28; cf.
16:37), of a family in which piety was hereditary (2
Timothy 1:3) and which was much attached to
Pharisaic
traditions and observances (Philippians
3:5-6). St.
Jerome relates, on what ground is not known, that his parents were
natives of Gischala, a small town of
Galilee and that
they brought him to
Tarsus when Gischala was captured by the Romans ("De vir. ill.", v;
"In epist. ad Phil.", 23). This last detail is certainly an anachronism,
but the Galilean
origin of the family is not at all improbable. As he belonged to the
tribe of Benjamin
he was given at the time of his
circumcision the
name of Saul, which must have been common in that
tribe in memory
of the first king of
the Jews (Philippians
3:5). As a Roman citizen he also bore the Latin name of Paul. It was
quite usual for the Jews of that time to have two names, one Hebrew, the
other Latin or Greek, between which there was often a certain assonance
and which were joined together exactly in the manner made use of by St.
Luke (Acts 13:9:
Saulos ho kai Paulos). See on this point Deissmann, "Bible Studies"
(Edinburgh, 1903, 313-17.) It was natural that in inaugurating his
apostolate among the
Gentiles Paul should have adopted his Roman name, especially as the
name Saul had a ludicrous meaning in Greek. As every respectable Jew had
to teach his son a trade, young Saul learned how to make tents (Acts
18:3) or rather to make the mohair of which tents were made (cf. Lewin,
"Life of St. Paul", I, London, 1874, 8-9). He was still very young when
sent to Jerusalem
to receive his education at the school of
Gamaliel (Acts
22:3). Possibly some of his family resided in the
holy city; later
there is mention of the presence of one of his sisters whose son saved his
life (Acts 23:16).
From that time it is absolutely impossible to follow him until he takes an
active part in the martyrdom of
St. Stephen (Acts
7:58-60; 22:20).
He was then qualified as a young man (neanias), but this was very
elastic appellation and might be applied to a man between twenty and
forty.
B. Conversion and early Labours
We read in the Acts
of the Apostles three accounts of the conversion of St. Paul (9:1-19;
22:3-21;
26:9-23)
presenting some slight differences, which it is not difficult to harmonize
and which do not affect the basis of the narrative, which is perfectly
identical in substance. See J. Massie, "The Conversion of St. Paul" in
"The Expositor", 3rd series, X, 1889, 241-62. Sabatier agreeing with most
independent critics, has well said (L'Apotre Paul, 1896, 42): These
differences cannot in any way alter the reality of the fact; their bearing
on the narrative is extremely remote; they do not deal even with the
circumstances accompanying the
miracle but with
the subjective impressions which the companions of St. Paul received of
these circumstances. . . . To base a denial of the historical character of
the account upon these differences would seem therefore a violent and
arbitrary proceeding." All efforts hitherto made to explain without a
miracle the
apparition of Jesus
to Paul have failed. Naturalistic explanations are reduced to two: either
Paul believed that he really saw
Christ, but was
the victim of an hallucination, or he believed that he saw Him only
through a spiritual vision, which tradition, recorded in the
Acts of the Apostles,
later erroneously materialized. Renan explained everything by
hallucination due to disease brought on by a combination of moral causes
such as doubt, remorse, fear, and of physical causes such as ophthalmia,
fatigue, fever, the sudden transition from the torrid desert to the fresh
gardens of Damascus,
perhaps a sudden storm accompanied by lightning and thunder. All this
combined, according to Renan's theory, to produce a cerebral commotion, a
passing delirium which Paul took in good faith for an apparition of the
risen
Christ.
The other partisans of a natural explanation while avoiding the word
hallucination, eventually fall back on the system of Renan which they
merely endeavour to render a little less complicated. Thus Holsten, for
whom the vision of
Christ is only the conclusion of a series of syllogisms by which Paul
persuaded himself that
Christ was truly
risen. So also
Pfleiderer, who however, causes the imagination to play a more influential
part: "An excitable, nervous temperament; a soul that had been violently
agitated and torn by the most terrible doubts; a most vivid phantasy,
occupied with the awful scenes of persecution on the one hand and on the
other by the ideal image of the celestial
Christ; in
addition the nearness of
Damascus with the
urgency of a decision, the lonely stillness, the scorching and blinding
heat of the desert -- in fact everything combined to produce one of those
ecstatic states
in which the soul believes that it sees those images and conceptions which
violently agitate it as if they were phenomena proceeding from the outward
world" (Lectures on the influence of the Apostle Paul on the development
of Christianity,
1897, 43). We have quoted Pfleiderer's words at length because his
"psychological" explanation is considered the best ever devised. It will
readily be seen that it is insufficient and as much opposed to the account
in the Acts as to the express testimony of St. Paul himself. (1) Paul is
certain of having "seen"
Christ as did the
other Apostles (1
Corinthians 9:1); he declares that
Christ "appeared"
to him (1
Corinthians 15:8) as He appeared to
Peter, to James,
to the Twelve, after His
Resurrection. (2)
He knows that his conversion is not the fruit of his reasoning or
thoughts, but an unforeseen, sudden, startling change, due to all-powerful
grace (Galatians
1:12-15; 1
Corinthians 15:10). (3) He is wrongly credited with doubts,
perplexities, fears, remorse, before his conversion. He was halted by
Christ when his
fury was at its height (Acts
9:1-2); it was "through zeal" that he persecuted the Church (Philippians
3:6), and he obtained mercy because he had acted "ignorantly in
unbelief" (1
Timothy 1:13). All explanations, psychological or otherwise, are
worthless in face of these definite assertions, for all suppose that it
was Paul's faith in
Christ which engendered the vision, whereas according to the
concordant testimony of the Acts and the Epistles it was the actual vision
of Christ which
engendered faith.
After his conversion, his baptism, and his
miraculous cure
Paul set about preaching to the Jews (Acts
9:19-20). He afterwards withdrew to Arabia -- probably to the region
south of Damascus
(Galatians 1:17),
doubtless less to preach than to meditate on the
Scriptures. On his return to
Damascus the
intrigues of the Jews forced him to flee by night (2
Corinthians 11:32-33;
Acts 9:23-25).
He went to Jerusalem
to see Peter (Galatians
1:18), but remained only fifteen days, for the snares of the Greeks
threatened his life. He then left for
Tarsus and is
lost to sight for five or six years (Acts
9:29-30;
Galatians 1:21).
Barnabas went in search of him and brought him to
Antioch where for
a year they worked together and their apostolate was most fruitful (Acts
11:25-26). Together also they were sent to
Jerusalem to
carry alms to the brethren on the occasion of the famine predicted by
Agabus (Acts
11:27-30). They do not seem to have found the Apostles there; these
had been scattered by the persecution of
Herod.
C. Apostolic Career of Paul
This period of twelve years (45-57) was the most active and fruitful of
his life. It comprises three great Apostolic expeditions of which
Antioch was in
each instance the starting-point and which invariably ended in a visit to
Jerusalem.
(1) First mission (Acts 13:1-14:27)
Set apart by command of the
Holy Ghost for
the special evangelization of the
Gentiles,
Barnabas and Saul
embark for Cyprus,
preach in the synagogue of Salamina, cross the island from east to west
doubtless following the southern coast, and reach
Paphos, the
residence of the proconsul Sergius Paulus, where a sudden change takes
place. After the conversion of the Roman proconsul, Saul, suddenly become
Paul, is invariably mentioned before
Barnabas by St.
Luke and manifestly assumes the leadership of the mission which
Barnabas has
hitherto directed. The results of this change are soon evident. Paul,
doubtless concluding that
Cyprus, the
natural dependency of Syria and Cilicia, would embrace the faith of
Christ when these
two countries should be
Christian, chose
Asia Minor as the
field of his apostolate and sailed for
Perge in
Pamphylia, eighth miles above the mouth of the Cestrus. It was then that
John Mark, cousin of
Barnabas, dismayed perhaps by the daring projects of the Apostle,
abandoned the expedition and returned to
Jerusalem, while
Paul and Barnabas
laboured alone among the rough mountains of
Pisidia, which
were infested by brigands and crossed by frightful precipices. Their
destination was the Roman colony of
Antioch,
situated a seven day's journey from
Perge. Here Paul
spoke on the vocation of
Israel and the
providential sending of the Messias, a discourse which St. Luke reproduces
in substance as an example of his preaching in the synagogues (Acts
13:16-41). The sojourn of the two missionaries in
Antioch was
long enough for the word of the Lord to be published throughout the whole
country (Acts 13:49).
When by their intrigues the Jews had obtained against them a decree of
banishment, they went to
Iconium, three or
four days distant, where they met with the same persecution from the Jews
and the same eager welcome from the
Gentiles. The
hostility of the Jews forced them to take refuge in the Roman colony of
Lystra, eighteen miles distant. Here the Jews from
Antioch and
Iconium laid
snares for Paul and having stoned him left him for dead, but again he
succeeded in escaping and this time sought refuge in Derbe, situated about
forty miles away on the frontier of the Province of Galatia. Their circuit
completed, the missionaries retraced their steps in order to visit their
neophytes,
ordained priests in each Church founded by them at such great cost, and
thus reached Perge
where they halted to preach the Gospel, perhaps while awaiting an
opportunity to embark for
Attalia, a port
twelve miles distant. On their return to
Antioch in Syria
after an absence of at least three years, they were received with
transports of joy and thanksgiving, for
God had opened
the door of faith to the
Gentiles.
The problem of the status of the
Gentiles in the
Church now made itself felt with all its acuteness. Some
Judeo-Christians
coming down from
Jerusalem claimed that the
Gentiles must be
submitted to
circumcision and treated as the Jews treated
proselytes.
Against this Paul and
Barnabas protested and it was decided that a meeting should be held at
Jerusalem in
order to solve the question. At this assembly Paul and
Barnabas
represented the community of
Antioch.
Peter pleaded the
freedom of the
Gentiles; James upheld him, at the same time demanding that the
Gentiles should
abstain from certain things which especially shocked the Jews. It was
decided, first, that the
Gentiles were
exempt from the
Mosaic law. Secondly, that those of Syria and Cilicia must abstain
from things sacrificed to idols, from blood, from things strangled, and
from fornication. Thirdly, that this injunction was laid upon them, not in
virtue of the Mosaic
law, but in the name of the
Holy Ghost. This
meant the complete triumph of Paul's ideas. The restriction imposed on the
Gentile converts
of Syria and Cilicia did not concern his Churches, and Titus, his
companion, was not compelled to be
circumcised,
despite the loud protests of the
Judaizers (Galatians
2:3-4). Here it is to be assumed that
Galatians 2 and
Acts 15 relate to
the same fact, for the actors are the same, Paul and
Barnabas on the
one hand, Peter
and James on the other; the discussion is the same, the question of the
circumcision of
the Gentiles; the
scenes are the same,
Antioch and
Jerusalem; the date is the same, about A. D. 50; and the result is the
same, Paul's victory over the
Judaizers.
However, the decision of
Jerusalem did not
do away with all difficulties. The question did not concern only the
Gentiles, and
while exempting them from the
Mosaic law, it
was not declared that it would not have been counted meritorious and more
perfect for them to observe it, as the decree seemed to liken them to
Jewish proselytes
of the second class. Furthermore the
Judeo-Christians,
not having been included in the verdict, were still free to consider
themselves bound to the observance of the law. This was the origin of the
dispute which shortly afterwards arose at
Antioch between
Peter and Paul.
The latter taught openly that the law was abolished for the Jews
themselves. Peter
did not think otherwise, but he considered it wise to avoid giving offence
to the Judaizers
and to refrain from eating with the
Gentiles who did
not observe all the prescriptions of the law. As he thus morally
influenced the
Gentiles to live as the Jews did, Paul demonstrated to him that this
dissimulation or opportuneness prepared the way for future
misunderstandings and conflicts and even then had regrettable
consequences. His manner of relating this incident leaves no room for
doubt that Peter
was persuaded by his arguments (Galatians
2:11-20).
(2) Second mission (Acts 15:36-18:22)
The beginning of the second mission was marked by a rather sharp
discussion concerning
Mark, whom St. Paul this time refused to accept as travelling
companion. Consequently
Barnabas set out
with Mark for
Cyprus and Paul
chose Silas or Silvanus, a Roman citizen like himself, and an influential
member of the Church of
Jerusalem, and
sent by it to Antioch
to deliver the decrees of the Apostolic council. The two missionaries
first went from
Antioch to Tarsus,
stopping on the way in order to
promulgate the
decisions of the Council of Jerusalem; then they went from
Tarsus to Derbe,
through the Cilician Gates, the defiles of
Tarsus, and the
plains of Lycaonia. The visitation of the Churches founded during his
first mission passed without notable incidents except the choice of
Timothy, whom the
Apostle while in Lystra persuaded to accompany him, and whom he caused to
be circumcised in
order to facilitate his access to the Jews who were numerous in those
places. It was probably at
Antioch of Pisidia,
although the Acts
do not mention that city, that the itinerary of the mission was altered by
the intervention of the
Holy Ghost. Paul
thought to enter the Province of Asia by the valley of Meander which
separated it by only three day's journey, but they passed through Phrygia
and the country of Galatia, having been forbidden by the
Holy Ghost to
preach the word of
God in Asia (Acts
16:6). These words (ten phrygian kai Galatiken choran) are
variously interpreted, according as we take them to mean the Galatians of
the north or of the south (see GALATIANS). Whatever the hypothesis, the
missionaries had to travel northwards in that portion of Galatia properly
so called of which Pessinonte was the capital, and the only question is as
to whether or not they preached there. They did not intend to do so, but
as is known the evangelization of the Galatians was due to an accident,
namely the illness of Paul (Galatians iv, 13); this fits very well for
Galatians in the north. In any case the missionaries having reached the
Upper part of Mysia (kata Mysian), attempted to enter the rich
Province of Bithynia, which lay before them, but the
Holy Ghost
prevented them (Acts
16:7). Therefore, passing through Mysia without stopping to preach (parelthontes)
they reached Alexandria of Troas, where
God's will was
again made known to them in the vision of a Macedonian who called them to
come and help his country (Acts
16:9-10).
Paul continued to follow on European soil the method of preaching he
had employed from the beginning. As far as possible he concentrated his
efforts in a metropolis from which the Faith would spread to cities of
second rank and to the country districts. Wherever there was a synagogue
he first took his stand there and preached to the Jews and
proselytes who
would consent to listen to him. When the rupture with the Jews was
irreparable which always happened sooner or later, he founded a new Church
with his neophytes
as a nucleus. He remained in the same city until persecution, generally
aroused by the intrigues of the Jews, forced him to retire. There were,
however, variations of this plan. At
Philippi, where
there was no synagogue, the first preaching took place in the uncovered
oratory called the proseuche, which the
Gentiles made a
reason for stirring up the persecution. Paul and Silas, charged with
disturbing public order, were beaten with rods, imprisoned, and finally
exiled. But at
Thessalonica and Berea, whither they successively repaired after
leaving Philippi,
things turned out almost as they had planned. The apostolate of
Athens was quite
exceptional. Here there was no question of Jews or synagogue, Paul,
contrary to his custom, was alone (1
Thessalonians 3:1), and he delivered before the areopagus a specially
framed discourse, a synopsis of which has been preserved by
Acts 17:23-31
as a specimen of its kind. He seems to have left the city of his own
accord, without being forced to do so by persecution. The mission to
Corinth on the
other hand may be considered typical. Paul preached in the synagogue every
Sabbath day, and
when the violent opposition of the Jews denied him entrance there he
withdrew to an adjoining house which was the property of a
proselyte named
Titus Justus. He carried on his apostolate in this manner for eighteen
months, while the Jews vainly stormed against him; he was able to
withstand them owing to the impartial, if not actually favourable,
attitude of the proconsul, Gallio. Finally he decided to go to
Jerusalem in
fulfillment of a vow made perhaps in a moment of danger. From
Jerusalem,
according to his custom, he returned to
Antioch. The two
Epistles to the
Thessalonians were written during the early months of his sojourn at
Corinth. For
occasion, circumstances, and analysis of these letters see
THESSALONIANS.
(3) Third mission (Acts 18:23-21:26)
Paul's destination in his third journey was obviously
Ephesus. There
Aquila and Priscilla
were awaiting him, he had promised the Ephesians to return and evangelize
them if it were the will of
God (Acts
18:19-21), and the
Holy Ghost no
longer opposed his entry into Asia. Therefore, after a brief rest at
Antioch he went
through the countries of Galatia and Phrygia (Acts
18:23) and passing through "the upper regions" of Central Asia he
reached Ephesus (19:1).
His method remained the same. In order to earn his living and not be a
burden to the faithful he toiled every day for many hours at making tents,
but this did not prevent him from preaching the Gospel. As usual he began
with the synagogue where he succeeded in remaining for three months. At
the end of this time he taught every day in a classroom placed at his
disposal by a certain Tyrannus "from the fifth hour to the tenth" (from
eleven in the morning till four in the afternoon), according to the
interesting addition of the
"Codex Bezae" (Acts
19:9). This lasted two years, so that all the inhabitants of Asia,
Jews and Greeks, heard the word of the Lord (Acts
19:20).
Naturally there were trials to be endured and obstacles to be overcome.
Some of these obstacles arose from the jealousy of the Jews, who vainly
endeavoured to imitate Paul's
exorcisms, others
from the superstition
of the pagans, which was especially rife at
Ephesus. So
effectually did he triumph over it, however, that books of
superstition were
burned to the value of 50,000 pieces of silver (each piece about a day's
wage). This time the persecution was due to the
Gentiles and
inspired by a motive of self-interest. The progress of
Christianity
having ruined the sale of the little facsimiles of the temple of Diana and
statuettes of the goddess, which devout pilgrims had been wont to
purchase, a certain
Demetrius, at
the head of the guild of silversmiths, stirred up the crowd against Paul.
The scene which then transpired in the theatre is described by St. Luke
with memorable vividness and pathos (Acts
19:23-40). The Apostle had to yield to the storm. After a stay at
Ephesus of two
years and a half, perhaps more (Acts
20:31: trietian), he departed for Macedonia and thence for
Corinth, where he
spent the winter. It was his intention in the following spring to go by
sea to Jerusalem,
doubtless for the Pasch; but learning that the Jews had planned his
destruction, he did not wish, by going to sea, to afford them an
opportunity to attempt his life. Therefore he returned by way of
Macedonia. Numerous disciples divided into two groups, accompanied him or
awaited him at Troas.
These were Sopater of Berea, Aristarchus and Secundus of Thessalonica,
Gaius of Derbe,
Timothy, Tychicus
and Trophimus of Asia, and finally Luke, the historian of the
Acts, who gives us
minutely all the stages of the voyage:
Philippi,
Troas, Assos,
Mitylene,
Chios,
Samos,
Miletus, Cos,
Rhodes,
Patara,
Tyre,
Ptolemais,
Caesarea,
Jerusalem.
Three more remarkable facts should be noted in passing. At
Troas Paul
resuscitated the young Eutychus, who had fallen from a third-story window
while Paul was preaching late into the night. At
Miletus he
pronounced before the ancients of
Ephesus the
touching farewell discourse which drew many tears (Acts
20:18-38). At
Caesarea the Holy
Ghost by the mouth of
Agabus, predicted
his coming arrest, but did not dissuade him from going to
Jerusalem.
St. Paul's four great Epistles were written during this third mission:
the first to the
Corinthians from
Ephesus, about the time of the Pasch prior to his departure from that
city; the second to
the Corinthians from Macedonia, during the summer or autumn of the
same year; that to the
Romans from
Corinth, in the following spring; the date of the
Epistle to the
Galatians is disputed. On the many questions occasioned by the
despatch and the language of these letters, or the situation assumed
either on the side of the Apostle or his correspondents, see
EPISTLES TO THE
CORINTHIANS;
EPISTLE TO THE GALATIANS;
EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS.
D. Captivity (Acts 21:27-28:31)
Falsely accused by the Jews of having brought
Gentiles into the
Temple, Paul was
ill-treated by the populace and led in chains to the fortress Antonia by
the tribune Lysias. The latter having learned that the Jews had conspired
treacherously to slay the prisoner sent him under strong escort to
Caesarea, which
was the residence of the procurator Felix. Paul had little difficulty in
confounding his accusers, but as he refused to purchase his liberty Felix
kept him in chains for two years and even left him in prison in order to
please the Jews, until the arrival of his successor, Festus. The new
governor wished to send the prisoner to
Jerusalem there
to be tried in the presence of his accusers; but Paul, who was acquainted
with the snares of his enemies, appealed to Caesar. Thenceforth his cause
could be tried only at
Rome. This first
period of captivity is characterized by five discourses of the Apostle:
The first was delivered in
Hebrew on the
steps of the Antonia before the threatening crowd; herein Paul relates his
conversion and vocation to the Apostolate, but he was interrupted by the
hostile shouts of the multitude (Acts
22:1-22). In the second, delivered the next day, before the
Sanhedrin
assembled at the command of Lysias, the Apostle skillfully embroiled the
Pharisees with
the Sadducees and
no accusation could be brought. In the third, Paul, answering his accuser
Tertullus in the presence of the Governor Felix, makes known the facts
which had been distorted and proves his innocence (Acts
24:10-21). The fourth discourse is merely an explanatory summary of
the Christian Faith
delivered before Felix and his wife
Drusilla (Acts
24:24-25). The fifth, pronounced before the Governor Festus,
King Agrippa,
and his wife Berenice, again relates the history of Paul's conversion, and
is left unfinished owing to the sarcastic interruptions of the governor
and the embarrassed attitude of the king (Acts
26).
The journey of the captive Paul from
Caesarea to
Rome is described
by St. Luke with an exactness and vividness of colours which leave nothing
to be desired. For commentaries see Smith, "Voyage and Shipwreck of St.
Paul" (1866); Ramsay, "St. Paul the Traveller and Roman Citizen" (London,
1908). The centurion Julius had shipped Paul and his fellow-prisoners on a
merchant vessel on board which Luke and Aristarchus were able to take
passage. As the season was advanced the voyage was slow and difficult.
They skirted the coasts of Syria, Cilicia, and Pamphylia. At
Myra in Lycia the
prisoners were transferred to an Alexandrian vessel bound for Italy, but
the winds being persistently contrary a place in Crete called Goodhavens
was reached with great difficulty and Paul advised that they should spend
the winter there, but his advice was not followed, and the vessel driven
by the tempest drifted aimlessly for fourteen whole days, being finally
wrecked on the coast of
Malta. The three
months during which navigation was considered most dangerous were spent
there, but with the first days of spring all haste was made to resume the
voyage. Paul must have reached
Rome some time in
March. "He remained two whole years in his own hired lodging . . .
preaching the kingdom
of God and teaching the things which concern the
Lord Jesus Christ,
with all confidence, without prohibition" (Acts
28:30-31). With these words the
Acts of the Apostles
conclude.
There is no doubt that Paul's trial terminated in a sentence of
acquittal, for (1) the report of the Governor Festus was certainly
favourable as well as that of the centurion. (2) The Jews seem to have
abandoned their charge since their co-religionists in
Rome were not
informed of it (Acts
28:21). (3) The course of the proceedings led Paul to hope for a
release, of which he sometimes speaks as of a certainty (Philippians
1:25; 2:24;
Philemon 22).
(4) The pastorals if they are authentic assume a period of activity for
Paul subsequent to his captivity. The same conclusion is drawn from the
hypothesis that they are not authentic, for all agree that the author was
well acquainted with the life of the Apostle. It is the almost unanimous
opinion that the so-called Epistles of the captivity were sent from
Rome. Some
authors have attempted to prove that St. Paul wrote them during his
detention at Caesarea,
but they have found few to agree with them. The Epistles to the
Colossians, the Ephesians, and Philemon were despatched together and by
the same messenger,
Tychicus. It is a matter of controversy whether the Epistle to the
Philippians was prior or subsequent to these, and the question has not
been answered by decisive arguments (see
EPISTLE TO THE
PHILIPPIANS;
EPISTLE TO THE EPHESIANS;
EPISTLE TO THE
COLOSSIANS;
EPISTLE TO PHILEMON).
E. Last Years
This period is wrapped in deep obscurity for, lacking the account of
the Acts, we have
no guide save an often uncertain tradition and the brief references of the
Pastoral epistles. Paul had long cherished the desire to go to Spain (Romans
15:24, 28) and there is no evidence that he was led to change his
plan. When towards the end of his captivity he announces his coming to
Philemon (22)
and to the Philippians (2:23-24),
he does not seem to regard this visit as immediate since he promises the
Philippians to send them a messenger as soon as he learns the issue of his
trial; he therefore plans another journey before his return to the East.
Finally, not to mention the later testimony of
St. Cyril of
Jerusalem, St.
Epiphanius, St.
Jerome, St.
Chrysostom, and Theodoret, the well-known text of
St. Clement of Rome,
the witness of the "Muratorian Canon", and of the "Acta Pauli" render
probable Paul's journey to Spain. In any case he can not have remained
there long, for he was in haste to revisit his Churches in the East. He
may have returned from Spain through southern Gaul if it was thither, as
some Fathers have
thought, and not to Galatia, that
Crescens was sent
later (2 Timothy
4:10). We may readily believe that he afterwards kept the promise made
to his friend Philemon and that on this occasion he visited the churches
of the valley of Lycus, Laodicea, Colossus, and Hierapolis.
The itinerary now becomes very uncertain, but the following facts seem
indicated by the Pastorals: Paul remained in Crete exactly long enough to
found there new churches, the care and organization of which he confided
to his fellow-worker Titus (Titus
1:5). He then went to
Ephesus, and
besought Timothy,
who was already there, to remain until his return while he proceeded to
Macedonia (1 Timothy
1:3). On this occasion he paid his promised visit to the Philippians (Philippians
2:24), and naturally also saw the Thessalonians. The letter to Titus
and the First Epistle
to Timothy must date from this period; they seem to have been written
about the same time and shortly after the departure from
Ephesus. The
question is whether they were sent from Macedonia or, which seems more
probable, from
Corinth. The Apostle instructs Titus to join him at
Nicopolis of Epirus
where he intends to spend the winter (Titus
3:12). In the following spring he must have carried out his plan to
return to Asia (1
Timothy 3:14-15). Here occurred the obscure episode of his arrest,
which probably took place at
Troas; this would
explain his having left with Carpus a cloak and books which he needed (2
Timothy 4:13). He was taken from there to
Ephesus, capital
of the Province of Asia, where he was deserted by all those on whom he
thought he could rely (2
Timothy 1:15). Being sent to
Rome for trial he
left Trophimus sick at
Miletus, and
Erastus, another of his companions, remained at
Corinth, for what
reason is not clear (2
Timothy 4:20). When Paul wrote his
Second Epistle to
Timothy from Rome
he felt that all human hope was lost (4:6);
he begs his disciple to rejoin him as quickly as possible, for he is alone
with Luke. We do not know if
Timothy was able
to reach Rome
before the death of the Apostle.
Ancient tradition makes it possible to establish the following points:
(1) Paul suffered martyrdom near
Rome at a place
called Aquae Salviae (now Tre Fontane), somewhat east of the Ostian Way,
about two miles from the splendid
Basilica of San Paolo
fuori le mura which marks his burial place. (2) The martyrdom took
place towards the end of the reign of
Nero, in the
twelfth year (St.
Epiphanius), the thirteenth (Euthalius),
or the fourteenth (St.
Jerome). (3) According to the most common opinion, Paul suffered in
the same year and on the same day as
Peter; several
Latin Fathers
contend that it was on the same day but not in the same year; the oldest
witness, St. Dionysius the Corinthian, says only kata ton auton kairon,
which may be translated "at the same time" or "about the same time". (4)
From time immemorial the solemnity of the Apostles Peter and Paul has been
celebrated on 29 June, which is the anniversary either of their death or
of the translation of their
relics. Formerly
the pope, after having pontificated in the
Basilica of St. Peter,
went with his attendants to that of St. Paul, but the distance between the
two basilicas (about five miles) rendered the double ceremony too
exhausting, especially at that season of the year. Thus arose the
prevailing custom of transferring to the next day (30 June) the
Commemoration of St. Paul. The feast of the Conversion of St. Paul (25
January) is of comparatively recent origin. There is reason for believing
that the day was first observed to mark the translation of the
relics of St.
Paul at Rome, for
so it appears in the Hieronymian Martyrology. It is unknown to the Greek
Church (Dowden, "The Church Year and Kalendar", Cambridge, 1910, 69; cf.
Duchesne, "Origines du culte chrétien", Paris, 1898, 265-72; McClure,
"Christian Worship", London, 1903, 277-81).
F. Physical and Moral Portrait of St. Paul
We know from
Eusebius (Hist. eccl., VII, 18) that even in his time there existed
paintings representing
Christ and the
Apostles Peter
and Paul. Paul's features have been preserved in three ancient monuments:
(1) A diptych which dates from not later than the fourth century (Lewin,
"The Life and Epistles of St. Paul", 1874, frontispiece of Vol. I and Vol.
II, 210). (2) A large medallion found in the cemetery of
Domitilla,
representing the Apostles
Peter and Paul
(Op. cit., II, 411). (3) A glass dish in the British Museum, depicting the
same Apostles (Farrara, "Life and Work of St. Paul", 1891, 896). We have
also the concordant descriptions of the "Acta Pauli et Theelae", of
Pseudo-Lucian in Philopatris, of Malalas (Chronogr., x), and of Nicephorus
(Hist. eccl., III, 37). Paul was short of stature; the Pseudo-Chrysostom
calls him "the man of three cubits" (anthropos tripechys); he was
broad-shouldered, somewhat bald, with slightly aquiline nose, closely-knit
eyebrows, thick, greyish beard, fair complexion, and a pleasing and
affable manner. He was afflicted with a malady which is difficult to
diagnose (cf. Menzies, "St. Paul's Infirmity" in the Expository Times",
July and Sept., 1904), but despite this painful and humiliating infirmity
(2 Corinthians
12:7-9;
Galatians 4:13-14) and although his bearing was not impressive (2
Corinthians 10:10), Paul must undoubtedly have been possessed of great
physical strength to have sustained so long such superhuman labours (2
Corinthians 11:23-29). Pseudo-Chrysostom, "In princip. apostol. Petrum
et Paulum" (in P. G., LIX, 494-95), considers that he died at the age of
sixty-eight after having served the Lord for thirty-five years.
The moral portrait is more difficult to draw because it is full of
contrasts. Its elements will be found: in Lewin, op. cit., II, xi, 410-35
(Paul's Person and Character); in Farrar, Op, cit., Appendix, Excursus I;
and especially in
Newman, "Sermons preached on Various Occasions", vii, viii.
III. THEOLOGY OF ST. PAUL
A. Paul and Christ
This question has passed through two distinct phases. According to the
principal followers of the Tübingen School, the Apostle had but a vague
knowledge of the life and teaching of the historical
Christ and even
disdained such knowledge as inferior and useless. Their only support is
the misinterpreted text: "Et si cognovimus secundum carnem Christum, sed
nunc jam novimus" (2
Corinthians 5:16). The opposition noted in this text is not between
the historical and the glorified
Christ, but
between the Messias such as the unbelieving Jews represented Him, such
perhaps as he was preached by certain
Judaizers, and
the Messias as He manifested Himself in His death and
Resurrection, as
He had been confessed by the converted Paul. It is neither admissible nor
probable that Paul would be uninterested in the life and preaching of Him,
Whom he loved passionately, Whom he constantly held up for the imitation
of his neophytes,
and Whose spirit he boasted of having. It is incredible that he would not
question on this subject eyewitnesses, such as
Barnabas, Silas,
or the future historians of
Christ, Sts. Mark
and Luke, with whom he was so long associated. Careful examination of this
subject has brought out the three following conclusions concerning which
there is now general agreement: (1) There are in St. Paul more allusions
to the life and teachings of
Christ than would
be suspected at first sight, and the casual way in which they are made
shows that the Apostle knew more on the subject than he had the occasion,
or the wish to tell. (2) These allusions are more frequent in St. Paul
than the Gospels. (3) From Apostolic times there existed a
catechesis,
treating among other things the life and teachings of
Christ, and as
all neophytes
were supposed to possess a copy it was not necessary to refer thereto save
occasionally and in passing.
The second phase of the question is closely connected with the first.
The same theologians, who maintain that Paul was indifferent to the
earthly life and teaching of
Christ,
deliberately exaggerate his originality and influence. According to them
Paul was the creator of theology, the founder of the Church, the preacher
of asceticism, the defender of the sacraments and of the ecclesiastical
system, the opponent of the religion of love and liberty which
Christ came to
announce to the world. If, to do him honour, he is called the second
founder of
Christianity, this must be a degenerate and altered
Christianity
since it was at least partially opposed to the primitive
Christianity.
Paul is thus made responsible for every antipathy to modern thought in
traditional
Christianity. This is to a great extent the origin of the "Back to
Christ" movement, the strange wanderings of which we are now witnessing.
The chief reason for returning to
Christ is to
escape Paul, the originator of dogma, the theologian of the faith. The cry
"Zuruck zu Jesu" which has resounded in
Germany for
thirty years, is inspired by the ulterior motive, "Los von Paulus". The
problem is: Was Paul's relation to
Christ that of a
disciple to his master? or was he absolutely autodidactic, independent
alike of the Gospel of Christ and the preaching of the Twelve? It must be
admitted that most of the papers published shed little light on the
subject. However, the discussions have not been useless, for they have
shown that the most characteristic Pauline doctrines, such as
justifying faith,
the redeeming death of Christ, the universality of salvation, are in
accord with the writings of the first Apostles, from which they were
derived. Julicher in particular has pointed out that Paul's Christology,
which is more exalted than that of his companions in the apostolate, was
never the object of controversy, and that Paul was not conscious of being
singular in this respect from the other heralds of the Gospel. Cf. Morgan,
"Back to Christ" in "Dict. of Christ and the Gospels", I, 61-67; Sanday,
"Paul", loc. cit., II, 886-92; Feine, "Jesus Christus und Paulus" (1902);
Goguel, "L'apôtre Paul et Jésus-Christ" (Paris, 1904); Julicher, "Paulus
und Jesus" (1907).
B. The Root Idea of St. Paul's Theology
Several modern authors consider that theodicy is at the base, centre,
and summit of Pauline theology. "The apostle's doctrine is theocentric,
not in reality anthropocentric. What is styled his 'metaphysics' holds for
Paul the immediate and sovereign fact of the universe;
God, as he
conceives Him, is all in all to his reason and heart alike" (Findlay in
Hastings, "Dict. of the Bible", III, 718). Stevens begins the exposition
of his "Pauline Theology" with a chapter entitled "The doctrine of
God". Sabatier (L'apotre
Paul, 1896, 297) also considers that "the last word of Pauline theology
is: "God all in
all", and he makes the idea of
God the crown of
Paul's theological edifice. But these authors have not reflected that
though the idea of
God occupies so large a place in the teaching of the Apostle, whose
thought is deeply religious like that of all his compatriots, it is not
characteristic of him, nor does it distinguish him from his companions in
the apostolate nor even from contemporary Jews. Many modern
Protestant
theologians, especially among the more or less faithful followers of the
Tübingen School, maintain that Paul's doctrine is "anthropocentric", that
it starts from his conception of man's inability to fulfill the
law of God
without the help of grace to such an extent that he is a slave of sin and
must wage war against the flesh. But if this be the genesis of Paul's idea
it is astonishing that he enunciates it only in one chapter (Romans
7), the sense of which is controverted, so that if this chapter had
not been written, or it had been lost, we would have no means of
recovering the key to his teaching. However, most modern theologians now
agree that St. Paul's doctrine is Christocentric, that it is at base a
soteriology, not from a subjective standpoint, according to the ancient
prejudice of the founders of
Protestantism who
made justification
by faith the quintessence of Paulinism, but from the objective standpoint,
embracing in a wide synthesis the person and work of the Redeemer. This
may be proved empirically by the statement that everything in St. Paul
converges towards
Jesus Christ, so much so, that abstracting from
Jesus Christ it
becomes, whether taken collectively or in detail, absolutely
incomprehensible. This is proved also by demonstrating that what Paul
calls his Gospel is the salvation of all men through
Christ and in
Christ. This is
the standpoint of the following rapid analysis:
C. Humanity without Christ
The first three chapters of the
Epistle to the Romans
shows us human nature wholly under the dominion of sin. Neither
Gentiles nor Jews
had withstood the torrent of evil. The
Mosaic Law was a
futile barrier because it prescribed good without importing the strength
to do it. The Apostle arrives at this mournful conclusion: "There is no
distinction [between Jew and
Gentile]; for all
have sinned, and do need the glory of
God" (Romans
3:22-23). He subsequently leads us back to the historical cause of
this disorder: "By one man sin entered into this world, and by sin death;
and so death passed upon all men, in whom all have sinned" (Romans
5:12). This man is obviously Adam, the sin which he brought into the
world is not only his personal sin, but a predominating sin which entered
into all men and left in them the seed of death: "All sinned when Adam
sinned; all sinned in and with his sin" (Stevens, "Pauline Theology",
129). It remains to be seen how original sin which is our lot by natural
generation, manifests itself outwardly and becomes the source of actual
sins. This Paul teaches us in
chapter 7, where
describing the contest between the Law assisted by reason and human nature
weakened by the flesh and the tendency to evil, he represents nature as
inevitably vanquished: "For I am delighted with the
law of God,
according to the inward man: But I see another law in my members fighting
against the law of my mind, and captivating me in the law of sin" (Romans
7:22-23). This does not mean that the organism, the material
substratus, is evil in itself, as some theologians of the Tübingen School
have claimed, for the flesh of
Christ, which was
like unto ours, was exempt from sin, and the Apostle wishes that our
bodies, which are destined to rise again, be preserved free from stain.
The relation between sin and the flesh is neither inherent nor necessary;
it is accidental, determined by an historical fact, and capable of
disappearing through the intervention of the
Holy Ghost, but
it is none the less true that it is not in our power to overcome it
unaided and that fallen man had need of a Saviour.
Yet God did
not abandon sinful man. He continued to manifest Himself through this
visible world (Romans i, 19-20), through the light of a conscience (Rom.
ii, 14-15), and finally through His ever active and paternally benevolent
Providence (Acts
14:16; 17:26).
Furthermore, in His untiring mercy, He "will have all men to be saved, and
to come to the knowledge of the truth" (1
Timothy 2:4). This will is necessarily subsequent to original sin
since it concerns man as he is at present. According to His merciful
designs God leads
man step by step to salvation. To the Patriarchs, and especially to
Abraham, He gave his free and generous promise, confirmed by oath (Romans
4:13-20;
Galatians 3:15-18), which anticipated the Gospel. To Moses He gave His
Law, the observation of which should be a means of salvation (Romans
7:10; 10:5),
and which, even when violated, as it was in reality, was no less a guide
leading to Christ
(Galatians 3:24)
and an instrument of mercy in the hands of
God. The Law was
a mere interlude until such time as humanity should be ripe for a complete
revelation (Galatians
3:19; Romans
5:20), and thus provoked the Divine wrath (Romans
4:15). But good will arise from the excess of evil and "the Scripture
hath concluded all under sin, that the promise, by the faith of
Jesus Christ,
might be given to them that believe" (Galatians
3:22). This would be fulfilled in the "fullness of the time" (Galatians
4:4; Ephesians
1:10), that is, at the time set by
God for the
execution of His merciful designs, when man's helplessness should have
been well manifested. Then "God
sent his Son, made of a woman, made under the law: that he might redeem
them who were under the law: that we might receive the adoption of sons" (Galatians
4:4).
D. The Person of the Redeemer
Nearly all statements relating to the person of
Jesus Christ bear
either directly or indirectly on His role as a Saviour. With St. Paul
Christology is a function of soteriology. However broad these outlines,
they show us the faithful image of
Christ in His
pre-existence, in His historical existence and in His glorified life (see
F. Prat, "Théologie de Saint Paul").
(1) Christ in His pre-existence
(a) Christ is
of an order superior to all created beings (Ephesians
1:21); He is the Creator and Preserver of the World (Colossians
1:16-17); all is by Him, in Him, and for Him (Colossians
1:16). (b) Christ
is the image of the invisible Father (2
Corinthians 4:4;
Colossians 1:15);
He is the Son of God,
but unlike other sons is so in an incommunicable manner; He is the Son,
the own Son, the well-Beloved, and this He has always been (2
Corinthians 1:19;
Romans 8:3,
8:32;
Colossians 1:13;
Ephesians 1:6;
etc.). (c) Christ
is the object of the doxologies reserved for
God (2
Timothy 4:18;
Romans 16:27); He is prayed to as the equal of the Father (2
Corinthians 12:8-9;
Romans 10:12;
1 Corinthians 1:2);
gifts are asked of Him which it is in the power of
God alone to
grant, namely grace, mercy, salvation (Romans
1:7; 16:20;
1 Corinthians 1:3;
16:23; etc.
before Him every knee shall bow in heaven, on earth, and under the earth (Philippians
2:10), as every head inclines in adoration of the majesty of the
Most High. (d)
Christ possesses
all the Divine attributes; He is eternal, since He is the "first born of
every creature" and exists before all ages (Colossians
1:15-17); He is immutable, since He exists "in the form of
God" (Philippians
2:6); He is omnipotent, since He has the power to bring forth being
from nothingness (Colossians
1:16); He is immense, since He fills all things with His plenitude (Ephesians
4:10;
Colossians 2:10); He is infinite since "the fullness of the
Godhead dwells in
Him" (Colossians 2:9).
All that is the special property of the
God belongs of
right to Him; the judgment seat of
God is the
judgment seat of
Christ (Romans
14:10; 2
Corinthians 5:10); the Gospel of
God is the Gospel
of Christ (Romans
1:1, 1:9,
15:16,
15:19, etc.);
the Church of
God is the
Church of
Christ (1
Corinthians 1:2 and
Romans 16:16 sqq.);
the Kingdom of
God is the
Kingdom of
Christ (Ephesians
5:5), the Spirit
of God is the
Spirit of
Christ (Romans
8:9 sqq.). (e)
Christ is the one Lord (1
Corinthians 8:6); He is identified with Jehovah of the Old Covenant (1
Corinthians 10:4,
10:9;
Romans 10:13;
cf. 1 Corinthians
2:16; 9:21);
He is the God who
has purchased the Church with his own blood" (Acts
20:28); He is our "great
God and Saviour
Jesus Christ" (Titus
2:13); He is the "God
over all things" (Romans
9:5), effacing by His infinite transcendency the sum and substance of
created things.
(2) Jesus Christ as Man
The other aspect of the figure of
Christ is drawn
with no less firm a hand.
Jesus Christ is
the second Adam (Romans
5:14; 1
Corinthians 15:45-49); "the mediator of
God and men" (1
Timothy 2:5), and as such He must necessarily be man (anthropos
Christos Iesous). So He is the descendant of the Patriarchs (Romans
9:5; Galatians
3:16), He is "of the seed of David, according to the flesh)" (Romans
1:3), "born of a woman" (Galatians
4:4), like all men; finally, He is known as a man by His appearance,
which is exactly similar to that of men (Philippians
2:7), save for sin, which He did not and could not know (2
Corinthians 5:21). When St. Paul says that "God
sent His Son in the likeness of sinful flesh" (Romans
8:3), he does not mean to deny the reality of
Christ's flesh,
but excludes only sinful flesh.
Nowhere does the Apostle explain how the union of the Divine and the
human natures is accomplished in
Christ, being
content to affirm that He who was "in the form of
God" took "the
form of a servant" (Philippians
2:6-7), or he states the Incarnation in this laconic formula: "For in
him dwelleth all the fullness of the
Godhead
corporeally" (Colossians
2:9). What we see clearly is that there is in
Christ a single
Person to whom are attributed, often in the same sentence, qualities
proper to the Divine and the human nature, to the pre-existence, the
historical existence, and the glorified life (Colossians
1:15-19;
Philippians 2:5-11; etc.). The theological explanation of the mystery
has given rise to numerous errors. Denial was made of one of the natures,
either the human (Docetism), or the Divine (Arianism),
or the two natures were considered to be united in a purely accidental
manner so as to produce two persons (Nestorianism), or the two natures
were merged into one (Monophysitism), or on pretext of uniting them in one
person the heretics mutilated either the human nature (Apollinarianism),
or the Divine, according to the strange modern heresy known as
Kenosis.
The last-mentioned requires a brief treatment, as it is based on a
saying of St. Paul "Being in the form of
God . . . emptied
himself (ekenosen eauton, hence
kenosis)
taking the form of a servant" (Philippians
2:6-7). Contrary to the common opinion,
Luther applied
these words not to the Word, but to
Christ, the
Incarnate Word. Moreover he understood the communicatio idiomatus
as a real possession by each of the two natures of the attributes of the
other. According to this the human nature of
Christ would
possess the Divine attributes of ubiquity, omniscience, and omnipotence.
There are two systems among
Lutheran
theologians, one asserting that the human nature of
Christ was
voluntarily stripped of these attributes (kenosis),
the other that they were hidden during His mortal existence (krypsis).
In modern times the doctrine of
Kenosis, while
still restricted to
Lutheran theology, has completely changed its opinions. Starting with
the philosophical idea that "personality" is identified with
"consciousness", it is maintained that where there is only one person
there can be only one consciousness; but since the
consciousness of
Christ was truly human consciousness, the Divine consciousness must of
necessity have ceased to exist or act in Him. According to Thomasius, the
theorist of the system, the
Son of God was
stripped, not after the Incarnation, as
Luther asserted,
but by the very fact of the Incarnation, and what rendered possible the
union of the Logos with the humanity was the faculty possessed by the
Divinity to limit itself both as to being and activity. The other
partisans of the system express themselves in a similar manner. Gess, for
instance, says that in
Jesus Christ the
Divine ego is changed into the human ego. When it is
objected that God
is immutable, that He can neither cease to be, nor limit Himself, nor
transform Himself, they reply that this reasoning is on metaphysical
hypotheses and concepts without reality. (For the various forms of
Kenosis see
Bruce, "The Humiliation of Christ", p. 136.)
All these systems are merely variations of Monophysitism. Unconsciously
they assume that there is in
Christ but a
single nature as there is but a single person. According to the Catholic
doctrine, on the contrary, the union of the two natures in a single person
involves no change in the Divine nature and need involve no physical
change of the human nature of
Christ. Without
doubt Christ is
the Son and is morally entitled even as man to the goods of His Father,
viz. the immediate
vision of God, eternal beatitude, the state of glory. He is
temporarily deprived of a portion of these goods in order that he may
fulfill His mission as Redeemer. This is the abasement, the annihilation,
of which St. Paul speaks, but it is a totally different thing from the
Kenosis as
described above.
E. The Objective Redemption as the Work of Christ
We have seen that fallen man being unable to arise again unaided,
God in His mercy
sent His Son to save him. It is an elementary and often repeated doctrine
of St. Paul that
Jesus Christ saves us through the Cross, that we are "justified
by His blood", that "we were reconciled to
God by the death
of his Son" (Romans
5:9-10). What endowed the blood of
Christ, His
death, His Cross, with this redeeming virtue? Paul never answers this
question directly, but he shows us the drama of
Calvary under
three aspects, which there is danger in separating and which are better
understood when compared: (a) at one time the death of
Christ is a
sacrifice intended, like the sacrifice of the
Old Law, to
expiate sin and propitiate
God. Cf. Sanday
and Headlam, "Romans", 91-94, "The death of Christ considered as a
sacrifice". "It is impossible from this passage (Romans
3:25) to get rid of the double idea: (1) of a sacrifice; (2) of a
sacrifice which is propitiatory . . . Quite apart from this passage it is
not difficult to prove that these two ideas of sacrifice and propitiation
lie at the root of the teaching not only of St. Paul but of the new
Testament generally." The double danger of this idea is, first to wish to
apply to the sacrifice of
Christ all the
mode of action, real or supposed, of the imperfect sacrifices of the
Old Law; and
second, to believe that
God is appeased
by a sort of magical effect, in virtue of this sacrifice, whereas on the
contrary it was He Who took the initiative of mercy, instituted the
sacrifice of Calvary,
and endowed it with its expiatory value. (b) At another time the death of
Christ is
represented as a redemption, the payment of a ransom, as the result of
which man was delivered from all his past servitude (1
Corinthians 6:20;
7:23 [times
egorasthete];
Galatians 3:13;
4:5 [ina tous hypo nomon exagorase];
Romans 3:24;
1 Corinthians 1:30;
Ephesians 1:7, 14;
Colossians 1:14
[apolytrosis];
1 Timothy 2:6 [antilytron];
etc.) This idea, correct as it is, may have inconveniences if isolated or
exaggerated. By carrying it beyond what was written, some of the
Fathers put forth
the strange suggestion of a ransom paid by
Christ to the
demon who held us in bondage. Another mistake is to regard the death of
Christ as having
a value in itself, independent of
Christ Who
offered it and God
Who accepted it for the remission of our sins.
(c) Often, too,
Christ seems to substitute Himself for us in order to undergo in our
stead the chastisement for sin. He suffers physical death to save us from
the moral death of sin and preserve us from eternal death. This idea of
substitution appealed so strongly to
Lutheran
theologians that they admitted quantitative equality between the
sufferings really endured by
Christ and the
penalties deserved by our sins. They even maintained that
Jesus underwent
the penalty of loss (of the
vision of God)
and the malediction of the Father. These are the extravagances which have
cast so much discredit on the theory of subsitution. It has been rightly
said that the transfer of a chastisement from one person to another is an
injustice and a contradiction, for the chastisement is inseparable from
the fault and an undeserved chastisement is no longer a chastisement.
Besides, St. Paul never said that
Christ died in
our stead (anti), but only that he died for us (hyper)
because of our sins.
In reality the three standpoints considered above are but three aspects
of the Redemption which, far from excluding one another, should harmonize
and combine, modifying if necessary all the other aspects of the problem.
In the following text St. Paul assembles these various aspects with
several others. We are "justified
freely by his grace, through the Redemption, that is in
Christ Jesus,
whom God hath
proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing
of his [hidden] justice, for the remission of former sins, through the
forbearance of God,
for the shewing of his justice in this time; that of himself may be [known
as] just, and the justifier of him, who is in the faith of
Jesus Christ" (Romans
3:24-26). Herein are designated the part of
God, of
Christ, and of
man: (1) God
takes the initiative; it is He who offers His Son; He intends to manifest
His justice, but is moved thereto by mercy. It is therefore incorrect or
more or less inadequate to say that
God was angry
with the human race and that He was only appeased by the death of His Son.
(2) Christ is our
Redemption (apolytrosis), He is the instrument of expiation or
propitiation (ilasterion), and is such by His Sacrifice (en to
autou aimati), which does not resemble those ofirrational animals; it
dervies its value from
Christ, who
offers it for us to His Father through obedience and love (Philippians
2:8; Galatians
2:20). (3) Man is not merely passive in the drama of his salvation; he
must understand the lesson which
God teaches, and
appropriate by faith the fruit of the Redemption.
F. The Subjective Redemption
Christ having
once died and risen,
the Redemption is completed in law and in principle for the whole human
race. Each man makes it his own in fact and in act by faith and baptism
which, by uniting him with
Christ, causes
him to participate in His Divine life. Faith, according to St. Paul, is
composed of several elements; it is the submission of the intellect to the
word of God, the
trusting abandonment of the believer to the Saviour Who promises him
assistance; it is also an act of obedience by which man accepts the Divine
will. Such an act has a moral value, for it "gives glory to
God" (Romans
4:20) in the measure in which it recognizes its own helplessness. That
is why "Abraham believed
God, and it was
reputed to him unto justice" (Romans
4:3; Galatians
3:6). The spiritual children of Abraham are likewise "justified
by faith, without the works of the law" (Romans
3:28; cf.
Galatians 2:16). Hence it follows: (1) That justice is granted by
God in
consideration of faith. (2) That, neverthelss, faith is not equivalent to
justice, since man is
justified "by grace" (Romans
4:6). (3) That the justice freely granted to man becomes his property
and is inherent in him.
Protestants
formerly asserted that the justice of
Christ is imputed
to us, but now they are generally agreed that this argument is
unscriptural and lacks the guaranty of Paul; but some,
loth to base
justification on
a good work (ergon), deny a moral value to faith and claim that
justification is
but a forensic judgment of
God which alters
absolutely nothing in the
justified sinner.
But this theory is untenable; for: (1) even admitting that "to
justify"
signifies "to pronounce just", it is absurd to suppose that
God really
pronounces just anyone who is not already so or who is not rendered so by
the declaration itself. (2)
Justification is
inseparable from sanctification, for the latter is "a
justification of
life" (Romans 5:18)
and every "just man liveth by faith" (Romans
1:17; Galatians
3:11). (3) By faith and baptism we die to the "old man", our former
selves; now this is impossible without beginning to live as the new man,
who "according to God,
is created in justice and holiness" (Romans
6:3-5;
Ephesians 4:24;
1 Corinthians 1:30;
6:11). We may,
therefore, establish a distinction in definition and concept between
justification and
sanctification, but we can neither separate them nor regard them as
separate.
G. Moral Doctrine
A remarkable characteristic of Paulinism is that it connects morality
with the subjective redemption or
justification.
This is especially striking in
chapter 6 of the
Epistle to the Romans. In baptism "our old man is crucified with [Christ]
that, the body of sin may be destroyed, to the end that we may serve sin
no longer" (Romans
6:6). Our incorporation with the mystical Christ is not only a
transformation and a metamorphosis, but a real reaction, the production of
a new being, subject to new laws and consequently to new duties. To
understand the extent of our obligations it is enough for us to know
ourselves as
Christians and to reflect on the various relations which result from
our supernatural birth: that of sonship to
God the Father,
of consecration to the
Holy Ghost, of
mystical identity with our Saviour
Jesus Christ, of
brotherly union with the other members of
Christ. But this
is not all. Paul says to the
neophytes:
"Thanks be to God,
that you were the servants of sin, but have obeyed from the heart unto
that form of doctrine, into which you have been delivered. . . . But now
being made free from sin, and become servants to
God, you have
your fruit unto sanctification, and the end life everlasting" (Romans
6:17, 22). By the act of faith and by baptism, its seal, the
Christian freely
makes himself the servant of
God and the
soldier of Christ.
God's will, which
he accepts in advance in the measure in which it shall be manifested,
becomes thenceforth his rule of conduct. Thus Paul's moral code rests on
the one hand on the positive will of
God made known by
Christ,
promulgated by
the Apostles, and virtually accepted by the
neophyte in his
first act of faith, and on the other, in baptismal regeneration and the
new relations which it produces. All Paul's commands and recommendations
are merely applications of these principles.
H. Eschatology
(1) The graphic description of the Pauline parousia (1
Thessalonians 4:16-17;
2 Thessalonians
1:7-10) has nearly all its main points in
Christ's great
eschatological discourse (Matthew
24, Mark 13,
Luke 21). A common
characteristic of all these passages is the apparent nearness of the
parousia. Paul does not assert that the coming of the Saviour is at hand.
In each of the five epistles, wherein he expresses the desire and the hope
to witness in person the
return of Christ,
he at the same time considers the probability of the contrary hypothesis,
proving that he had neither revelation nor certainty on the point. He
knows only that the
day of the lord will come unexpectedly, like a thief (1
Thessalonians 5:2-3), and he counsels the
neophytes to make
themselves ready without neglecting the duties of their state of life (2
Thessalonians 3:6-12). Although the coming of
Christ will be
sudden, it will be heralded by three signs: general apostasy (2
Thessalonians 2:3), the appearance of
Antichrist (2:3-12),
and the conversion of the Jews (Romans
11:26). A particular circumstance of St. Paul's preaching is that the
just who shall be living at
Christ's second
advent will pass to glorious immortality without dying [1
Thessalonians 4:17;
1 Corinthians 15:51
(Greek text); 2
Corinthians 5:2-5].
(2) Owing to the doubts of the Corinthians Paul treats the
resurrection of
the just at some length. He does not ignore the
resurrection of
the sinners, which he affirmed before the Governor Felix (Acts
24:15), but he does not concern himself with it in his Epistles. When
he says that "the dead who are in
Christ shall rise
first" (proton,
1 Thessalonians
4:16, Greek) this "first" offsets, not another
resurrection of the
dead, but the glorious transformation of the living. In like manner
"the evil" of which he speaks (tou telos,
1 Corinthians 15:24)
is not the end of the
resurrection, but of the present world and the beginning of a new
order of things. All the arguments which he advances in behalf of the
resurrection may
be reduced to three: the mystical union of the
Christian with
Christ, the
presence within us of the Spirit of Holiness, the interior and
supernatural conviction of the faithful and the Apostles. It is evident
that these arguments deal only with the glorious
resurrection of
the just. In short, the
resurrection of
the wicked does not come within his theological horizon. What is the
condition of the souls of the just between death and
resurrection?
These souls enjoy the presence of
Christ (2
Corinthians 5:8); their lot is enviable (Philippians
1:23); hence it is impossible that they should be without life,
activity, or consciousness.
(3) The judgment according to St. Paul as according to the Synoptics,
is closely connected with the parousia and the
resurrection.
They are the three acts of the same drama which constitute the Day of the
Lord (1 Corinthians
1:8; 2
Corinthians 1:14;
Philippians 1:6, 10;
2:16). "For we
must all be manifested before the judgment seat of
Christ, that
every one may receive the proper things of the body, according as he hath
done, whether it be good or evil" (2
Corinthians 5:10).
Two conclusions are derived from this text:
(1) The judgment shall be universal, neither the good nor the wicked
shall escape (Romans
14:10-12), nor even the
angels (1
Corinthians 6:3); all who are brought to trial must account for the
use of their liberty.
(2) The judgment shall be according to works: this is a truth
frequently reiterated by St. Paul, concerning sinners (2
Corinthians 11:15), the just (2
Timothy 4:14), and men in general (Romans
2:6-9). Many
Protestants marvel at this and claim that in St. Paul this doctrine is
a survival of his rabbinical education (Pfleiderer), or that he could not
make it harmonize with his doctrine of gratuitous
justification (Reuss),
or that the reward will be in proportion to the act, as the harvest is in
proportion to the sowing, but that it will not be because of or with a
view to the act (Weiss). These authors lose sight of the fact that St.
Paul distinguishes between two
justifications,
the first necessarily gratuitous since man was then incapable of meriting
it (Romans 3:28;
Galatians 2:16),
the second in conformity to his works (Romans
2:6: kata ta erga), since man, when adorned with sanctifying
grace, is capable of merit as the sinner is of demerit. Hence the
celestial recompense is "a crown of justice which the Lord the just judge
will render" (2
Timothy 4:8) to whomsoever has legitimately gained it.
Briefly, St. Paul's eschatology is not so distinctive as it has been
made to appear. Perhaps its most original characteristic is the continuity
between the present and the future of the just, between grace and glory,
between salvation begun and salvation consummated. A large number of
terms, redemption,
justification, salvation, kingdom, glory and especially life, are
common to the two states, or rather to the two phases of the same
existence linked by charity which "never falleth away".
(History of Saint Paul copied from newadvent.org)

|
|