Jesus
& Paul*
J. Gresham Machen
The Apostle Paul is the greatest
teacher of the Christian Church. True,
he has not always been fully understood. The legalism that he combatted
during his lifetime soon established itself among his converts, and
finally celebrated a triumph in the formation of the Catholic Church.
The keen edge of his dialectic was soon blunted. But however his ideas
may have been injured in transmission, they were never altogether
destroyed. Much was forgotten; but what remained was the life of the
Church. And the great revivals were revivals of Paulinism.
Protestantism - in its practical piety as well as in its theology - was
simply a rediscovery of Paul.
Yet Paul has never been accepted for his own sake. Men have never come
to him for an independent solution of the riddle of the universe.
Simply as a religious philosopher, he is unsatisfactory; for his
philosophy is rooted in one definite fact. He has been listened to not
as a philosopher, but as a witness - a witness to Jesus Christ. His
teaching has been accepted only on one condition - that he speak
as a
faithful disciple of Jesus of Nazareth.
The question of the relation between Jesus and Paul is therefore
absolutely fundamental. Paul has always been regarded as the greatest
disciple of Jesus. If so, well and good. The Christian Church may then
go forward as it has done before.
But in recent years there is a tendency to dissociate Paul from Jesus.
A recent historian has entitled Paul "the second founder of
Christianity." If that be correct, then Christianity is facing the
greatest crisis in its history. For - let us not deceive ourselves - if
Paul is independent of Jesus, he can no longer be a teacher of the
Church. Christianity is founded upon Christ and only Christ. Paulinism
has never been accepted upon any other supposition than that it
reproduces the mind of Christ. If that supposition is incorrect - if
Paulinism is derived not from Jesus Christ, but from other sources -
then
it must be uprooted from the life of the Church. But that is more than
reform - it is revolution. Compared with that upheaval, the reformation
of the sixteenth century is as nothing.
At first sight, the danger appears to be trifling. The voices that
would separate Paul from Jesus have been drowned by a chorus of
protest. In making Paul and not Jesus the true founder of Christianity,
Wrede is as little representative of the main trend of modern
investigation as he is when he eliminates the Messianic element from
the consciousness of Jesus. Measured by the direct assent which he has
received, Wrede is a negligeable quantity. But that is but a poor
measure of his importance. The true significance of Wrede's "Paul" is
that it has merely made explicit what was implicit before. The entire
modern reconstruction of primitive Christianity leads logically to
Wrede's startling pronouncement. Modern liberalism has produced a Jesus
who has really but little in common with Paul. Wrede has but drawn the
conclusion. Paul was no disciple of the liberal Jesus. Wrede has merely
had the courage to say so.
This essential harmony between Wrede and his opponents appears even in
some of the criticisms to which he has been subjected. No doubt these
criticisms are salutary. They fill out omissions, and correct
exaggerations. But they obscure the issue. In general, their refutation
of Wrede amounts to little more than this - Paul's theology is
abandoned, in order to save his religion. His theology, it is admitted,
was derived from extra-Christian sources; but in his practical piety he
was a true disciple of Jesus. Such a distinction is thoroughly vicious;
it is contradicted in no uncertain tones by the Pauline Epistles. Where
is it that the current of Paul's religious experience becomes
overpowering, so that even after the lapse of centuries, even through
the dull medium of the printed page, it sweeps the heart of the
sympathetic reader on with it in a mighty flood? It is not in the
ethical admonitions. It is
not in the discussions of the practical problems of the Christian life.
It is not even in the inspired encomium of Christian love. But it is in
the great theological passages of the epistles - the second chapter of
Galatians, the fifth chapter of Second Corinthians, the fifth to the
eighth chapters of Romans. In these passages, the religious experience
and the theology of Paul are blended in a union which no critical
analysis can dissolve. Furthermore., if it is impossible to separate
Pauline piety and Pauline theology in the life of Paul himself, it is
just as impossible to separate them in the life of the Church of today.
Thus far, at least, all attempts at accomplishing it have resulted in
failure. Liberal Christianity has sometimes tried to reproduce Paul's
religion apart from his theology. But thus far it has produced nothing
which in the remotest degree resembles the model.
In determining whether Paul was a disciple of Jesus, the whole Paul
must be kept in view - not the theology apart from the warm religious
life that pulses through it, and not the religious emotion apart from
its basis in theology. Theology apart from religion, or religion apart
from theology - either is an empty abstraction. The religion and the
theology of Paul stand or fall together. If one is derived from Jesus,
probably the other is also.
In discussing the relation between Jesus and Paul, it is better to
begin with Paul. For, in the first place, Paul is more easily known
than Jesus. That will be admitted on all sides. Jesus wrote nothing;
all the extant records of his words are the reports of others. The
trustworthiness of the records of his life is at present a matter of
dispute. Yet even if the most favorable estimate of the Gospel
narratives be adopted, Jesus remains far more incomprehensible than
Paul. Indeed it is just when the Gospel picture is accepted in its
entirety that the sense of mystery in the presence of Jesus becomes
most overpowering.
For the life of Paul, on the other hand, the historian is in possession
of sources which are not only trustworthy, but universally admitted to
be trustworthy. At least seven of the Pauline Epistles - 1
Thessalonians,
Galatians, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Romans, Philippians, and Philemon - are
now assigned by all except a few extremists to Paul himself; and the
critical doubts with regard to three of the others are gradually being
dispelled. In general, the disputed epistles are not of fundamental
importance for determining the relation of Paul to Jesus. Colossians,
perhaps, forms the only exception, and it is just Colossians that is
most commonly accepted as Pauline. All the characteristic features of
Paul's thinking appear within the homologoumena; and it is the
characteristic features alone which can determine the general question
whether Paul was a disciple of Jesus.
With regard to the book of Acts as a source for the study of Paul,
there is more difference of opinion; and the difference is of more
importance for the question now in hand. But three remarks can be made.
In the first place, those sections of Acts where the first person
plural is used are universally regarded as the work of an eye-witness.
In the second place, the framework - the account of external events in
the life of Paul - is for the most part accepted. In the third place,
the
tendency of recent criticism is decidedly towards a higher estimate of
the general representation of Paul. The conciliatory attitude toward
the Jews, which the book of Acts attributes to Paul, is no longer
regarded as due altogether to an "irenic" purpose on the part of the
historian.
The sources for the life of Paul are insufficient, indeed, for a
complete biography. For the period up to the conversion, the extant
information is of the most general kind, and after the conversion some
fifteen years elapse before anything like a connected narrative can be
constructed. Even from the years of the so-called missionary journeys,
only a bare summary has been preserved, with vivid, detailed narratives
only here and there. Finally, the close of Paul's life is shrouded in
obscurity. But what the sources lack in quantity they make up in
quality. Paul was gifted with a remarkable power of self-revelation,
which has been exercised in his epistles to the fullest extent. Free
from self-centred vanity, without the slightest indelicacy, without a
touch of morbid introspection, he has yet revealed the very secrets of
his heart. Not only the exquisite delicacy of feeling, the fine play of
affection, the consecrated anger, the keen practical judgment are open
before us, but also the deepest springs of the tremendous religious
experience. The Pauline Epistles make Paul one of the best-known men of
history. We might be able to account, in an external way, for every day
and hour of his life, and yet not know him half so well.
As thus revealed, Paul is comprehensible. With all his greatness,
almost immeasurably exalted as he is above the generality of mankind,
he yet possesses nothing which any man might not conceivably possess.
Starting from the common misery of sin, he attained to a peace with
God, which, again, has been shared by humble Christians of all ages.
His commission as apostle exceeds in dignity and importance that of
other disciples of Christ, but does not free him from human
limitations. It was Christ's strength which was made perfect in
weakness. In all essential features, the religious experience of Paul
may be imitated by every Christian. Jesus, on the other hand, is full
of mystery. Of course the mystery may be ignored. It is ignored by
Wrede, when he denies to Jesus the consciousness of his Messiahship.
But even by the most thorough-going modern naturalism, that is felt to
be a desperate measure. The Messianic consciousness is rooted too deep
in the sources ever to be removed by historical criticism. That Jesus
lived at all is hardly more certain than that he thought himself to be
the Messiah. But the Messianic consciousness of Jesus is a profound
mystery. It would be no mystery if Jesus were an ordinary fanatic or
unbalanced visionary. Among the many false Messiahs who championed
their claims in the first century, there may well have been some who
deceived themselves as well as others. But Jesus was no ordinary
fanatic - no megalomaniac. On the contrary, he is the moral ideal of
the
race. His calmness, unselfishness, and strength have produced an
impression which the lapse of time has done nothing to obliterate. It
was such a man who supposed himself to be the Son of Man who was to
come with the clouds of heaven! Considered in the light of the
character of Jesus, the Messianic consciousness of Jesus is the
profoundest of problems. It is true, the problem can be solved. It can
be solved by supposing that Jesus' own estimate of his person was
true - by recognizing in Jesus a supernatural person. But the
acceptance
of the supernatural is not easy. For the modern mind it involves
nothing short of a Copernican revolution. And until that step is taken,
the person of Jesus cannot be understood. Paul, on the other hand, is
more easily comprehended. To a certain extent, his religious experience
can be understood, at least in an external way, even by one who
supposes it to be founded not on truth but on error. Paul, therefore,
may perhaps be a stepping-stone on the way to a comprehension of Jesus.
In the first place, then, the investigation of the relation between
Jesus and Paul should begin with Paul rather than with Jesus, because
Paul is, if not better known than Jesus, at least more easily known. In
the second place, Paul should be studied before Jesus just because he
lived after Jesus. If the object of the investigation were Jesus and
Paul, taken separately, then it would be better to begin with the
earlier rather than with the later of the two; but since it is the
relation between Jesus and Paul that is to be studied, it is better
method to begin with Paul. For the investigator need not rely merely on
a comparison of Jesus and Paul. If Paul was dependent upon Jesus, the
fact may be expected to appear in direct statements of Paul himself,
and in the attitude of his contemporaries toward him. Did Paul feel
himself to be an innovator with respect to Jesus; and was he regarded
as an innovator by the earlier disciples of Jesus?
The latter question, at any rate, cannot be answered offhand. There
were undoubtedly some men in the primitive church who combatted Paul in
the name of conservatism. These were the Judaizers, who regarded Paul's
doctrine of Christian freedom as a dangerous innovation. The Jewish
law, they said, must be maintained even among Gentile Christians. Faith
in Christ is supplementary to it, not subversive of it. Were the
Judaizers justified in their conservatism? Were they right in regarding
Paul as an innovator? What was the relation between these Judaizers and
the original apostles, who had been disciples of Jesus in Galilee?
These are among the most important questions in apostolic history. They
have divided students of the New Testament into hostile camps. F. C.
Baur supposed that the relation between Judaizers and original apostles
was in the main friendly. The original apostles, though they could not
quite close their eyes to the hand of God as manifested in the
successes of Paul, belong nevertheless inwardly with the Judaizers
rather than with Paul. The fundamental fact of apostolic history is a
conflict between Paul and the original apostles, between Gentile
Christianity and Jewish Christianity. The history of early Christianity
is the history of the development and final adjustment of that
conflict. The Catholic Church of the close of the second century is the
result of a compromise between Pauline Christianity and the
Christianity of the original apostles. This reconstruction of early
Christian history was opposed by Albrecht Ritschl. According to
Ritschl, the conflict in the apostolic age was not between Paul and the
original apostles, but between apostolic Christianity - including both
Paul and the original apostles - on the one side, and Judaistic
Christianity - the Christianity of the Judaistic opponents of Paul - on
the
other. Specifically Jewish Christianity exerted no considerable
influence upon the development of the Church. The Old Catholic Church
of the close of the second century was the result not of a compromise
between Jewish Christianity and Gentile Christianity, but of a natural
process of degeneration from Pauline Christianity on purely Gentile
Christian ground. The Gentile Christian world was unable to understand
the Pauline doctrine of grace. Christianity came to be regarded as a
new law - but that was due, not to the rehabilitation of the Mosaic law
as a concession to Jewish Christianity, but to the tendency of the
average man toward legalism in religion. As against Baur, Harnack
belongs with Ritschl. Like Ritschl, he denies to Jewish Christianity
any considerable influence upon the development of the Catholic Church.
The Church Of 200, A.D. owes its difference from Paul, not to a
compromise with Jewish Christianity, but to the intrusion of Greek
habits of thought.
If Baur was correct, then Paul was probably no true disciple of Jesus.
For Baur brought Paul into fundamental conflict with the men who had
stood nearest to Jesus. But Baur was not correct. His reconstruction of
apostolic history was arrived at by neglecting all sources except the
epistles to the Galatians and Corinthians and then misinterpreting
these. He failed to do justice to the "right hand of fellowship" (Gal.
2:9) which the pillars of the Jerusalem Church gave to Paul. And the
account of Paul's rebuke of Peter in Antioch, apparently the strongest
evidence of a conflict between Paul and the original apostles, is
rather to be regarded as evidence to the contrary. For Paul rebukes
Peter for hypocrisy- -not for false opinions, but for concealing his
correct opinions for fear of men. In condemning his practice, Paul
approves his principles. Peter had therefore been in fundamental
agreement with Paul.
As for the Judaizers in Corinth, their opinions are as uncertain as
their relation to the original apostles. It is not certain that they
combatted Paul's doctrine of justification by faith, and it is not
certain that they had any kind of endorsement from the original
apostles. Surely the apostles were not the only ones who could have
given them "letters of recommendation" (2 Cor. 3:1).
Baur's thesis, then, was insufficiently grounded. One fact, however,
still requires explanation - the appeal of the Judaizers to the
original
apostles against Paul. It is not enough to say simply that the appeal
of the Judaizers was a false appeal. For if the original apostles were
as Pauline as Paul himself, it is difficult to see why they should have
been preferred to Paul by the anti-Pauline party. Surely the original
apostles must have given the Judaizers at least some color of support;
otherwise the Judaizers could never have appealed to them. Until this
appeal is explained, Baur remains unrefuted. But the explanation is not
difficult to find. It was the life, not the teaching, of the original
apostles which appeared to support the contentions of the Judaizers.
The early Christians in Jerusalem continued to observe the Jewish law.
They continued in diligent attendance upon the Temple services. They
observed the feasts, they obeyed the regulations about food. To a
superficial observer, they were simply pious Jews. Now, as a matter of
fact, they were not simply pious Jews. They were relying for salvation
not really upon their observance of the law, but solely upon their
faith in the crucified and risen Christ. Inwardly, Christianity was
from the very beginning no mere continuation of Judaism, but a new
religion. Outwardly, however, the early church was nothing more than a
Jewish sect. And the Judaizers failed to penetrate beneath the outward
appearance. Because the original apostles continued to observe the
Jewish law, the Judaizers supposed that legalism was of the essence of
their religion. The Judaizers appealed to the outward practice of the
apostles; Paul, to the deepest springs of their religious life. So long
as Christianity was preached only among Jews, there was no acute
conflict. True Christians and mere Jewish believers in the Messiahship
of Jesus were united by a common observance of the Mosaic law. But when
Christianity began to transcend the bounds of Judaism, the division
became apparent. The apostles, true disciples of Jesus, attested their
own inward freedom by accepting the outward freedom of the Gentiles;
the Judaizers, false brethren privily brought in, insisted upon the
observance of the law as necessary to salvation.
Paul, then, was not the founder of universalistic Christianity. In
principle, Christianity was universalistic from the very beginning. In
principle, the first Christians in Jerusalem were entirely free from
the Judaism with which they were united outwardly by observance of the
Temple ritual. If Paul was not the founder of universalistic
Christianity, what was he? What was his peculiar service to the Church?
It was not the mere geographical extension of the frontiers of the
Kingdom. That achievement he shares with others. Paul was perhaps not
even the first to preach the Gospel systematically to Gentiles. That
honor belongs apparently to certain unnamed Jews of Cyprus and Cyrene.
The true achievement of Paul lies in another sphere - in the hidden
realm
of thought. When Christianity began to be offered directly to Gentiles
in Antioch, the principles of the Gentile mission had to be established
once for all. Conceivably, of course, the Gentile mission might have
got along without principles. The leaders of the church at Antioch
might have pointed simply to the practical necessities of the case.
Obviously, the Gentile world, as a matter of fact, would never accept
circumcision, and would never submit to the Mosaic law. Consequently,
if Christianity was ever to be anything more than a Jewish sect, the
requirements of the law must quietly be held in abeyance. Conceivably,
the leaders of the church at Antioch might have reasoned thus;
conceivably they might have been "practical Christian workers" in the
modern sense. But as a matter of fact, the leader of the church at
Antioch was the Apostle Paul. Paul was not a man to sacrifice principle
to practical necessity.
What was standing in the way of the Gentile mission was no mere Jewish
racial prejudice, but a genuine religious principle. Jewish
particularism was part of the very essence of the Jews' religion. The
idea of the covenant between God and his chosen people was fundamental
in all periods of Judaism. To have offered the Gospel to uncircumcised
Gentiles simply because that was demanded by the practical necessities
of the case, would have meant to a Jew nothing less than disobedience
to the revealed will of God. It would have been an irreparable injury
to the religious conscience. Particularism was not a prejudice, but a
religious principle. Therefore it could be overcome only by a higher
principle. Its abrogation needed to be demonstrated, not merely
assumed. And that was the work of Paul.
The original apostles, through their intercourse with Jesus upon earth,
and their experience of the risen Lord, had in principle transcended
Jewish particularism. Inwardly they were free from the law. But they
did not know that they were free. Certainly they did not know why they
were free. Stich freedom could not be permanent. It sufficed for the
Jewish Church, so long as the issue was not clearly drawn. But it was
open to argumentative attack. It could never have conquered the world.
Christian freedom was held by but a precarious tenure, until its
underlying principles were established. Christianity could not exist
without theology. And the first great Christian theologian was Paul.
In championing Gentile freedom, then, in emphasizing the doctrine of
salvation by faith alone, Paul was not an innovator. He was merely
making explicit what had been implicit before. He was in fundamental
harmony with the original apostles. And if he was in harmony with the
most intimate disciples of Jesus, the presumption is that he was in
harmony with Jesus himself.
If the harmony between Paul and the original apostles was preserved by
Paul's conception of Christian freedom, it was preserved even more
clearly by his view of the person of Christ. just where modern
radicalism is most confident that Paul was an innovator, Paul's
contemporaries were most confident of his faithfulness to tradition.
Even the Judaizers had no quarrel with Paul's conception of Christ as a
heavenly being. In the Epistle to the Galatians, where Paul insists
that he received his apostleship. not from men but directly from
Christ, he does so in sharp opposition to the Judaizers. Paul says,
"not by man, but by Christ"; the Judaizers said, "not by Christ but by
man." But if so, then the Judaizers, no less than Paul, distinguished
Christ sharply from men, and placed him clearly on the side of God. If
Paul can prove that he received his apostleship directly from Christ,
then he has already proved that he received it directly from God.
Apparently, it never occurred to him that his opponents might accept
the former proposition and deny the latter. For the Judaizers as well
as for Paul, God and Christ belong together. In 2 Cor. 11:4, it is
true, Paul hints that his opponents are preaching another Jesus. If
that passage stood alone, it might mean that the Judaizers differed
from Paul in their conception of the person of Christ. But if there had
been such a difference, it would surely have appeared more clearly in
the rest of the Corinthian epistles. If the Judaizers had taught that
Jesus was a mere man, son of David and nothing else, surely Paul would
have taken occasion to contradict them. So dangerous an error - an
error
so completely subversive of Paul's deepest convictions - could not
possibly have been left unrefuted. The meaning of the passage is quite
different. It was the Judaizers themselves, and not Paul, who said that
their Jesus was another Jesus. "Paul", they said to the Corinthians,
"has not revealed the Gospel to you in its fulness (2 Cor. 4:3, 11:5).
Paul has had no close contact either with Jesus himself, or with the
immediate disciples of Jesus. Paul has preached but an imperfect
gospel. We, on the other hand, can offer you the true Jesus, the true
Spirit, and the true gospel. Do not listen to Paul. We alone can give
you fully authentic information. "In reality, however, the Judaizers
had nothing new to offer. Paul had been no whit behind "the pre-eminent
apostles." He had made the full gospel plain and open before them (2
Cor. 11:5-6). If Paul's gospel was hidden, it was hidden only from
those who had been blinded by the god of this world (2 Cor. 4:4). The
"other Jesus" of the Judaizers existed only in their own inordinate
claims. They preached the same Jesus as did Paul - only their preaching
was marred by quarrelsomeness and pride. They preached the same Jesus;
but they had not themselves come into vital communion with him. In that
they differed from Paul.
It is not until the Epistle to the Colossians that Paul is compelled to
defend his conception of the person of Christ. And there he defends it
not against a conservative, naturalistic view of Jesus as a merely
human Messiah, but against Gnostic speculation. With regard to the
person of Christ, Paul appears everywhere in perfect harmony with all
Palestinian Christians. In the whole New Testament there is not a trace
of a conflict. That is a fact of tremendous significance. For Paul's
conception of the supernatural Christ was formed not later than five
years after the crucifixion of Jesus. There is every reason to believe
that it was formed at the conversion. With regard to this matter, there
is no evidence of a development in Paul's thinking. One passage, 2 Cor.
5:16, has occasionally been regarded as such evidence. But only by
palpable disregard of the context. When Paul says, "Even if we have
known Christ according to the flesh, yet now we know him so no longer,"
he cannot possibly mean that for a time after his conversion he
regarded Christ simply as a human, Jewish Messiah. For the point of the
whole passage is the revolutionary change wrought in every Christian's
life by the death of Christ. It is clearly the appropriation of that
death - that is, conversion - and not some subsequent development of
the
Christian life which brings the transition from the knowledge of Christ
after the flesh (whatever that may be) to the higher knowledge of which
Paul is now in possession. The revelation of God's Son (Gal. 1:16) on
the road to Damascus clearly gave to Paul the essential elements of his
Christology. What is more, that Christology must have formed from the
very beginning the essence of his preaching. The "Jesus" whom he
preached in the Damascan synagogues was also Christ - his Christ. That
he
preached in Damascus is directly attested only by the book of Acts,
but, as has been observed by some who entertain rather a low estimate
of Acts, it is implied in 2 Cor. 11:32-33. What could have caused the
persecution of Paul except Christian activity on his part? If the book
of Acts is correct, Paul preached also in Jerusalem only three years
after his conversion. Yet the churches of Judea glorified God in him.
If there was opposition to his heavenly Christ, such opposition has
left no trace. Yet Paul had been in direct consultation with Peter.
There is every reason to believe, therefore, that from the very
beginning, the exalted Christology of Paul was accepted by the
Jerusalem Church. The heavenly Christ of Paul was also the Christ of
those who had walked and talked with Jesus of Nazareth.
By his contemporaries, then, Paul was regarded not as the founder of a
new religion, but as a disciple of Jesus. That testimony may be
overthrown by contrary evidence. But there is a strong presumption that
it is correct. For among those who passed judgment upon Paul were
included the most intimate friends and disciples of Jesus. Their
estimate of Paul's relationship to Jesus can be rejected only under the
compulsion of positive evidence. Those who knew Jesus best accepted
Paul as a disciple of Jesus like themselves.
Thus, by his contemporaries, Paul was not regarded as an innovator with
respect to Jesus. Did he regard himself as such?
Put in this form, the question admits of but one answer. "It is no
longer I that live," says Paul, "but Christ that liveth in me. Christ,
for Paul, was absolute Lord and Master. But this "Christ" whom Paul
served was identified by Paul with Jesus of Nazareth. Of that there can
be no manner of doubt. Moreover, even in his estate of humiliation,
Christ was regarded by Paul as Lord. It was "the Lord of glory" (1 Cor.
2:8) who was crucified. The right of the earthly Jesus to issue
commands was for Paul a matter of course. That is proved beyond
question even by the few direct references which Paul makes to words of
Jesus. So much is almost universally admitted. That Paul regarded
himself as a disciple of Jesus can be denied by no one. The difference
of opinion appears when the question is formulated in somewhat broader
terms. Do the Pauline Epistles themselves, even apart from a comparison
with the words of Jesus, furnish evidence that Paul was not, as he
supposed, a disciple of Jesus, but the founder of a new religion?
In favor of the affirmative, two considerations have been adduced.
In the first place, in the Epistle to the Galatians Paul himself
insists upon his independence of tradition. He received his gospel
directly from Christ, not through any human agency. Even after he had
received his gospel, he avoided all contact with those who had been
apostles before him. He conferred not with flesh and blood. Paul
received his gospel, then, by revelation from the risen Christ, not by
tradition from the earthly Jesus. But the earthly Jesus was the
historical Jesus. In exalting his direct commission from the heavenly
Christ, Paul has himself betrayed the slenderness of his connection
with Jesus of Nazareth.
In the second place, the same low estimate of historical tradition
appears throughout the epistles, in the paucity of references to the
words and deeds of Jesus. Apparently Paul is interested almost
exclusively in the birth and death and resurrection. He is interested
in the birth as the incarnation of a heavenly being, come for the
salvation of men; and in the death and resurrection as the great cosmic
events by which salvation was obtained. But for the details of the life
of Jesus he displays but little interest. His mind and fancy are
dominated by a vague, mysterious, cosmic personification, not by a
definite historical person - by the heavenly Christ, not by Jesus of
Nazareth.
The latter of these two arguments can be established only by
exaggeration and by misinterpretation - by exaggeration of the paucity
of
references in Paul to the life of Jesus, and by misinterpretation of
the paucity that really exists. In the first place, Paul displays far
greater knowledge than is sometimes supposed, and in the second place,
he possesses far greater knowledge than he displays. The testimony of
Paul to Jesus has been examined many times - it will not be necessary
to
traverse the ground again. The assertion that the details of the life
of Jesus were of little value for Paul is contradicted in no uncertain
terms by such passages as 2 Cor. 10:1 and Rom. 15:3. When Paul urges as
an example to his readers the meekness and gentleness of Christ, or his
faithfulness in bearing reproaches in the service of God, he is
evidently thinking not primarily of the gracious acts of the
incarnation and passion, as in Phil. 2:5ff., and 2 Cor. 8:9, but of the
character of Jesus as it was exhibited in his daily. life on earth.
Such expressions as these attest not merely knowledge of Jesus but also
warm appreciation of his character. The imitation of Jesus (1 Cor.
11:1) had its due place in the ethical life of Paul. Direct commands of
Jesus are occasionally quoted, and Paul is fully conscious of the
significance of such commands (1 Cor. 7:10, 12, 25). In 1 Cor 11:
23ff., he quotes in full the words of Jesus instituting the Lord's
Supper, and incidentally shows that he is acquainted with the exact
circumstances under which the words were spoken ("the night in which he
was betrayed").
The incidental character of Paul's references to the life of Jesus
itself suggests that he knew far more than he chooses to tell. The
account of the institution of the Lord's Supper, for example, would
never have found a place in the epistles except for certain abuses
which had sprung up in Corinth. Yet Paul says that he had already
"delivered over" that account to the Corinthians. It had formed part of
his elementary preaching. And it displays intimate knowledge of detail.
That one example is sufficient to prove not only that Paul knew more
than he tells in the epistles, but also that what is omitted from the
epistles formed part of the essential elements of his preaching. It is
omitted not because it is unimportant, but on the contrary because it
is fundamental. Instruction about it had to be given at the very
beginning, and did not often have to be repeated. The hint supplied by
such passages as the account of the Lord's Supper in 1 Cor. 11:23ff. is
only supplementary to weighty a priori considerations. A missionary
preaching that included no concrete account of the life of Jesus would
have been preposterous. The claim that a crucified Jew was to be obeyed
as Lord and trusted as Saviour must surely have provoked the question
as to what manner of man this was. It is true that the gods of other
religions needed to be described only in general terms. But
Christianity had dispensed with the advantages of such vagueness. It
had identified its God with a Jew who had lived but a few years before.
Surely the tremendous prejudice against accepting a crucified criminal
as Lord and Master could be overcome only by an account of the
wonderful character of Jesus. The only other resource is an extreme
supernaturalism. If the concrete figure of the crucified one had no
part in winning the hearts of men, then the work must have been
accomplished by a magical exercise of divine power - working out of all
connection with the mind and heart. That is not the supernaturalism of
Paul. When Paul writes to the Galatians that Jesus Christ crucified was
placarded before their eyes,
he refers to something more than a dogmatic exposition of the
atonement. The picture of the crucified one owed part of its compelling
power to the conviction that the death there portrayed was the supreme
act of a life of love.
It is already pretty clear that the first chapter of Galatians cannot
mean that Paul had a contempt for Christian tradition. When Paul says
that he received his gospel by direct revelation from Jesus Christ, he
cannot mean that he excluded from his preaching what he had received by
ordinary word of mouth from the eye-witnesses of the life of Jesus. He
cannot mean even that his proof of the resurrection of Jesus was based
solely upon his own testimony. That inference, at least, would be very
natural if Gal. 1 stood alone. But it is refuted in no uncertain terms
by 1 Cor. 15:3-7. In this passage the appearances of the risen Christ
to persons other than Paul are reviewed in an extended list, and Paul
distinctly says that this formed a part of his first preaching in
Corinth. So not even the fact of the resurrection itself was supported
solely by the testimony of Paul. On the contrary, Paul was diligent in
investigating the testimony of others.
The first chapter of Galatians, therefore, bears a very different
aspect when it is interpreted in the light of the other Pauline
epistles. Paul does not mean that all his information about Jesus came
from the risen Christ. In all probability, Paul knew the essential
facts in the life of Jesus even before he became a Christian. Since he
was a persecutor of the Church, he must have had at least general
information about its founder. The story of the life and death of the
Galilean prophet must have been matter of common knowledge in
Palestine. And after the conversion, Paul added to his knowledge. It is
inconceivable that during the brief intercourse with Peter, for
example, the subject of the words and deeds of Jesus was studiously
avoided. Such an unnatural supposition is by no means required by the
actual phenomena of the epistles. That has been demonstrated above. The
true reason why Paul does not mention his knowledge of the life of
Jesus as part of the basis of his faith, is that for him such factual
knowledge was a matter of course. For us it is not a matter of course,
because many centuries stand between us and the events. For
us, painful investigation of sources is necessary in order that we may
arrive even at the bare facts. Indeed, it is just the facts that need
to be established in the face of the sharpest criticism. But for Paul,
the facts were matter of common knowledge; it was the interpretation of
the *facts which was in dispute. Paul was living in Jerusalem only a
very few years at the latest after the crucifixion of Jesus. The
prophet of Nazareth had certainly created considerable stir in
Jerusalem as well as in Galilee. These things were not done in a
corner. The general outlines of the life of Jesus were known to friend
and foe alike. Even indifference could hardly have brought
forgetfulness. But Paul was not indifferent. Before his conversion, as
well as after it, he was interested in Jesus. That was what made him
the most relentless of the persecutors.
The bare facts of the earthly life of Jesus did not, therefore,
constitute in Paul's mind a "gospel." Everyone knew the facts - the
Pharisees as well as the disciples. The facts could be obtained through
a thousand channels. Paul did not reflect as to where he got them.
Before the conversion, he heard the reports of the opponents of Jesus,
and the common gossip of the crowds. After the conversion, there were
many eye-witnesses who could be questioned - perhaps in Damascus and
even
in Arabia as well as in Jerusalem. It never occurred to Paul to regard
himself as a disciple of the men who merely reported the facts, any
more than the modem man feels a deep gratitude to the newspaper in
which he reads useful information. If that particular paper had not
printed the news, others would have done so. The sources of information
are so numerous that no one of them can be regarded as of supreme
importance. For us, the sources of information about the life of Jesus
are limited. Hence our veneration for the Gospels. But Paul was a
contemporary of Jesus; the sources of his information about Jesus were
so numerous that they could not be counted.
Thus, when Paul says that he received his gospel from the risen Christ,
he does not mean that the risen Christ revealed to him the facts of the
life of Jesus. He had known the facts before - only they had filled him
with hatred. What he received at his
conversion was a new interpretation of the facts. Instead of continuing
to persecute the disciples of Jesus, he accepted Jesus as living Lord
and Master. Conceivably, the change might have been wrought through the
preaching of the disciples; Paul might have received his gospel through
the ministrations of Peter. But such was not the Lord's will. Suddenly,
on the road to Damascus, Jesus called him. Paul had heard, perhaps, of
the call of the first disciples; he had heard of those who left home
and kindred to follow the new teacher. He had heard only to condemn.
But now it was his turn. Jesus called, and he obeyed. Jesus, whom he
knew only too well - destroyer of the Temple, accursed by the law,
crucified, dead and buried - was living Lord. Jesus called him - called
him
not merely to revering imitation of the holy martyr, not merely to a
new estimate of events that were past, but to present, living communion
with himself. Jesus himself, in very presence, called him into
communion, and into glorious service. That, and that only, is what Paul
means when he says that he received his gospel not from man but by
revelation of Jesus Christ.
Neither by Paul himself, therefore, nor by the original apostles was
Paul regarded as an innovator with reference to Jesus. On the contrary
he regarded himself and was regarded by others as a true disciple. The
presumption is that that opinion was correct. For both Paul himself,
and the early Christians with whom he came into contact were
contemporaries of Jesus, and had every opportunity to know him. If Paul
had detected any fundamental divergence between his own teaching and
that of Jesus of Nazareth, then he could not have remained Jesus'
disciple. Unless, indeed, the conversion was supernatural. But the
conversion was not supernatural if it left Paul in disharmony with
Jesus. For it purported to be wrought by Jesus himself. If
supernatural, the conversion could not have left Paul in disharmony
with the historical Jesus, because it was wrought by an appearance of
Jesus; if not supernatural, it would have been insufficient to make
Paul regard himself as a disciple of one with whom he didnot agree.
That the original apostles had every opportunity for knowing the
historical Jesus requires no proof. Yet undoubtedly
they accepted Paul as a disciple.
The presumption thus established in favor of regarding Paul as a true
disciple of Jesus could be overthrown only by positive divergence,
established by an actual comparison of Jesus with Paul. At the very
outset of such comparison, a serious difficulty is encountered. How is
Jesus to be investigated? Paul we know, but what is the truth about
Jesus? It will not do, it is said, to accept the Gospel picture in its
entirety: For the Gospels were written after Paul, and have been
affected by Pauline thinking. To a certain extent, therefore, it is no
longer the historical Jesus which the Gospels describe, but the Pauline
Christ. To compare Paul with the Gospels, therefore, is to compare not
Paul with Jesus, but Paul with Paul. Naturally the comparison
establishes coincidence, not divergence; but the result is altogether
without value.
This objection was applied first of all to the Fourth Gospel. The
Fourth Gospel was written undoubtedly many years after the Pauline
Epistles. And undoubtedly it exhibits a remarkable harmony with Pauline
thinking. The Pauline Christ is here made to appear even in the earthly
life of Jesus. In this respect, it is said, the Gospel is more Pauline
than Paul himself. Paul had done justice to the human life of Jesus by
distinguishing sharply between the humiliation and the exaltation of
Christ. Jesus had become Son of God in power only at the resurrection.
In the Fourth Gospel, on the other hand, the heavenly Christ appears in
all his glory even on earth. Furthermore, the new birth of John 3 is
identical with the Pauline conception of the new life which the
Christian has by sharing in the death and resurrection of Christ. Even
the Pauline doctrine of the sacrificial death of Christ, though not
prominent in the Fourth Gospel, appears in such passages as John 1:29
and 3:14-15.
The objection could be overcome only by an examination of the Fourth
Gospel, which would far transcend the limits of the present discussion.
The Fourth Gospel will therefore here be left out of account. It should
be remarked, however, in passing, that dependence of the Fourth Gospel
upon Paul has by no means been proved. A far-reaching similarity in
ideas may freely be admitted. But in order to prove dependence, it is
necessary to establish similarity not only of ideas, but also of
expression. And that is conspicuously absent. Even where the underlying
ideas are most clearly identical, the terminology is strikingly
different - and not only the bare terminology but also the point of
view.
The entire atmosphere and spirit of the Fourth Gospel is quite distinct
from that of the Pauline Epistles. That is sufficient to disprove the
hypothesis of dependence of the Gospel upon Paul. The underlying
similarity of thought, when taken in connection with the total
dissimilarity of expression, can be explained only by dependence upon a
common source. And that source can hardly be anything but Jesus Christ.
Provisionally, however, the Fourth Gospel will be left out of account.
That can be done with the greater safety, because it is now universally
agreed that the contrast between the Fourth Gospel and the Synoptics is
not an absolute one. The day is past when the divine Christ of the
Gospel of John could be confronted with a human Christ of Mark.
Historical students of all shades of opinion have now come to see that
Mark as well as John (though, it is believed, in a lesser degree)
presents an exalted Christology. The charge of Pauline influence,
therefore, has been brought not only against John, but also against the
earlier Gospels. Hence, it is maintained that if Paul be compared even
with the Jesus of the Synoptics, he is being compared not with the
historical Jesus, but with a Paulinized Jesus. Obviously such
comparison can prove nothing
If the Synoptic Gospels were influenced by Paul, then there is extant
not a single document which preserves a pre-Pauline conception of
Christ. That is a very remarkable state of affairs. The original
disciples of Jesus, those who had been, intimate with him on earth,
those from whom the most authentic information might have been
expected, have allowed their account of the life of Jesus to be altered
through the influence of one who could speak only from hearsay. Such
alteration would certainly fall within the lifetime of many of the
eyewitnesses. For the Gospel of Mark is generally admitted to have been
written before 70, A.D. It is conceivable that the Pauline conception
might thus have gained the ascendancy over the primitive conception.
But it is hardly conceivable that it
could have done so without a struggle, and of struggle there is not a
trace. In the supposed Pauline passages in the Synoptic Gospels, the
writers are quite unaware that one conception is being replaced by
another. And the Pauline Epistles themselves, as has already been
observed, presuppose a substantial agreement between Paul and the
Jerusalem Church with regard to the person of Christ. This remarkable
absence of struggle between the Pauline conception and the primitive
conception can be explained only if the two were essentially the same.
Only so could the Pauline conception have been accepted by the
Jerusalem Church, and permitted to dominate subsequent Christianity.
This conclusion is supported by the positive evidence, which has
recently been urged, for example by Harnack, for a pre- Pauline dating
of the Synoptic Gospels - that is, for dating them at a time when the
Pauline! Epistles, even if some of them had already been written, could
not have been collected, and could not have begun to dominate the
thinking of the Church at large. The affinity between the Christology
of Paul and the Jesus of the Synoptic Gospels does not prove the
dependence of the Gospels upon Paul. For the Christology of Paul was
also, in essentials, the Christology of the primitive Christian
community in Jerusalem.
The transition from the human Jesus to the divine Christ must be placed
therefore not between the primitive church and Paul, but between Jesus
and the primitive church. A man, Jesus, came to be regarded as a divine
being, not by later generations, who could have been deceived by the
nimbus of distance and mystery, but almost immediately after his death,
by his intimate friends, by men who had seen him subject to all the
petty limitations of daily life. Even if Paul were the first witness to
the deification of Jesus, the process would still be preternaturally
rapid. Jesus would still be regarded as a divine being by a
contemporary of his intimate friends-and each deification would be no
mere official form of flattery, like the apotheosis of the Roman
emperors, but would be the expression of serious conviction. The
process by which the man Jesus was raised to divine dignity within a
few years of his death would be absolutely unique. That has been
recognized even by men of the most thorough-going naturalistic
principles. The
late H. J. Holtzmann, who may be regarded as the typical exponent of
modern New Testament criticism, admitted that for the rapid apotheosis
of Jesus, as it appears in the thinking of Paul, he was unable to cite
any parallel in the religious history of the race. In order to explain
the origin of the Pauline Christology, Bruckner and Wrede have recourse
to the Jewish Apocalypses. The Christology of Paul was formed, it is
said, before his conversion. He needed only to identify the heavenly,
pre-existent Christ of his Jewish belief with Jesus of Nazareth, and
his Christology was complete. But that explanation does not help
matters. Even if it be accepted to the fullest extent, it explains only
details. It explains why, if Jesus was to be regarded as a divine
being, he was regarded as just this particular kind of divine being.
But it does not explain how he came to be regarded as a divine being at
all. And that is what really requires explanation. One might almost as
well say that the deification of a man is explained if only it be shown
that those who accomplished such deification already had a conception
of God. The apotheosis of Jesus, then, is remarkable, even if it was
due to Paul. But it becomes yet a thousand fold more remarkable when it
is seen to have been due not to Paul, but to the intimate friends of
Jesus of Nazareth. Indeed, the process is so remarkable that the
question arises whether there is not something wrong with the
starting-point. The end of the process is fixed. It is the super-human
Christ of Paul and of the primitive church. If, therefore, the process
is inconceivable in its rapidity, it is the starting-point which
becomes open to suspicion. The starting-point is the purely human
Jesus. A suspicion arises that he
never existed. If indeed any early Christian extant document gave a
clear, consistent account of a Jesus who was nothing more than a man,
then the historian might be forced to regard such a Jesus as the
starting-point for an astonishingly rapid apotheosis. But as a matter
of fact, no such document is in
existence. Even those writers who represent Jesus most clearly as a
man, represent him as something more than a man, and are quite
unconscious of a conflict between the two representations. Indeed the
two representations appear as two ways of regarding one and the same
person. If, therefore, the purely human Jesus is to be reconstructed,
he can be reconstructed only by a critical process. That critical
process, in view of the indissolubly close connection in which divine
and human appear in the Synoptic representation of Jesus, becomes, to
say the least, exceedingly difficult. And after criticism has done its
work, after the purely human Jesus has been in some sort disentangled
from the ornamentation which had almost hopelessly defaced his
portrait, the critic faces another problem yet more baffling than the
first. How did this human Jesus come to be regarded as a super-human
Jesus even by his most intimate friends? There is absolutely nothing to
explain the transition except the supposed appearances of the risen
Lord. The disciples had been familiar with a Jesus who placed himself
on the side of man, not of God, who offered himself as an example of
faith, not as the object of faith. And yet, after his shameful death,
this estimate of his person suddenly gave place to a vastly higher
estimate. That is bare supernaturalism. It is supernaturalism stripped
of that harmony with the laws of the human mind which has been
preserved even by the supernaturalism of the Church. In its effort to
remove the supernatural from the life of Jesus, modern criticism has
been obliged to heap up a double portion of the supernatural upon the
Easter experience of the disciples. If the disciples had been familiar
with a supernatural Jesusa Jesus who forgave sin as only God can, a
Jesus who offered himself not as an example of faith but as the object
of faith, a Jesus who substantiated these his lofty claims by wonderful
command over the powers of nature-then conceivably, though not
probably, the impression of such a Jesus might have been sufficient to
produce in the disciples, in a purely natural way, the experiences
which they interpreted as appearances of the risen Lord. But by
eliminating the supernatural in the life of the Jesus whom the
disciples had known, modern criticism has closed the way to this its
only possible psychological ex-planation
of the Easter experience. In order to explain the facts of primitive
Christianity, the supernatural must be retained at least either in the
life of Jesus of Nazareth or else in the appearances of the risen Lord.
But of course no one 'will stop with that alternative. If the
supernatural be accepted in either place, then of course it will be
accepted in both places. If Jesus was really a supernatural person,
then his resurrection and appearance to his disciples was only what was
to be expected; if the experience of the disciples was really an
appearance of Jesus, then of course even in his earthly life he was a
supernatural person. The supernaturalism of the Church is a reasonable
supernaturalism; the supernaturalism into which modern criticism is
forced in its effort to avoid supernaturalism, is a supernaturalism
unworthy of a reasonable God. In ,order to explain the exalted
Christology of the primitive church, either the appearance of the risen
Christ or the Easter experience of the disciples must be regarded as
supernatural. But if either was supernatural then there is no objection
against supposing that both were.
The similarity of the exalted Christology of the Synoptic Gospels to
the Christology of Paul is therefore no indication of dependence upon
Paul. For the Christology of Paul was in essence the Christology of the
primitive church; and the Christology of the primitive church must have
found its justification in the life of Jesus. Furthermore, comparison
of Pauline thinking with the teaching of Jesus in the Synoptic Gospels
will demonstrate that the harmony between Jesus and Paul extends even
to those elements in the teaching of Jesus which are regarded by modern
criticism as most characteristic of him. For example, the fatherhood of
God, and love as the fulfilling of the law. The conception of God as
father was known, it is true, in pre-Christian Judaism. But Jesus
brought an incalculable enrichment of it. And that same -enrichment
appears in Paul in all its fullness. In the earliest extant epistle (1
Thess. 1:1) and throughout all the epistles, the fatherhood of God
appears as a matter of course. It requires no defence or elaboration.
It is one of the commonplaces of Christianity. Yet it is not for Paul a
mere matter of tradition, but a vital element in his religious life. It
has not,
through familiarity, lost one whit of its freshness. The cry, "Abba,
Father", comes from the very depths of the heart. Hardly less prominent
in Paul is the conception of love as the fulfilling of the law. "The
whole law is fulfilled in one word, even in this, 'Thou shalt love thy
neighbor as thyself.'" "And if I bestow all my goods to feed the poor,
and if I give my body to be burned, but have not love, it profiteth me
nothing." In the epistles, it is true, Paul is speaking usually of love
for Christian brethren. But simply because of the needs of the
churches. The closeness of the relationship with fellow-Christians had
sometimes increased rather than diminished the tendency towards strife
and selfishness. The epistles are addressed not to missionaries, but to
Christians of very imperfect mold, who needed to be admonished to
exhibit love even where love might have seemed most natural and easy.
On account of the peculiar circumstances, therefore, Paul speaks
especially of love for fellow-Christians. But not to the exclusion of
love for all men. Never was greater injustice done than when Paul is
accused of narrowness in his affections. His whole life is the
refutation of such a charge - his life of tactful adaptation to varying
conditions, of restless energy, of untold peril and hardship. What was
the secret of such a life? Love of Christ, no doubt. But also love of
those for whom Christ died - whether Jew or Greek, circumcision or
uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bond or free.
The fatherhood of God, it is true, does not mean for Paul that God is
pleased with all men, or that all men will receive the children's
blessing. And Christian love does not mean obliteration of the dividing
line between the Kingdom and the world. But these limitations appear at
least as clearly in Jesus as in Paul. The dark background of eternal
destruction, and the sharp division between the disciples and the world
are described by Jesus in far harsher terms than Paul ever ventured to
employ. It was Jesus who spoke of the outer darkness and the
everlasting fire, of the sin that shall not be forgiven either in this
world or in that which is to come; it was Jesus who said, "If any man
cometh unto me, and hateth not his own father, and mother, and wife,
and children, and brethren and
sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple."
These examples might be multiplied; and they should be supplemented by
what has been said above with regard to Paul's appreciation of the
character of Jesus. Jesus of Nazareth, as he is depicted for us in the
Gospels, was for Paul the supreme moral ideal. But that does not make
Paul a disciple of Jesus. Be it spoken with all plainness. Imitation of
Jesus, important as it was in the life of Paul, was overshadowed by
something else. All that has been said about Paul's interest in the
earthly life of Jesus, about his obedience to Jesus' commands, about
his reverence for Jesus' character, cannot disguise the fact that these
things for Paul are not supreme. Knowledge of the life of Jesus is not
for Paul an end in itself but a means to an end. The essence of Paul's
religious life is not imitation of a dead prophet. It is communion with
a living Lord. In making the risen Christ, not the earthly Jesus, the
supreme object of Paul's thinking, modern radicalism is perfectly
correct. Paul cannot be vindicated as a disciple of Jesus simply by
correcting exaggeration - simply by showing that the influence upon him
of the teaching and example of Jesus was somewhat greater than has been
supposed. The true relationships of a man are to be determined not by
the periphery of his life, but by what is central - central both in his
own estimation and in his influence upon history. But the centre and
core of Paulinism is not imitation of the earthly Jesus, but communion
with the risen Christ. It was that which Paul himself regarded as the
very foundation of his own life. "If any man is in Christ, he is a new
creature." "It is no longer I that live, but Christ that liveth in me."
It was that which planted the Pauline gospel in the great cities of the
Roman Empire; it was that which dominated Christianity, and through
Christianity has changed the face of the world.
The tremendous difference between this communion with the risen Christ
and mere imitation of the earthly Jesus has sometimes been overlooked.
In the eagerness to vindicate Paul as a disciple of Jesus, the
essential feature of Paulinism has been thrust into the background. It
is admitted, of course, that in
Paul's own estimation the thought of Christ as a divine being, now
living in glory, was fundamental. But the really important thing, it is
said, is the ethical character that is attributed to this heavenly
being. Paul's heavenly Christ is the personification of self-denying
love. But whence was this attribute derived? Certainly not from the
Messiah of the Jewish Apocalypses. For he is conceived of as enveloped
in mystery, as hidden from the world until the great day of his
revealing. The gracious character of Paul's heavenly Christ could only
have been derived from the historical Jesus. Perhaps directly. The
character of the historical Jesus, as it was known through tradition,
was simply attributed by Paul to the heavenly being with whom Jesus was
identified. Or perhaps indirectly. The heavenly Christ was for Paul the
personification of love, because Paul conceived of the death of Christ
as a supreme act of loving self-denial. But how could Paul conceive
thus of the death of Christ? Only because of the loving spirit of Jesus
which appeared in the disciples whom Paul persecuted. It was therefore
ultimately the character of the historical Jesus which enabled Paul to
conceive of the crucifixion as a loving act of sacrifice; and it was
this conception of the crucifixion which enabled Paul to conceive of
his heavenly Christ as the supreme ideal of love. Of course, for Paul,
owing to his intellectual environment, it was impossible to submit
himself to this ideal of love, so long as it was embodied merely in a
dead teacher. The conception of the risen Christ was therefore
necessary historically in order to preserve the precious ideal which
had been introduced into the world by Jesus. But we of the present day
can and must sacrifice the form to the content. The glorious Christ of
Paul derives the real secret of his power over the hearts of men not
from his glory, but from his love.
Such reasoning ignores the essence of Paulinism. It represents
Paulinism as devotion to an ideal. If that were granted, then perhaps
all the rest might follow. If Paulinism is simply imitation of Christ,
then perhaps it makes little difference whether Christ be conceived of
as on earth or in heaven, as a dead prophet or a living Lord. Past or
present, the ideal, as an ideal, remains the same. But Paulinism is not
imitation of Christ, but communion with Christ. That fact requires no
proof. The epistles are on fire with it. The communion is, on the one
hand, intensely personal - it is a relation of love. With Christ Paul
can
hold colloquies of the most intimate kind. But, on the other hand, the
communion with Christ transcends human analogies. The Lord can operate
on the heart and life of Paul in a way that is impossible for any human
friend. Paul is in Christ and Christ is in Paul. The relation to the
risen Christ is not only personal, but also religious. But if Paulinism
is communion with Christ, then quite the fundamental thing about Christ
is that he is alive. It is sheer folly to say that this Pauline
Christ-religion can be reproduced by one who supposes that Christ is
dead. Such a one can envy the poor sinners in the Gospels who received
from Jesus healing for body and mind. He can admire the great prophet.
When, alas, shall we find another like him? He can envy the faith of
others. But he cannot himself believe. He cannot hear Jesus say, "Thy
faith hath made thee whole."
When Paulinism is understood as fellowship with the risen Christ, then
the disproportionate emphasis which Paul places upon the death and
resurrection of Christ becomes intelligible. For these are the acts by
which fellowship has been established. To the modern man, they seem
unnecessary. By the modern man fellowship with God is taken as a matter
of course. But only because of an imperfect conception of God. If God
is all love and kindness, then of course nothing is required in order
to bring us into his presence. But Paul would never have been satisfied
with such a God. His was the awful, holy God of the Old Testament
prophets - and of Jesus. But for Paul the holiness of God was also the
holiness of Christ. Communion of sinful man with the holy Christ is a
tremendous paradox, a supreme mystery. But the mystery has been
illumined. It has been illumined by the cross. Christ forgives sin not
because he is complacent towards sin, but because of his own free grace
he has paid the dreadful penalty of it. And he has not stopped with
that. After the cross came the resurrection. Christ rose from the dead
into a life of glory
and power. Into that glory and into that. power he invites the
believer. In Christ we receive not only pardon, but new and glorious
life.
Paul's interpretation of the death and resurrection is not to be found
in the words of Jesus. But hints of it appear, even in the Synoptic
discourses. "The Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to
minister, and to give his life a ransom for many" (Mk. 10:45). Modern
criticism is inclined to question the authenticity of that verse. But
if any saying of Jesus is commended by its form, it is this one. The
exquisite gnomic form vindicates the saying to the great master of
inspired paradox. Even far stronger, however, is the attestation of the
words which were spoken at the last supper. Indeed these are the most
strongly attested of all the words of Jesus; for the Synoptic tradition
is here supplemented by the testimony of Paul; and the testimony of
Paul is also the testimony of the tradition to which he refers. That
tradition must be absolutely primitive. But the words which Jesus spoke
at the last supper designate the death of Jesus as a sacrifice. And why
should the idea of vicarious suffering be denied to Jesus? It is freely
accepted for his disciples and for Paul. They interpreted the death of
Jesus as a sacrifice for sin, because, it is said, the idea was current
in Judaism of that day. But if the idea was so familiar, surely Jesus
was more susceptible to it than were his disciples. They had an
external conception of the Kingdom, he regarded the Kingdom as
spiritual; they exalted power and worldly position, he insisted upon
self-denial. Was it then the disciples, and not Jesus, who seized upon
the idea of vicarious suffering? Surely if Jesus anticipated his death
at all, he would naturally regard it as a sacrificial death. And to
eliminate altogether Jesus' foreknowledge of his death involves extreme
skepticism. Aside from the direct predictions, what shall be done with
Mk. 2:20: "But the days will come when the bridegroom shall he taken
from them, and then will they fast in that day"? If Jesus expected the
Kingdom to be established before his death, then he was an extreme
fanatic, who could not even discern the signs of the times. The whole
spirit of his life is opposed to such a view. Even during his life,
Jesus was a suffering servant of Jehovah.
Nevertheless, the teaching of Jesus about the significance of his death
is not explicit. It resembles the mysterious intimations of prophecy
rather than the definite enunciation of fundamental religious truth.
That fact must be admitted; indeed, it should be insisted upon. The
fundamental Pauline doctrine - the doctrine of the cross - is only
hinted
at in the words of Jesus. Yet that doctrine was fundamental not only in
Paul, but in the primitive church. Certainly it has been fundamental in
historic Christianity. The fundamental doctrine of Christianity, then,
was not taught definitely by Jesus of Nazareth. As a teacher,
therefore, Jesus was not the founder of Christianity. He was the
founder of Christianity not because of what he said, but because of
what he did. The Church revered him as its founder only because his
death was interpreted as an event of cosmic significance. But it had
such significance only if Jesus was a divine being, come to earth for
the salvation of men. If Jesus was not a supernatural person, then not
only Paulinism but also the whole of Christianity is founded not upon
the lofty teaching of an inspired prophet, but upon a colossal error.
Paul was a disciple of Jesus, if Jesus was a supernatural person; he
was not a disciple of Jesus, if Jesus was a mere man. If Jesus was
simply a human teacher, then Paulinism defies explanation. Yet it is
powerful and beneficent beyond compare. judged simply by its effects,
the religious experience of Paul is the most tremendous phenomenon in
the history of the human spirit. It has transformed the world from
darkness into light. But it need be judged not merely by its effects.
It lies open before us. In the presence of it, the sympathetic observer
is aghast. It is a new world that is opened before him. Freedom,
goodness, communion with God, sought by philosophers of all the ages,
attained at last! The religious experience of Paul needs no defense.
Give it but sympathetic attention and it is irresistible. But it can be
shared as well as admired. The relation of Paul to Jesus Christ is
essentially the same as our own. The original apostles had one element
in their religious life which we cannot share the memory of; their
daily intercourse with Jesus. That element, it is true, was not really
fundamental, even for them. But it appears to be fundamental; our fears
tell us that it was fundamental. But in the experience of Paul there
was no such element. Like ourselves he did not know Jesus upon earth-he
had no memory of Galilean days. His devotion was directed simply and
solely to the risen Saviour. Shall we follow him? We can do so on one
condition. That condition is not easy. To fulfil it, we must overcome
our most deep-seated convictions. We must recognize in Jesus a
supernatural person. But unless we fulfil that condition, we can never
share in the religious experience of Paul. When brought face to face
with the crisis, we may shrink back. But if we do so, we make the
origin of Christianity an insoluble problem. In exalting the methods of
scientific history, we involve ourselves hopelessly in historical
difficulty. In the relation between Jesus and Paul, we discover a
problem, which, through the very processes of mind by which the
uniformity of nature has been established, forces us to transcend that
doctrine-which pushes us relentlessly off the safe ground of the
phenomenal world toward the abyss of supernaturalism-which forces us,
despite the resistance of the modern mind, to make the great venture of
faith, and found our lives no longer upon what can be procured by human
effort or understood as a phase of evolution, but upon him who has
linked us with the unseen world, and brought us into communion with the
eternal God.
* This essay was originally
published in Biblical And
Theological Studies
by The Members of the Faculty of Princeton Theological Seminary, (New
York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1912). The article was later to be
transformed into one of the chapters in Machen's book The Origin of Paul's Religion.
This essay is now in the public domain and may be freely copied and
distributed. The electronic edition of this book was scanned and edited
by Shane Rosenthal for Reformation Ink. In this edition the footnotes
have not been included and in a few places the spelling has been
modernized.