Recovering Paul's Mother Tongue, Second Edition: Language and Theology in Galatians
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Susan Grove Eastman
Susan Eastman is associate professor of the practice ofBible and Christian formation at Duke University DivinitySchool, Durham, North Carolina, where she also directs theDoctor of Theology program.
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Recovering Paul's Mother Tongue, Second Edition - Susan Grove Eastman
Recovering Paul’s Mother Tongue
Second Edition
Language and Theology in Galatians
Susan Grove Eastman
Foreword by Martinus C. de Boer
Recovering Paul’s Mother Tongue, Second Edition
Language and Theology in Galatians
Copyright © 2022 Susan Grove Eastman. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
Cascade Books
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3
Eugene, OR 97401
www.wipfandstock.com
paperback isbn: 978-1-5326-9413-4
hardcover isbn: 978-1-5326-9414-1
ebook isbn: 978-1-5326-9415-8
Cataloguing-in-Publication data:
Names: Eastman, Susan Grove, author. | de Boer, Martinus C., foreword.
Title: Recovering Paul’s mother tongue : language and theology in Galatians; second edition / by Susan Grove Eastman; foreword by Martinus C. de Boer.
Description: Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2022 | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: isbn 978-1-5326-9413-4 (paperback) | isbn 978-1-5326-9414-1 (hardcover) | isbn 978-1-5326-9415-8 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Bible. N.T. Galatians—Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Classification: BS2685.52 E27 2022 (print) | BS2685.52 (ebook)
10/20/21
Excerpts from the lyrics of Saint of Me
(1997) by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards are used by permission.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Foreword
Preface to the Second Edition
Preface to the First Edition
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Chapter 1: The Torturer Became the Mother
Recovering Paul’s Mother Tongue
The Staying Power of the Gospel
A Word about Method
Chapter 2: Become Like Me!
Galatians 4:12 in the Context of the Letter
Chronological
Parallels
Relational Matrix
Conclusion
Chapter 3: Paul among the Prophets
Paul among the Prophets
Discussion
Chapter 4: Galatians 4:19
Questions of Interpretation
The Material Content of Paul’s Labor Pains
The Background of ὠδίνω in the Septuagint
Conclusion
Chapter 5: Children of the Free Woman
Galatians 4:21—5:1 in the Structure of the Letter
Isaiah 54:1 in the Structure of Galatians 4:21—5:1
Isaiah 54:1 in Relationship to Sarah’s Story
The Barren Woman and the Maternity of Paul
Chapter 6: Two Family Trees
The Flesh
The Spirit
Conclusion
Chapter 7: Paul’s Mother Tongue and the Staying Power of the Gospel
The Power of the Gospel to Create a History: Four Reflections
Mother Tongue and Metaphor
Conclusion
Appendices
Cast Out the Slave Woman and her Son
Israel and the Mercy of God
Bibliography
For Eddie, Danny, and Angela
Foreword
Susan Grove Eastman is a leading interpreter of Paul as an apocalyptic theologian. Her signature contribution is the exploration of the implications of Paul’s apocalyptic theology for human beings in their everyday life on this earth. What is the payoff of God’s apocalyptic invasion in Christ for individual and communal formation? How is it embodied in daily life, in the ongoing stream of history, in the networks of our relationships? How does it become visible and concrete? Eastman wants to know and to show, as she herself puts it in this volume, how Paul’s emphasis on crucifixion with Christ and new creation intersects with existing patterns of relationships, identity, and behavior in the lives of individuals and communities . . . How is it sustained and mediated in the life of the community over time?
These are the questions and concerns of someone with extensive pastoral experience and an inquisitive intellect, who has been grasped by the apocalyptic gospel as preached and articulated by the apostle.
In Eastman’s scholarly work on Paul, Galatians has a special place. Her excellent recent book, Paul and the Person: Reframing Paul’s Anthropology (2017), focuses on Romans but concludes with an illuminating chapter on the theme of union with Christ in Galatians. The present volume, which was first published in 2007, is an exegetical investigation of language and theology in Galatians, more particularly, of the working relationship between Paul’s language and his theology as enacted in the practice of his apostolic ministry.
Eastman lets the reader see that Paul’s preaching is intensely personal and emotional, with not even a pretense of disinterestedness or objectivity.
In order to hear and to understand this existentially engaged Paul it is necessary to recover what she (using the work of Ursula Le Guin) labels his mother tongue,
a metaphor for the intensely relational inflections of his voice, the language of his maternal ‘labor’ with his converts,
as these come to expression in one section of Galatians in particular, namely, 4:12—5:1, where Paul draws heavily on maternal metaphors. Paul’s mother tongue
forms a contrast with a father tongue,
which is characteristically unidirectional, objective, and authoritarian.
The Paul who emerges from Eastman’s study is not only someone who thinks deeply about the gospel but also someone who embodies it in everything he says, writes, and does. In Eastman’s apt formulation, Paul engages in a representational, embodied mode of proclamation,
whereby he seeks to build and nurture a faith community that endures
over time. Paul’s discourse,
Eastman writes, demonstrates for his converts the content of the good news. That demonstration has motivational force, drawing his auditors back into a relational matrix with both cosmic and personal dimensions, which in turn mediates the gospel’s power to transform and sustain them.
The gospel Paul preached, and through his letters still preaches, is no abstract theory limited to the realm of ideas but a power that is effective in the concrete, historical existence of communities and people of faith.
In presenting her case, Eastman wrestles with certain issues raised by the influential work of J. Louis Martyn on Galatians. Martyn emphasized theological continuity (expressed in God’s faithfulness to Abraham), on the one hand, and anthropological discontinuity (effected and revealed by the cross), on the other. For Eastman, however, it is difficult, if not impossible, to speak of the gospel creating a ‘history,’
as Martyn did, without utilizing language implying anthropological as well as theological continuity.
Martyn’s insistence on an antinomy between divine and human agency is subject to a similar critique. Eastman wants to know whether and how the transforming and sustaining power of the gospel . . . is mediated over time and made visible in human affairs. Without such visibility, it becomes impossible to describe the history-making intersection of Christ’s unique crucifixion and resurrection with the linear narratives of Paul’s converts.
As a counterpoint to Martyn’s focus on the crucifixion, Eastman focuses on the incarnation, without however neglecting or underestimating the crucifixion as effecting a radical break with the past. Christ’s humanity means that in and through Christ God participates in the human story. Eastman discerns a dynamic mimetic reversal at the heart of the gospel
as preached by Paul: because God in Christ participates in the human story, God initiates and sustains human participation in Christ’s story through the gift of the Spirit.
There is a mutually participatory interaction between God and humanity.
Christ enters the human scene, and in a sense stays there, empowering ongoing change and participation in the new creation that represents the future for human beings. The God of Jesus Christ becomes involved in human life on earth and enables human beings to participate in the promised new reality that Christ represents and mediates. Christ creates a new community, that is, a new relational network defined by faith, hope, and love, and in doing so he also creates a history, the history of the gospel in human affairs.
This book is worth your time not only because of the importance of the issues it addresses but also because of the author’s apt, incisive, and exegetically acute exploration of these issues. Moreover, the original volume has been augmented with other significant essays on Paul from the author’s hand.
Martinus C. de Boer
Emeritus Professor of New Testament
Vrij Universiteit of Amsterdam
Preface to the Second Edition
This new edition of Recovering Paul’s Mother Tongue: Language and Theology in Galatians comes some fourteen years after its original publication. Preparing it for publication is thus an exercise in reading backwards,
excavating and discovering earlier versions of themes that I have continued to develop in recent work, including Paul and the Person: Reframing Paul’s Anthropology. Those themes include: transformation and continuity in the formation of identity; the interplay of language and theology, which is closely related to the interplay of experience and text in understanding both God and ourselves; Paul’s bodily, experiential communication of his gospel message; the close connection between embodiment and community in the constitution of human personhood; imitation as a mode of participation; the importance of eschatological reservation for the character of the church as incomplete and therefore porous in its boundaries; and, closely related to such eschatological reservation, the continued future of Israel in God’s purposes. That is a long list that extends far beyond the bounds of this little book. But in the following analysis of Galatians, these themes coalesce around two theological and pastoral foci. The first is this: how do people change, and how do they endure? That is, how does God in Christ both transform human beings, and also sustain their transformation over time? The second question is closely related: how does Paul’s mode of proclamation in Galatians correlate with his theological message? If the medium is indeed the message, what is the medium? What is the message? In other words, what is the interplay between language and theology?
If we pay close attention to Paul’s own embodiment of the message, we cannot help but be challenged to a similar embodiment in contemporary times. For example, Paul’s mission to the Gentiles entailed a necessary crossing of the social boundaries between Jews and Gentiles, and indeed a radical re-visioning of a new humanity in Christ. Paul says to the Gentile believers, My brothers and sisters, I beg of you, become like me because I have become like you
(4:12). His language is emotional and relational, and it relies on the Galatians’ experience of Paul assimilating to their reality even as he recalls them to their life together in Christ. But such boundary crossing is neither unique to Paul’s particular vocation nor is it optional. Rather, it enacts and communicates the heart of Paul’s gospel, in which God in Christ crosses the chasm between divinity and enslaved, condemned humanity: Christ became fully human, mimetically entering into the reality of human bondage and death, in order to set humanity free. Paul seems to see his own ministry as enacting a parallel mimetic interchange, through entering into the world of those who are very different from him. Such an interchange is not, God forbid, an exchange of ethnicities, nor a crude mimicry of the other, nor an absorption of one identity into another. Rather, Paul enacts and proclaims a shared, reciprocal union with Christ who calls all people out of their communities of origin to a new kind of belonging to one another. This is a powerful message in the midst of a world such as ours, afflicted as it is with entrenched divisions and mutual suspicion.
Thus I believe that in this time, as ever, we stand in dire need of Paul’s mother tongue
—his passionate, experiential, robust, life changing and life sustaining proclamation of God for us in Jesus Christ. If the re-issue of this book can play some small part in that proclamation, may it be so.
I have chosen to republish the book with very minimal editing, limiting my interaction with more recent scholarship to footnotes. The primary purpose of the additional footnotes is to draw attention to important new work on metaphor, familial imagery, and intertextuality in Galatians. This second edition also includes two essays in the Appendices. The first essay, ‘Cast Out the Slave Woman and her Son’: The Dynamics of Inclusion and Exclusion in Gal 4:30,
expands my argument in chapter five for reading Gal 4:30 as a warning to all the Galatian believers, rather than a command to some of them to throw out the circumcising missionaries and their followers. Through quoting what Scripture says
to Sarah in Gen 21:10 (Gal 4:30), Paul heightens the contrast between the destinies of those living by the Spirit and those relying on fleshly stratagems, thereby strengthening his exhortation in 5:1: Stand fast, therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery!
The second essay, Israel and the Mercy of God: A Re-reading of Gal 6:16 and Rom 9–11,
represents an about-face in my thinking and thus requires some explanation. Whereas I formerly shared a widespread identification of the Israel of God
in 6:16 with the church, or perhaps specifically with Jewish followers of Christ, I have become convinced that Gal 6:16 pronounces a blessing of peace on those believers who walk in line with the canon of the new creation, and a separate prayer for mercy on Israel
—that is, on Paul’s fellow Jews who do not at present follow Jesus as the Messiah. In Galatians Paul does not close the book
on his Jewish relatives by appropriating their identity as God’s Israel
for believers in Christ, and then later correct course in Romans. Rather, just as in Romans he hopes in God’s mercy for the future, as yet unimaginable, redemption of all Israel
(Rom 11:30–32), so also in Galatians Paul prays for the gift of divine mercy for his Jewish kin (6:16). Apart from such redemption, the new creation remains incomplete, in Galatians as in Romans. Therefore the divine promises, enacted through the prophets and fulfilled in Christ, do not find their fulfillment in Paul’s Gentile mission but in the future redemption of Israel along with the Gentiles, all through Christ. If Paul ended his letter by blithely excluding the historic people of Israel from the promises and purposes of God, his words would ring very hollow indeed. But he does not.
Both essays have further implications for the sense of Paul’s mother tongue
drawn from the familial imagery of the prophets, as I argue in chapter three, develop with regard to apostolic and divine labor in chapter four, and explore in relationship to Isaiah and the Genesis narratives in chapter five. In my view, Paul does not pronounce final condemnation on the circumcision mission and their followers, nor on his Jewish kin. He does not cancel them out. Rather, the vision of redemption in Galatians remains open and therefore potentially inclusive, extending even to those who at present have gone astray from reliance on Christ, or have not come to faith in Jesus as the Messiah.
This claim has profound consequences for the character of the community of faith, and therefore also for the history created by the gospel. In contrast with the circumcision mission, which divides the congregation and excludes others (4:17), Paul exhorts his listeners, Brothers and sisters, if anyone is overtaken in any trespass, you who are living by the Spirit should restore such a one in a spirit of gentleness. Look to yourself, lest you too be tempted
(6:1). Such restorative action socially enacts the hope displayed in Paul’s promises in 5:5: we wait for the hope of righteousness,
and 6:7–9: at the right time we shall reap if we do not grow weary.
Such a future orientation also carries with it a present reservation, displayed in the distinction between Paul’s protracted labor pains (4:19) and the pain-free delivery of Jerusalem above
(4:27 / Isa 54:1), the barren mother city who brings forth children miraculously. A key aspect of this distinction is that it creates room for lament. Like the language of Jeremiah and Isaiah, Paul’s mother tongue
is full of anguish as well as eager expectation, displaying the presence of a God who enters into labor with God’s people. This is the mingling of experience and theology that animates Paul’s proclamation in Galatians, and challenges contemporary preachers and teachers to a similarly risky kind of prophetic and pastoral communication.
Preface to the First Edition
This study is both the fruit of and an attempt to bear witness to what Rowan Williams calls a moving and expanding network of saving relationship.
¹ The instantiation of that network within my own life has included both the church and the academy. The questions that first prompted my intense interest in Paul were generated by pastoral work in a diverse network of Episcopal congregations: Grace Church and Calvary-St. George’s in New York City; St. Andrews in Petersburg, Alaska; Prince of Peace in Salem, Oregon; and All Saints in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania. I am grateful to the marvelous folk in each of these churches, who shared their lives and their questions with me. They taught me to ask how Paul’s emphasis on crucifixion with Christ and new creation intersects with existing patterns of relationship, identity, and behavior in the lives of individuals and communities. Is genuine change possible in human interaction? How does it happen? How is it sustained and mediated in the life of the community over time?
The pages that follow attempt to wrestle with these questions through engaging with Paul’s thorny letter to the Galatians. In that letter, Paul repreaches the gospel to his recalcitrant converts, urging them to stand fast in embracing the radical change that God has wrought in their midst through the message of faith. As I pondered the character of Paul’s proclamation, particularly in the transitional and motivational sections of Gal 4:12–20 and 4:21—5:1, I came to see its embodied, mimetic, and metaphorical aspects as a clue to the transformative staying power of the gospel. The result is a study of the working relationship between Paul’s language and his theology as enacted in the practice of his apostolic ministry.
A few notes on translation are in order. Quotations from the Dead Sea Scrolls are from the translation by Florentino García Martínez.² Unless otherwise noted, all other translations are my own. Following the first appearance of key Greek terms I have provided brief parenthetical translations. I have chosen to render the important Pauline term ἀποκάλυψις (apokalypsis) as apocalypse
rather than as revelation,
in order to retain the dynamic and incursive sense of the term instead of limiting it to its visual meaning. In so doing, I follow the influential interpretation of J. Louis Martyn: "The genesis of Paul’s apocalyptic—as we see it in Galatians—lies in the apostle’s certainty that God has invaded the present evil age by sending Christ and his Spirit into it."³ As we shall see, this apocalyptic context is crucial for understanding Paul’s embodied, metaphorical, and mimetic language in Galatians.
The questions generated by years of pastoral work were given room to flourish and grow at Duke University Divinity School, where I wrote the dissertation from which this book developed. In that specific incarnation of saving relationship,
there are several people for whom I remain profoundly grateful. Many years ago Joel Marcus first saw
me as a biblical scholar, and over the years he encouraged me to pursue further study; I am happy to know him as an old friend and now as a colleague. As teacher and doctoral advisor, Richard Hays always graciously encouraged my work, delighting in mutual exegetical discovery and theological conversation. Mary McClintock Fulkerson introduced me to issues of power and authority in relationship to Pauline imitation. Stanley Hauerwas taught me to ask new and fruitful questions as I read Paul’s letters. In more recent years, as I have gone from student to faculty at Duke, many new colleagues have enriched my life and work here, including, in New Testament, Douglas Campbell and Kavin Rowe. Others are too numerous to name here.
Beyond the bounds of Duke, Kathy Grieb read and commented enthusiastically and insightfully on every page I wrote. John Barclay also has been a rigorous and encouraging conversation partner over the years. Special thanks go to Lou and Dorothy Martyn, who early on gave generously of their time and wisdom to help me clarify issues of identity, continuity, and discontinuity in Galatians; my great debt to both of them is apparent in the pages that follow. My debt to the work of Beverly Gaventa will also be apparent, and I am grateful for her gracious collegiality and friendship.
Special thanks are due to Anne Weston of Duke Divinity School, who gave many hours of editorial work, and to my graduate assistant, T. J. Lang, for taking on the tedious task of indexing. Thanks also to Linda Bieze and Jennifer Hoffman of Eerdmans for shepherding the manuscript through the publication process from start to finish.
It was only as I approached the end of writing this book on Paul’s mother tongue
that I realized the extent of my debt to my own mother, Pat Grove. She modeled for me a fascination with language and a love of literature, and she eagerly kept up with my work until her death in 2005. Thus this study of Paul’s mimetic and maternal voice
became, in a particular way, a recovery of my own mother tongue.
Finally, this book is dedicated to the brightest stars in my constellation of relationships—my husband Eddie, and our children, Danny and Angela. During my years of writing, Danny and Angela grew to young adulthood, developing into their distinct, inimitable, and wonderful selves. They are a joy to us. With considerable personal sacrifice and love, Eddie first encouraged me to return to school, and stood fast through all the changes and uncertainties this new endeavor brought. His faith, humor, and generosity teach me daily the staying power of God’s unconditional love.
1
. Williams, Incarnation and the Renewal of Community,
235–36
.
2
. Martínez, Dead Sea Scrolls Translated.
3
. Martyn, Galatians,
99
.
Acknowledgments
My thanks first go to Michael Thomson for his encouragement to re-issue this book, and the good team at Cascade Books for their support. This is not the first, nor will it be the last book Michael has shepherded to completion, and I am grateful for his superb editorial skills as well as his friendship. Judith Heyhoe did the tedious labor of reformatting the entire manuscript for re-publication, with her characteristic care, precision, and good humor. Thank you, Judith!
I also remain grateful for the friendship and collegiality of so many whose conversations continue to challenge and enrich my understanding of Paul’s gracious gospel of Christ. It is impossible to list everyone, but here I highlight: John Barclay, Alexandra Brown, Douglas Campbell, Beverly Gaventa, Douglas Harink, Richard Hays, Ann Jervis, Jonathan Linebaugh, Grant Macaskill, Kavin Rowe, Fleming Rutledge, Janet Soskice, Ross Wagner, Britanny Wilson, and Philip Ziegler. There are many others too numerous to name. In the time since the first publication of this book, three cherished friends and conversation partners have passed on. Lou and Dorothy Martyn gave very generously of their time and wisdom when I first put my understanding of Paul’s gospel before them; my debt to them is boundless. My husband Eddie was my companion throughout the first writing of this book, and in the years since then we shared the mystery of divine love that creates continuity through change and loss. I dedicate this book to his memory. The adventure continues.
Abbreviations
AB Anchor Bible
ACCS Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture
AGJU Arbeiten zur Geschichte des antiken Judentums und des Urchristentums
AnBib Analecta biblica
ANET Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament. Ed. J. B. Pritchard. 3rd ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1969
BAGD W. Bauer, W. F. Arndt, F. W. Gingrich, and F. W. Danker, Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature. 2nd ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979
BETL Bibliotheca ephemeridum theologicarum lovaniensium
BFCT Beiträge zur Förderung christlicher Theologie
BHT Beiträge zur historischen Theologie
Bib Biblica
BNTC Black’s New Testament Commentary
CBQ Catholic Biblical Quarterly
CNT Commentaire du Nouveau Testament
ET English translation(s)
FRLANT Forschungen zur Religion und Literatur des Alten und Neuen Testaments
HTKNT Herders theologischer Kommentar zum Neuen Testament
IB Interpreter’s Bible. Ed. G. A. Buttrick. 12 vols. New York: Abingdon, 1951–1957.
ICC International Critical Commentary
Int Interpretation
JB Jerusalem Bible
JBL Journal of Biblical Literature
JJS Journal of Jewish Studies
JSNT Journal for the Study of the New Testament
JSNTSup Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplements
JSPSup Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha Supplements
KEK Kritisch-exegetischer Kommentar über das Neue Testament
LCL Loeb Classical Library
LEC Library of Early Christianity
LXX Septuagint
MT Masoretic text
NEB New English Bible
NIB New Interpreter’s Bible. Ed. L. E. Keck. 13 vols. Nashville: Abingdon, 1994–2004.
NIGTC New International Greek Testament Commentary
NovT Novum Testamentum
NRSV New Revised Standard Version
NTS New Testament Studies
OBO Orbis biblicus et orientalis
OBT Overtures to Biblical Theology
OTL Old Testament Library
OTP Old Testament Pseudepigrapha. Ed. J. H. Charlesworth. 2 vols. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1983–1985.
PSB Princeton Seminary Bulletin
RB Revue biblique
RSV Revised Standard Version
SBLDS Society of Biblical Literature Dissertation Series
SBLSCS Society of Biblical Literature Septuagint and Cognate Studies
SBLSP Society of Biblical Literature Seminar Papers
SBLTT Society of Biblical Literature Texts and Translations
SNTSMS Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series
SP Sacra pagina
TDNT Theological Dictionary of the New Testament. Ed. G. Kittel and G. Friedrich. Trans. G. W. Bromiley. 10 vols. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1964–1976.
THKNT Theologischer Handkommentar zum Neuen Testament
TZ Theologische Zeitschrift
WBC Word Biblical Commentary
WTJ Westminster Theological Journal
WUNT Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament
Chapter One
The Torturer Became the Mother
St. Paul the persecutor was a cruel and sinful man, Jesus hit him with a blinding light and then his life began. I said ye-e-es.
—Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, Saint of Me
(
1997
)¹
But behold all at once the Holy Spirit was sent from heaven, like milk poured out from Christ’s own breasts, and Peter was filled with an abundance of milk. Not long afterwards Saul became Paul, the persecutor became the preacher, the torturer became the mother, the executioner became the nurse, so that you might truly understand that the whole of his blood was changed into the sweetness of milk, his cruelty into loving kindness.
—Guerric, abbot of Igny (ca.
1157
)²
Despite the immense temporal and cultural chasm that separates Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones from Guerric of Igny, they find common ground in their description of the reversal that defines the course of the apostle Paul’s life. Had he heard both descriptions, Paul might well have said, I couldn’t have put it better myself.
The change in his life was so great that he described it in terms of death and new life: I have been crucified with Christ. I no longer live, but Christ lives in me, and the life I now live in the flesh, I live in faith—trusting in the faithfulness of the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me
(Gal 2:20). Clearly, for Paul it was after God’s gracious apocalypse (or revelation) of Christ in his own life that, in a profound sense, his life began.
His letter to the Galatians proclaims that death and new life in dramatic language, speaking of deliverance from the present evil age
(1:4), his former life in Judaism
(1:13), the turning point of God’s apocalypse of God’s Son in his life (1:16), death to the law and crucifixion with Christ (2:19–20), and a new creation (6:15). Furthermore, Paul expects his converts to experience and display a similar radical change in their own lives, as he reminds them that formerly they were slaves of the elemental spirits of the cosmos, but now they are sons of God
and heirs of God
(3:23—4:7). All who belong to Christ belong to the new creation,
in which old identity markers are radically shifted (3:28). In some way Paul sees his own life as exemplary of God’s transforming power, exhorting his converts to become like me
(4:12).
Despite Jagger and Richards’s and Guerric’s common focus on the change in Paul’s life, they diverge in their reaction to that change. For Guerric that reversal is an invitation to his auditors to trust in Paul’s message and to embrace a corresponding transformation in their lives. For Jagger and Richards such transformation seems unthinkable; the refrain of their song is, You’ll never make a saint of me,
and it reminds us of the existential obstacles to following in Paul’s footsteps, if indeed it is possible to do so. The first obstacle is posed by the apostle’s emphasis on suffering for the sake of the gospel, raising the question of motivation. This difficulty, of course, is not unique to Paul’s life. As Jagger and Richards put it, after Augustine’s turn away from all the special pleasures of doing something wrong,
and John the Baptist’s martyrdom:
Could you stand the torture and could you stand the pain,
Could you put your faith in Jesus when you’re burning in the flames?
I said a yes, oh yes, oh yes,
You’ll never make a saint of me.
Jagger and Richards speak for many when they reject the examples of the martyred saints of the church.³
Yet it is not clear that they completely reject those examples of sainthood. Instead, they remain so fascinated and drawn by them that their lyrics carry, not an absolute rejection, but a tortured ambiguity: I said a yes, oh yes, oh yes.
They say yes, but at the same time they say no—You’ll never make a saint of me.
Here the examples of the saints, beginning with Paul, do have inspirational force, but not enough to move one from admiration to emulation. Therefore the question of motivation becomes also a question of power: whence comes the power that moves one beyond Jagger and Richards’s ambiguous sic et non to Guerric’s unqualified yes—the kind of assent that Paul’s own life seems to display?
In addition to the question of motivational force, the dramatic reversal proclaimed by Paul’s life and preaching poses a question of durative force. How does one sustain such change over time? This difficulty concerns the intersection of Paul’s language of death and new life with the daily lives of individuals and communities—lives that of necessity unfold in at least a somewhat linear fashion.⁴ Without some such linearity and continuity, one cannot speak of genuine transformation, but only of a continual replacement of the old
by the new.
But without a radical break with the past, one may slip into a kind of determinism, or at the least an evolutionary model of history, which is quite foreign to Paul’s apocalyptic convictions. Galatians appears to contain language depicting both linear, horizontal
narratives and foundational dislocations in those narratives occasioned by the punctiliar, vertical
inbreaking of the apocalypse of Christ.⁵ For this reason Galatians has become somewhat of a battleground between those exegetes who stress discontinuity and radical change as at the heart of Paul’s gospel, and others who see in that gospel a model of gradual growth.⁶ The difficulties are existential as well as exegetical. One may speak of the apocalypse of Christ as a cosmic knife that cuts human history into a before
and an after,
but where in the lives of individuals and communities does one locate the line between before
and after,
or in Paul’s terms, present evil age
and new creation
? How does God’s decisive action, the sending of the Son, intersect with and realign the course of human lives over time? As Francis Watson puts it:
The Pauline gospel announces a definitive, unsurpassable divine incursion into the world—vertically, from above,
in Karl Barth’s celebrated phrase—that both establishes the new axis around which the entire world thereafter revolves and discloses the original meaning of the world as determined in the pretemporal counsel of God. So unlimited is the scope of this divine action that it comprehends not only the end but also the beginning—although it takes the highly particular form of an individual human life that reaches its goal not only in death but also in resurrection. The question is whether, for Paul, this life can be presented both as the singular divine saving action and as a narrative.⁷
In that Paul identifies himself and his converts as in Christ,
the question posed by Watson regarding the life of Jesus applies to the apostle and to the Galatians as well: can these lives be presented both as examples of the singular divine saving action and as narratives? The focus on divine saving action speaks to the locus and source of transforming and sustaining power; the focus on narrative struggles with the shape of day-to-day human existence.
Paul’s Galatian congregations have heard and accepted his initial preaching of Christ. But now they are listening to the preaching of other Jewish Christian missionaries. Through circumcision and law observance, these missionaries seem to offer concrete help with the direction and discipline of the Galatians’ daily lives, and the Galatians waver in their acceptance of Paul’s message. If they are to heed Paul’s exhortation, Stand fast and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery!
they need motivation to join him in his death to the law and to the cosmos, even as that death entails suffering. Further, they need a way to make sense of the struggles in their communal life at the boundary of the present evil age and the new creation, and they need power to persevere in their reliance on the Spirit apart from the law. That is, they need the saving power of God, enacted in the singular cross and resurrection of Christ, to be mediated to and through them over time.
The issue of motivation perhaps most exercises those who attempt to preach from Paul’s letters, because such preaching must ask what moves people to follow in the footsteps of such a countercultural, counterintuitive, and outrageous apostle. The issue of transforming and sustaining power is equally pressing for all who attempt to take seriously Paul’s language of radical discontinuity, and at the same time build and nurture a faith community that endures. In the following studies, I shall argue that Paul addresses both of these issues in the central section of his letter, the complex and confusing pericopes of Gal 4:12–20 and 4:21—5:1. The first passage moves from the apostle’s reciprocal mimetic appeal, Become like me, because I also have become like you
(4:12), to his anguished maternal cry, My little children, with whom I am again in labor until Christ be formed in you!
(4:19). The second passage retells and re-signifies the birth narratives of Ishmael and Isaac through the interpretive lenses of Isa 54:1 and Gal 4:27. The purpose of both passages remains a problematic and debated question in the interpretation of the letter as a whole. In regard to 4:12–20, Hans Dieter Betz remarks, All commentators point out that the section 4:12–20 presents considerable difficulties . . . Paul seems to be jumping from one matter to the next, without much consistency of thought.
⁸ As for the allegory in 4:21—5:1, interpretations vary from that of Ernest D. Burton, who calls it an afterthought,
to that of Betz, who sees it as the climax of the probatio.⁹ Indeed, if 4:12–30 was omitted, the train of thought would flow smoothly from Paul’s rebuke of the Galatians for observing the liturgical calendar (4:10), to his warning against circumcision (5:2). Galatians 5:1 would pick up on the warning against slavery to the stoicheia, the elemental spirits (4:9). These observations call into question the contribution of the two intervening pericopes—one from experience, one from Scripture, both structured by the language of human relationships—to Paul’s repreaching of the gospel.
My thesis is twofold. First, in this difficult section of the letter the apostle communicates to his converts the motivation and power necessary to move them from their wavering sic et non to a faith that stands fast
in its allegiance to Christ alone as the source of their unity and life together. Second, the medium and the message are inseparable: Paul’s discourse—packed with familial images, representative, vulnerable and yet authoritative, and above all, marked by personal suffering—demonstrates for his converts the content of the good news.¹⁰ That demonstration has motivational force, drawing his auditors back into a relational matrix with both cosmic and personal dimensions, which in turn mediates the gospel’s power to transform and sustain them. Most striking, the apostle’s language is replete with maternal imagery—his own labor pains,
the conflict between the slave woman and the free, the claim that Jerusalem above is free, and she is our mother,
and the rejoicing of the barren woman.¹¹ I call this mode of communication mother tongue,
and I shall argue that a fresh hearing of Paul’s mother tongue
in 4:12—5:1 will illuminate the gospel’s power