God as Creator in Acts 17:24: An Historical-Exegetical Study
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Jennifer Marie Creamer
Jennifer Marie Creamer is adjunct professor of New Testament at the Boston campus of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. She has also taught biblical studies with the University of the Nations at various international campuses.
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God as Creator in Acts 17:24 - Jennifer Marie Creamer
God as Creator in Acts 17:24
An Historical-Exegetical Study
Jennifer Marie Creamer
8381.pngGod as Creator in Acts
17
:
24
An Historical-Exegetical Study
Africanus Monograph Series,
2
Copyright © 2017 Jennifer Marie Creamer. 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.
Wipf & Stock
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199
W.
8
th Ave., Suite
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Eugene, OR
97401
www.wipfandstock.com
paperback isbn: 978-1-5326-1536-8
hardcover isbn: 978-1-5326-1538-2
ebook isbn: 978-1-5326-1537-5
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
September 19, 2017
Table of Contents
Title Page
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Literary Setting and Context of Acts 17:24
2.0 Introduction
2.1 Literary Setting
2.2 Literary Context
2.3 Conclusion
Chapter 3: Semantic Study of The God Who Made the Heaven and Earth
in Biblical and Extra-Biblical Jewish Literature
3.0 Introduction
3.1 Semantic Study of Key Phrases Related to Acts 17:24
3.2 Analysis: Comparison With Acts 17:24
3.3 Conclusion
Chapter 4: Greek Views of the Creation of the Universe as it Relates to the Deity or Deities in Philosophical Writings Influential in the First Century A.D.
4.0 Introduction
4.1 Summary of Scholarship
4.2 Methodology
4.3 Introduction to the Athenian Philosophical Setting
4.4 Origins of the Cosmos
4.5 Relationship of the Gods to the Cosmos
4.6 Summary
Chapter 5: Conclusion
5.1 Summary of Findings
5.2 Theological Reflection
Appendix: Greek Text and Translation of Acts 17:16–34
Bibliography
critchlow_figure_1.tifThe Africanus Monograph Series is published by the Africanus Guild, based at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary’s Boston campus, the Center for Urban Ministerial Education (CUME). Like the Africanus Journal, it strives to promote academic work by men and women that is globally evangelical in the historically orthodox, multiethnic, multicultural sense, with a commitment to biblical fidelity, in conversation with the realities of the world in which we live.
The journal is named in honor of Julius Africanus, a Christian scholar born around AD 200. He probably was born in Jerusalem; studied in Alexandria, Egypt; and later became bishop of Emmaus. He was considered by the ancients a man of consummate learning and sharpest judgment, a careful historian who sought to defend the truth of the Bible.
The journal may be read online at http://www.gordonconwell.edu/boston/africanusjournal.
The Africanus Monograph Series publishes academic dissertations and books by scholars who agree with its goals and have earned research degrees.
critchlow_figure_2.tifPreface
It has been a great privilege to spend several years immersed in the study of Paul’s message in Acts 17. This study has provided the opportunity to soak in the richness of two areas close to my heart: exegesis of the New Testament text and matters related to cross-cultural communication. I am grateful to the Faculty of Theology at the Potchefstroom campus of North-West University for facilitating this research under the supervision of Dr. Francois Viljoen. Dr. Viljoen has supervised my work with thoughtful care, always gently motivating me to deepen my research. The department was more than gracious during my stay in Potchefstroom. The warm and collegial atmosphere of the Faculty was a great encouragement and a time I will always remember fondly.
Dr. Aída Besançon Spencer and her husband, Dr. William David Spencer, created the Africanus Guild doctoral support program, without which this thesis would not exist. Thanks go to Bill, for getting me into it in the first place, and to Aída for getting me through it. Aída has mentored me in countless ways for many years and is, in many respects, much more than a supervisor. She has been extraordinary in her ability to provide guidance for research and writing. Besides giving insightful comments on the various iterations of each chapter and sharing her wisdom and advice in our meetings, Aída has facilitated opportunities to teach at the Boston campus of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, to publish, to participate in a conference presentation, and to assist with the editing of the Africanus Journal. We have also labored together in the work of the ministry at Pilgrim Church in Beverly, Massachusetts.
Dr. Catherine Kroeger took me on as an independent study student for courses in Greek history, literature, and philosophy before the start of this research. The discussions in her office provided a valuable foundation for the study of the Greco-Roman backgrounds in this thesis. Dr. Kroeger continued to teach at Gordon-Conwell until several days before her passing. I am fortunate to have had the opportunity to study with her before her sudden departure. I am also indebted to Dr. Sean McDonough for his feedback on chapter four and to Dr. Eckhard Schnabel for his input on bibliographic resources. Mary Riso, Jean Risley, and Kris Johnson have carefully proofread the manuscript, for which I am most grateful. Thanks also go to Dr. Tom Petter and Dr. Donna Petter for building foundations for study in my previous training at the School of Biblical Studies and for their encouragement over the years. I also wish to thank the excellent library staff at Gordon–Conwell Theological Seminary for their assistance in locating materials. Jim Darlack, Bob McFadden, and Meridith Kline gave valuable help and guidance with both print and electronic resources.
While doctoral research may appear to be a solitary venture, in reality, it is not. I am deeply grateful to all who have supported me, whether through finances, prayer, or encouragement. North-West University generously provided a doctoral bursary as well as a research scholarship. The Africanus Guild also provided tuition assistance. Heartfelt thanks go to the many who have journeyed with me through their friendship and support. Pilgrim Church has prayed for me regularly, as have friends around the world. Special acknowledgements are due to my father and mother for instilling in me a love for learning and for their support over the years.
Chapter 1
Introduction
Contextualization is a subject of great debate among those who labor in a global context. Many difficult questions arise that do not have easy answers. When it comes to engaging contemporary culture in cross-cultural communication, how far is too far? How far is not far enough? The Areopagus speech of Acts makes a helpful study of how Paul (as recorded by Luke) both engaged and confronted the contemporary culture of his day in order to present his message.
Although many (including Gärtner, 1955:66–72; Keener, 2014:2564–2680; Schnabel, 2012:715–748; Winter, 2005:38–59; Witherington, 1998:511–535) have discussed the question of how the speaker of the Areopagus address may have been interacting with the contemporary culture, there is no major work that focuses on the role of God as Creator in Paul’s communication. This work aims to make a contribution by addressing this gap.
Two monographs have made a great impact in the academic world and are frequently referred to in commentaries and articles. Martin Dibelius, in his 1939 essay, Paul on the Areopagus
(Dibelius, 1956:26–77), made a case for the speech being rooted squarely in Greek thought, in such a way as to depart from both Old and New Testament theology. Dibelius acknowledged that the creation motif in Acts 17:24 originates from the Old Testament (1956:41), but then develops his argument that the speech is Hellenistic, and not Christian, in language and content (1956:57). He asks the question of whether the apostle Paul could have made this speech
(1956:58). At the heart of Dibelius’s argument is an alleged incongruity between the theology of Paul in Romans and the theology of the speaker of the Areopagus speech (1956:58–64). In his view, Luke strayed too far from the Paul who was the theologian of the paradoxes of grace and faith
(1956:77). Dibelius concluded that the speech in Athens was not historical, but symbolic in nature (1956:77).
Some years later, Bertil Gärtner responded with a major work, The Areopagus Speech and Natural Revelation (1955). Gärtner argued in favor of the Old Testament and Jewish foundations of the Areopagus speech, while also affirming the Hellenistic environment into which it was spoken. His research includes an investigation of the role of natural revelation in Acts 17 and Romans 1–2 (1955:73). Gärtner (1955:82–83) asks the question, Is the background to the Pauline ideas to be sought in Old Testament, in Jewish, or in Stoic texts?
Gärtner demonstrates that the Old Testament employed creation as an argument against idolatry (1955:88–89, 101). Both Romans 1–2 and Acts 17 are shown to carry an anti-idolatry context, consolidating his point that Paul’s theology finds its roots in the Old Testament and Jewish thought. Further, the Stoic view of god is irreconcilable with the personal God of the Judeo-Christian tradition (1955:170–171). Against the claims of Dibelius, Gärtner concludes that the theology of Acts 17 is not contrary to that of Romans 1–2 (1955:249) and that the Areopagus speech links up with a Jewish pattern
(1955:251).
More recent studies focus on various aspects of the speech, but still, little is said regarding the proclamation of God as Creator in verse 24. The rhetorical aspects of the speech are explored in some detail by several authors (Given, 1995:357–369; Sandnes, 1993:13–25; Zweck, 1989:94–103).¹ The nature of God has been discussed as it relates to the Stoic and Epicurean schools (see especially Gärtner, 1955:81; Schnabel, 2005:179–180; Winter, 2005:48–53).² Many have made note of the rejection of idolatry being an important theme (Barrett, 1974:74–75; Gärtner, 1955:203–228; Keener, 2014:2575–2578; Litwak, 2004:208–210; Pardigon, 2008:192–313; Peterson, 2009:487–492; Polhill, 1992:376; Schnabel, 2005:181–183; 2012:722–723).³ Gärtner (1955:203–204) devoted several pages of his monograph to the critique of idolatry found in Greek literature. Recent scholarship has given some attention to Roman authors of the period who may have also been known in Athens. Juhana Torkki (2004:56–68) discusses Cicero’s De Natura Deorum with respect to the philosophical backgrounds of the Areopagus speech.⁴ Bruce Winter (2005:49–52) discusses both Cicero and Seneca with regard to the nature of God.⁵ Gärtner (1955:171–174) has briefly discussed the concept of Paul’s proclamation of God as maker of the world in light of contemporary (ancient) views of the cosmos,⁶ as have F.F. Bruce (1990:382) and C.K. Barrett (1998:840), in their commentaries on Acts, but little in-depth work has been done on this important topic.
The central question for this work is as follows: How does Paul, as a Jew, contextualize the message of the gospel for his audience of Stoic and Epicurean philosophers in Athens on the topic of God as Creator in Acts 17:24? In order to answer this question, the problem will be broken down into four subsequent questions. The research will address the following problems:
1. What have scholars suggested regarding the understanding of God as Creator in Acts 17:24?
2. How does an understanding of the literary setting and context help elucidate Acts 17:24?
3. How does an understanding of the semantic context help elucidate Acts 17:24?
4. What were the Stoic and Epicurean understandings of God as Creator and Lord, and how does Paul’s view compare and contrast with them?
The main aim of this study is to investigate Paul’s methods of contextualization (according to Luke) on the topic of God as Creator in Acts 17:24. In order to reach the aim, the following objectives will need to be met:
• To analyze and evaluate the understanding of God as Creator in Acts 17:24 by various scholars;
• To study the literary setting and context of Acts 17:24;
• To study the semantic context of Acts 17:24;
• To study the creation of the world as it relates to the deity or deities in Greek literature, especially in Stoic and Epicurean writings before the second century A.D., and to compare and contrast Paul’s presentation of God as Creator with these views.
The central theoretical argument of this study is that the proclamation of the identity of God as the Creator of the world both engaged and confronted the contemporary worldview of Paul’s audience in Acts 17:24.
This study will use the perspective of the Reformed tradition. In keeping with this tradition, emphasis will be placed on the Bible as a primary source document. This research will presuppose an authoritative and historically reliable biblical text. The investigation will proceed with the understanding that Luke recorded events and speeches in the book of Acts in a responsible manner.⁷ At the same time, I will also include secondary sources that are not written exclusively from within a Reformed framework in order to bring a wider understanding of the relevant literature.
The focus of this research is on an examination of the primary source documents themselves, whether biblical, extra-biblical, or philosophical. The following methods will be employed. Throughout the chapters, an analysis and evaluation of what recent scholars have written regarding God as Creator in Acts 17:24 will be conducted through a literature review of various monographs, articles, and commentaries. In chapter two, the literary setting and context of Acts 17:24 will be approached in accordance with the historical–grammatical exegetical method presented in Gordon Fee’s New Testament Exegesis (2002:5–95). The literary setting will address matters regarding Luke as author and Theophilus as the original reader. The literary context of Acts 17:24 will be studied in light of Paul’s entire speech in Acts 17:16–34. In chapter three, the semantic context of Acts 17:24 will be approached in accordance with the word study method presented in Moisés Silva’s Biblical Words and their Meanings (1994). Studies of key words and phrases in Acts 17:24 will be examined through an investigation of passages and contexts in the book of Acts, in the rest of the New Testament, in the Old Testament, and in other Jewish literature that uses Greek. In chapter four, the creation of the world as it relates to the deity or deities will be studied in specific works of Greco–Roman literature, particularly in Stoic and Epicurean writings before the second century A.D. Paul’s presentation of God as Creator will be compared and contrasted with Stoic and Epicurean views. In chapter five, the results and conclusions of this investigation will be presented in a final synthesis.
For the purpose of this study, contextualization will be understood as the presentation of the speaker’s message in a manner that relates specifically to the culture of the audience. How did Paul, as a Jew, use concepts familiar to Greeks in order to introduce the unfamiliar content of the gospel? This study will focus on the first century example of how Paul built a bridge of communication with his hearers in the Areopagus of Athens, and how his hearers might have understood his message. Special attention will be given to how Paul’s approach may have both engaged and confronted contemporary culture in Athens.
1. Sandnes argues that Paul’s approach in Athens is based on the rhetorical technique of insinuatio—a subtle approach intended to elicit questions of his audience (
1993
:
15
,
17
,
25
). Both Sandnes (
1993
:
20
–
24
) and Given (
1995
:
365
) discuss similarities between Paul and Socrates in Acts
17
. Given’s primary aim is to analyze the rhetorical features of the speech in a literary-critical approach (
1995
:
357
). He applies an actantial model
(
1995
:
360
–
361
) with the findings that the Word, proclamation of Jesus and the resurrection, is the paradigmatic object throughout Acts
as well as in the Areopagus speech (
1995
:
371). Zweck builds a case for the exordium of the Athens’s speech (Acts
17
:
22
–
23
) containing a propositio (the assertion that he will proclaim what is worshipped as unknown), a rhetorical technique detailed by Aristotle and Quintilian (
1989
:
94
–
96
).
2. Both Schnabel (
2005
:
179
–
180
) and Winter (
2005
:
48
–
53
) note similarities in the Stoic and Epicurean understandings of god in comparison to Paul’s speech. Stoics believed in immortal gods (Schnabel,
2005
:
179
) and would not have been provoked by the reference to God by Paul (Schnabel,
2005
:
179
; Winter,
2005
:
49
). The Epicureans disavowed superstition and did not believe that gods dwell in temples built by humans (Schnabel,
2005
:
180
; Winter,
2005
:
53
). Both Winter and Schnabel make mention of numerous points of cultural confrontation in the speech, including the criticism of idols, temples, and sacrifices (Schnabel,
2005
:
181
; Winter
2005
:
46
).
3. Keener (
2015
:
2575
–
2577
) recites a litany of idols and temples that Paul would have encountered in Athens: the temple of Demeter, a gymnasium dedicated to Hermes, an edifice for the worhip of Dionysus, various shrines and statues of Ares, Aphrodite, Heracles, Apollo, Athena, Artemis, and Zeus, to name a few—not to mention the ubiquitous presence of the obscene Hermes’ pillars. Peterson (
2009
:
487
) asserts that the debates referred to prior to the speech were in reply to the idolatry that he encountered in that city (also Schnabel
2012
:
722
). Polhill makes brief reference to the Old Testament critique of idolatry (
1993
:
376
). Litwak notes the echoes
of Scripture throughout the speech and makes particular reference to Isaiah
40
–
48
(Litwak,
2004
:
202
–
206
). Pardigon, in his dissertation, also undertakes the study of Isaiah
40
in connection with Acts
17
(
2004
:
204
–
208
). Schnabel identifies Isaiah as an Old Testament precedent for Paul’s critique of idolatry (
2012
:
732
). The similarity of the Areopagus speech with anti-idolatry texts in the Old Testament (Septuagint) will be investigated further in chapter three of this study.
4. Torkki discusses the themes of piety and superstition in the Epicurean and Stoic philosophical schools, as presented in Cicero’s dialogical work. Torrki concludes that matters of worship were often discussed by philosophers
(
2004
:
99
).
5. Winter makes a case for Paul’s argument in the Athens’s speech finding common ground with Stoics, who believed in the existence of gods as well as providence. He notes key differences between Paul’s speech and Stoic doctrines in the areas of polytheism and pantheism (
2005
:
50
). Winter also argues that the Stoics did not believe in a personal god (
2005
:
52
). Winter concludes that Paul’s speech in Acts
17
should be used as a model apologetic in its example of finding common ground as well as confronting misconceptions (
2005
:
58
–
59
).
6. Gärtner notes that while Paul proclaims the Creator of Genesis
1
:
1
, his use of κόσμος is interesting
(
1955
:
171
). He continues on to explain that the concept of cosmos
was different for the Greeks than for the Old Testament and New Testament writers (
1955
:
171
). Paul intentionally sets parameters for the term that would have enlightened his hearers of his intent (
1955
:
174
).
7. This view will be discussed in greater detail in the second chapter.
Chapter 2
Literary Setting and Context of Acts 17:24
2.0 Introduction
The aim of this chapter is to place Acts 17:24 in its literary setting and context within the Areopagus address as well as within the greater Luke–Acts corpus.⁸ This discussion of context contributes to the main research aim by establishing a foundation from which we will investigate Paul’s methods of contextualization on the topic of God as Creator in subsequent chapters. The discussion of literary setting will include matters related to the author and the original reader. An examination of Luke, as the author, and Theophilus, as the original reader, will provide a framework from which we approach Paul’s identification of the unknown God as the Creator of the world in Acts 17:24 throughout the study. A discussion of the literary context of the Areopagus speech, as it sits within the theme of the gospel advancing to the Gentile world, follows. Next, we survey the entire passage of Acts 17:16–34, giving special attention to style and grammar. Finally, the Areopagus speech will be compared and contrasted with speeches given in Lystra and Pisidian Antioch.
2.1 Literary Setting
This section will address matters related to the author and original reader of the Areopagus speech of Acts 17:16–34. Luke–Acts, as a whole, will provide the basis for the discussion of the literary setting. The prologue of Luke’s gospel will provide key evidence regarding both author and reader. All things considered, the evidence sheds light on Acts as written by a Gentile, for a Gentile.
2.1.1 Luke as author
We will examine evidence from Scripture, early manuscripts, and writings of church fathers that points to Luke as a missionary, a doctor, a historian, and the author of Luke–Acts. An analysis of the grammar and style of Luke’s prologue provides a starting place for this discussion. The study will continue with a discussion of the reliability of the Areopagus speech.
2.1.1.1 Evidence for Luke as author
Admitting that scholarship has long regarded Luke–Acts as a unity and that those who have deviated from this view have been both few in number and unsuccessful in proving their claims, Patricia Walters challenges the traditional understanding of a single