Death and Life: Resurrection, Restoration, and Rectification in Paul's Letter to the Galatians
By Andy Boakye and Peter Oakes
()
About this ebook
Andy Boakye
Andrew Boakye is Lecturer in Religions and Theology at the University of Manchester, UK.
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Death and Life - Andy Boakye
Death and Life
Resurrection, Restoration, and Rectification in Paul’s Letter to the Galatians
Andrew K. Boakye
foreword by Peter Oakes
Death and Life
Resurrection, Restoration, and Rectification in Paul’s Letter to the Galatians
Copyright ©
2017
Andrew K. Boakye. 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,
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.
Pickwick Publications
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paperback isbn: 978-1-4982-9000-5
hardcover isbn: 978-1-4982-9002-9
ebook isbn: 978-1-4982-9001-2
Cataloguing-in-Publication data:
Names: Boakye, Andrew K. | foreword by Oakes, Peter.
Title: Death and life : resurrection, restoration, and rectification in Paul’s letter to the Galatians / Andrew K. Boakye.
Description: Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications,
2017
| Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers:
isbn 978-1-4982-9000-5 (
paperback
) | isbn 978-1-4982-9002-9 (
hardcover
) | isbn 978-1-4982-9001-2 (
ebook
)
Subjects: LSCH: Bible. Galatians—Criticism, interpretation, etc. | Jesus Christ—Resurrection. | Paul, the Apostle, Saint. | Jews—Restoration.
Classification:
bs2655.e7 b6 2017(
) | bs2655.e7 (
ebook
)
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
02/06/24
Table of Contents
Title Page
Foreword
Chapter 1: Introduction
Thesis Outline
Methodological Considerations
Setting the Scene: Resurrection in Galatians
Revivification in Ancient Literature
The Exodus as Resurrection
Ezekiel 37:1–14 as Principal Restoration as Resurrection
Text
Summary of Introductory Issues
Chapter 2: Revivification Text One
Scholarly Comment on Gal 1:1–5
Co-textual Analysis: Gal 1:1 in Relation to 1:2–4
Chapter 3: Revivification Text Two
Context: Opening Comments/Significance of Unit Gal 2:15–21
Galatians 1:13–20; 2:1–9; 2:11–14—Three Connected Narratives Concluded by 2:15–21
Co-Text: Gal 2:15–21 as Riposte to Events of Gal 1:13–20; 2:1–9; 2:11–14
Intertextual Resonances: Galatians 2:19–20 and Ezekiel 37
Summary: Gal 2:19–20—Christ Lives in Me.
Chapter 4: Revivification Text Three
Context: Life as Headline for Restoration Blessing
Co-Text: Gal 3:10–14
The Deuteronomic Context of Galatians—A Survey
Exegesis of Gal 3:10–14
Co-Text: Gal 3:15–18
Exegesis of Gal 3:19–25
Juxtaposition of Gal 3:22–25 and 2:19–21
Intertextual Resonances: Life
in Galatians and the Prophets
Summary: Gal 3:21—Rectification as Endowment of Life in Galatians
Chapter 5: Revivification Text Four
Context of Gal 5:24–25; 6:8; 6:14–15: Flesh and Spirit
Co-Text: Gal 5:24–25—Crucifixion and Life
Intertextual Resonances: Spirit and Life
Intertextual Resonances: Gal 5:24–25, Spirit Internalization and the New Covenant
Summary: Gal 5:24–25—Life by Virtue of Spirit
Chapter 6: Revivification Text Five
Contextual and Co-Textual Issues—Gal 6:1–6
Exegesis of Gal 6:7–8
Sowing to the Flesh/Spirit
Intertextual Resonances: The Spirit of Life—Gal 6:8 and Ezekiel 37
Summary: Gal 6:8—Life Now, Life Everlasting
Chapter 7: Revivification Text Six
Context: Closing Sentiments of Galatians
Co-Text: Gal 6:12–13
Exegesis of Gal 6:14–15
Intertextual Resonances
Summary: Gal 6:14–15—The Eschatological People of God
Chapter 8: Thesis Conclusions and Summation
Outline of Argument and Controlling Theory of Thesis
Bibliography
This book is dedicated to Chienye CHI-CHI
Boakye, who has carried my burdens, thereby fulfilling the Law of Christ (Gal
6
:
2
).
And to Dad, Mum, Raymond and Lynette, who have never grown tired of doing good (Gal
6:9
).
Foreword
It is a pleasure to commend this book by my recent PhD student, Andrew Boakye, This is an excellent study that begins from a counter-intuitive premise. Whereas Galatians scholarship has frequently drawn attention to the virtual absence of the topic of resurrection in Galatians after 1 : 1 , Boakye sees it as central. He does this by linking it to the material on death and life in the letter. This, in turn, he links to the role of the life-giving Spirit in the restoration rhetoric of prophets such as Ezekiel. This series of moves enables Boakye to demonstrate the existence of a revivification
motif running through Galatians and playing a key role in the argument.
Boakye defines and defends the key conceptual move in the thesis by looking at ways in which a range of ancient texts relate together issues of life, death, revivification and restoration, an argument culminating in consideration of Ezekiel 37. He then covers six Galatians texts relating to death and life, reading each text co-textually and intertextually.
Boakye strongly links 1:1 with 2:19–20 to argue that Christ is the paradigm of the death-to-life experience of the believers, seen in 2:19–20 in the case of Paul. This makes the resurrection in 1:1 a statement of God’s identity of the kind that prefaces the Decalogue. Galatians 3:21 is the starting point for arguing that rectification
is seen in terms of giving of life, an argument reinforced by the links between parts of Galatians 3–4 and the restoration prophecies of Jeremiah and Ezekiel. Chapters 4–5 use discussion of 5:24–25 and 6:8 to show the intimate connection between the role of the Spirit and death/life issues. Finally, Boakye links the death/life idea into the rhetorical climax of the new creation in 6:14–15.
The argument is persuasively made. It certainly influenced me at points in the writing of my commentary. Readers will find this book a very good contribution to the understanding of Galatians and of ideas about life in Paul’s theology.
—Peter Oakes, University of Manchester, May 2016
1
Introduction
Outline and Setting the Scene
Thesis Outline
This investigation aims to ascertain the basis for which Paul’s response to the implied crisis in the Galatian Jesus communities took the shape and form it did in the epistle. A cursory reading of Galatians uncovers several wider concerns relating to Israel’s unfolding history that Paul deemed necessary to incorporate within his polemic—Israel’s relation to the Gentile world, to Abraham, Torah and Spirit. In addressing the issues within the Galatian churches by recourse to these elements of Israel’s religious history, Paul clearly saw the difficulties there as a practical manifestation of disagreements over these concerns within Israel.
The difficulties arose because certain Jewish believers (Gal 1:6) questioned Paul’s rendition of the gospel.¹ To these rogue teachers, Israel’s future still had Torah at its centre, so Gentiles desiring a share in that future were not exempt from its demands. Paul vociferously objected; however, the language and ideas by which he expressed his discord in Galatians imply a more thoroughgoing proposition than simply Gentiles do not need to Judaize to be counted among God’s people.
The present volume will consider what motivated Paul to employ the vocabulary of life and living in conjunction with the language of death and crucifixion in Galatians to both rebut the Torah-centered gospel and simultaneously convey how God acted to restore his relationship with mankind.²
Scholarly theories surrounding Paul’s literary-polemic approach in Galatians, with certain themes clearly predominant, are convoluted. There is generous consensus on some issues and wide divergence on others. Most agree that a serious Law-related
problem instigated Paul’s response; if, however, there is a core element to Paul’s retort, commentators exhibit little concurrence on what this might be.³ In what follows, a possible inroad will unfold.
Navigating a way into Galatians is an imprecise science; Cosgrove helpfully suggests that readers join the conversation
at Gal 3:1–2, for, this only did Paul wish to inquire about.⁴ Methodologically, he argues that the first unit that addresses the Galatian problem with directness and specificity is the question of 3:2.⁵ Cosgrove is broadly correct and my reading proceeds by suggesting that the question of Gal 3:19 is a corollary of the one in 3:2, which brings the two key elements of the problem to the fore—the manifestation of the Spirit and the place of the Law. No scholarly investigation of Galatians of any influence has left these components untreated, but innovative hermeneutic strategies have produced divergent outcomes regarding them, as the following scholars demonstrate.
By employing Aristotelian categorization, H. D. Betz postulated that Galatians fits the form of apologetic letter.⁶ Betz adjudged Galatians to be a form of forensic rhetoric, noting how Quintillian’s literary divisions make good sense of much of the epistle.⁷ For Betz, however, Paul’s letter is not primarily defending his apostleship, as several commentators suggest. Rather, Betz states that:
. . . Paul goes directly to the root of the matter. As his strategy of defence he has chosen to defend the gift of the Spirit to the Galatians . . . The Spirit was . . . God’s self-manifestation among and within human beings.⁸
The Spirit in Betz’s reading is outside human control and cannot be manipulated or averted.⁹ The ecstatic Spirit experience of the Galatian Gentiles was evidence of their salvation without works of Law; his opponents said that such a thing should never happen, but it did happen. As such, the Spirit proved the non-essentiality of the Law.
For J. Louis Martyn, it is the apocalyptic thrust of Galatians that governs its interpretation. As such, the key questions it addresses are what time is it?
and in what cosmos do we actually live?
¹⁰ Martyn answers in terms of Spirit:
It is the time after the apocalypse of the faith of Christ, the time, therefore, of God’s making things right by Christ’s faith, the time of the presence of the Spirit of Christ, and thus the time in which the invading Spirit has decisively commenced the war of liberation from the powers of the present evil age.¹¹
He further argues that the Spirit institutes and constitutes a new state of affairs.¹² In this new state of affairs, the dualisms upon which the old world rested are replaced. Sin still remains a genuine power that must be opposed, but it is not opposed by Law; it is opposed by the Spirit of the crucified Christ.¹³
In the work of J. D. G. Dunn, there is primarily a social quandary at issue in Galatians. The letter is Paul’s first sustained attempt to deal with covenantal nomism,
because the Law is being used
. . . both to identify Israel as the people of the covenant and to mark them off as distinct from the (other) nations.¹⁴
Dunn’s concern to highlight the issue of Israel’s national identity in Galatians is valid; however, it must go further insofar as the letter deals with the entire complex identity transformation process, which this project associates with life coming from death. Dunn writes:
. . . Paul confirms that the reception of the Spirit was equivalent in his thought to being reckoned righteous—two ways of describing the same positive relationship with God through which his blessing flows.¹⁵
Fee goes beyond the aforementioned scholars in a way that is more commensurate with this volume, by acknowledging that the eschatological people of God are Spirit people.¹⁶ In this he cites Gal 5:25, observing that for Paul, therefore, to get saved means first of all to receive the Spirit.¹⁷
What these scholars (and scholarship more generally) overlook, is a pervasive Spirit-life soteriology throughout Galatians. The present work launches from two related ideas; the first is that the opening of Galatians focuses attention on the resurrection of Jesus and the work of God in raising him. The second, connected idea is that the language of death/crucifixion
and life
that permeates the text demonstrates that this focus on the God of resurrection undergirds the argument. Jesus was crucified and God raised him; God’s people are those who have shared in the crucifixion, and, through the Spirit, shared in the risen life of Jesus; God’s new world has itself suffered crucifixion and been newly created.
The language of this narrative in Galatians reflects both the language and essential story of Ezekiel 36–37 and the associated narrative of New Covenant in Jeremiah—a story of Spirit revivifying the dead people of God, securing their liberation, and revitalizing their receptiveness to the divine commands. Paul insists that God never invested the Law with the power to revivify. It is the mediation of Jesus’ risen life by the Spirit, a life Paul saw enshrined in Israel’s scripture, as the soteriological centre of Galatians that sets this reading apart from other approaches to Galatians.
Review of Scholarship
The present work is aligned with scholarship which sees in the New Testament (NT) evidence that the Messianic age brings to bear the blessings of the restoration from exile codified in Israel’s prophetic traditions.¹⁸ It also resonates with scholars who acknowledge the centrality of Jesus’ resurrection in the inception of the New Covenant people of God, especially as expounded by Paul.
Pauline scholarship touching on these interests exhibits a curious trend. Scholars sensitive to the importance of exile and restoration in Paul seldom have much to say about resurrection; those who do, seldom have much to say about Galatians. In what follows, the stances of scholars who have commented on exile/new Exodus motifs and/or resurrection theology in Paul are reviewed.
Scott Hafemann
The outstanding contribution of Scott J. Hafemann in building on the ground-breaking work of James Scott is his attention to the epochal nature of Israel’s history. For Hafemann, Paul’s reflections on exile distinguish between two epochs of redemptive history.¹⁹ His major work on Galatians has focused on Galatians 3–4 to this end.
He highlights the deficiencies of reading Gal 4:1–2 as the generic application of an illustration from the legal practice of testamentary guardianship over minors.²⁰ Where Paul does apply secular legal arguments as a defence (e.g., Gal 3:15–18) he is explicit. Hafemann points out that the testamentary guardianship position does not seem to reflect any known law.²¹ Rather, he follows Scott in seeing the backdrop of Gal 4:1–7 as the first and second Exodus typology used in Old Testament (OT)/Post-Biblical Judaism to picture Israel’s restoration from exile.²²
As such, there is a basic harmony between type (Israel’s redemption to divine sonship at the foreordained time of the Exodus) and antitype (believers’ redemption to divine sonship at the foreordained time of the second Exodus).²³ W. N. Wilder similarly sees the Exodus story as the implied narrative to which Paul glancingly refers in Galatians 5–6.²⁴ S. C. Keesmaat correctly suggests that Paul’s description of the Galatians’ story has the same narrative flow as the story of the Exodus.²⁵ She continues that Paul also
. . . tells the story of God’s salvation of the Galatians in such a way that the Exodus of Israel becomes paradigmatic for their redemption in Christ.²⁶
Hafemann takes up Scott’s position carefully. He notes, for example, that the only key term Scott can point to linking the Exodus narratives with Galatians is νήπιος in Hos 11:1; other terms from Gal 4:1–2 are applied to the Exodus by pointing to only general conceptual parallels and applying προθεσμία (Gal 4:2) to the 430 years of 3:17 instead of the period of Law.²⁷ Others have been more critical of Scott’s lexical connections.²⁸
In Hafemann’s work, Paul is not so much using Exodus language,
but using Exodus imagery to describe Israel’s history as a child in one long period of slavery for as long as it may exist (ἐφʼ ὅσον χρόνον)—in other words, until she receives her inheritance. The stance is different from the traditional argument based on secular forensic praxis, but the net effect is not much different—for Hafemann, it is the epochal nature of salvation history that cannot be neglected.
The problem in Galatia, as Hafemann reckons it, is the agitators’ failure to recognize the eschatological implications of demanding Gentile adherence to Torah.²⁹ Their disregard for the true purpose of the Torah is wreaking havoc on God’s eschatological calendar. The scripture shut up all things under sin
(3:22), hence, 4:8–9 suggests Gentiles are under the same condemnation. Τὰ στοιχεῖα in 4:3 suggests that Israel’s life under the curse of the Law is part of humanity’s existence in this world under the cursed elements of this present evil age (1:4). Israel under the curse for her perennial rebellion is equivalent to the world under slavery to idolatry. Israel having been adopted at the first Exodus rebelled as a youth,
rendering her a slave in regard to inheritance. Therefore, she received the inheritance at the same time as the Gentiles, who were adopted at the second Exodus—this is the correct order of things.
³⁰ Paul’s emphasis on status as Abraham’s heirs in 3:26–29 and 4:1–7 is to raise the issue of inheritance (3:29; 4:5, 7), which points to the eschatological transition from the present evil age to what Cosgrove calls realized heirship.
³¹
Hafemann’s reading of Gal 4:21–30 is consistent with this emphasis on the contrasting periods of Israelite history; Gal 4:21–25 reflects the present state of Israel. From Paul’s eschatological perspective, being in or out of the covenant is represented by Isaac/Ishmael—to be born according to flesh is to be left to one’s own devices under the power of sin; birth according to the Spirit is receiving the Spirit as per the Abrahamic promise. Here, as in 3:17—4:5, Paul shows that the Sinai covenant did not fulfil the promises to Abraham, but rather adjudicated over a people who like Ishmael stood outside the covenant.³² For Hafemann the key issue of 4:21–30 is that it evidences Israel’s present rejection of God’s word—a rejection consistent with her traditional stubbornness. Once more, for Hafemann, Paul is making a clear distinction between two epochs of redemptive history.
Hafemann has clearly done some considerable reflection on the convoluted issues in 2 Corinthians. Eventually, these ruminations became Paul, Moses, and the History of Israel: The Letter/Spirit Contrast and the Argument from Scripture in 2 Corinthians 3. Here, Hafemann adopts a similar salvation-history approach to the one through which he reads Galatians 3–4. This publication ambitiously attempts to articulate the continuity between Paul’s gospel and Moses’ Law, and in particular, the contentious letter/Spirit contrast. In his critiques of some scholarly treatments of the quandary, Hafemann suggests that
. . . one must entertain anew the possibility that the arguments from Scripture in
2
Cor.
3
:
3
b and
3
:
6
a may provide the backdrop for understanding the meaning of the letter/Spirit contrast in this context, rather than prejudice the exegesis of this passage by deciding in advance that Paul could not have derived his thinking from the OT passages to which he explicitly alludes.³³
The term letter
does not point to a critique of Torah, for the hearts of the people, and not the structure of the covenant relationship between God and his people per se, have now been changed by the work of Christ and the power of the Spirit.³⁴ Hafemann contends that the New Covenant texts in Jeremiah 31 and Ezekiel 36 attest to the maintenance of Torah in the age of Spirit. Indeed:
From its very beginning . . . the old covenant of the Law without the Spirit implicitly looked forward to the time when the Law would encounter a people whose hearts had been changed and empowered to keep God’s covenant.³⁵
Letter
implies Torah in the absence of Spirit. Spirit is the energy behind Law keeping, which the Israelites lacked before the age of the Spirit; the problem lay not in Moses or the Law but in Israel’s hard heartedness, a motif he sees in Galatians 3–4, 2 Corinthians 3, and Romans 9–11.
Hafemann’s analyses are hard to fault; however, the neglect of attention to resurrection in his treatments of Galatians is palpable. Scott himself expressed concerns at how little scholarly attention is given to the Assyrian exile compared to the Babylonian exile.³⁶ It seems that the key conceptual parallel
(Hafemann’s term) within biblical portraits of exile and restoration is resurrection. Hosea 6:1–3 exemplifies such resurrection imagery in the context of restoration from Assyria. When one further considers the death-life language associated with exile and restoration in Deuteronomy 30, the resurrection metaphor in Ezek 37:1–14 and the significance of resurrection to Galatians, Hafemann is too hasty to dismiss such conceptual parallels.
He is correct that Hos 11:1–4 is a judgment text—Israel is about to be enslaved in Assyria just like she was in Egypt.³⁷ Later, we will suggest why the Exodus would have been read as a resurrection image, together with the other two great freedom-from-captivity narratives in Israel’s scriptures. Coupled with Paul’s encounter of a resurrection, the meagre lexical interface between the Exodus narratives and Galatians 4 need not over-concern us.
Also, it should be noted that Gal 4:21–30 goes well beyond establishing a contrast between periods of history, which even according to Hafemann has already been established earlier in Galatians 4. Though this contrast is present, the chief contrast is between the births of Abraham’s sons. Isaac’s birth by Spirit into freedom, compared to Ishmael born according to flesh into slavery, is the critical distinction in the text. It reflects rectification by faith in opposition to the false attempt to be rectified by works of Law.
Whilst I am in virtually complete agreement with Hafemann’s position on the continuity of the Law and Gospel in the out-working of New Covenant prophecy, he has not pursued these ideas in Galatians, where the kernel of these ideas lie.
Rodrigo Morales
The chief concern of Morales’s monograph is to demonstrate the centrality of Spirit in the restoration eschatology of Galatians. The Spirit, in bringing forth the eschatological blessing of life, achieved what the Law could not (Gal 3:21). Morales’s work is primarily a pneumatology of Galatians—as I wrote in a review of his work:
Spirit is a lead actor in the drama of Biblical/Post-Biblical restoration eschatology, and the images and ideas employed in the associated texts have influenced Paul’s understanding of the Spirit in Galatians. These images include creation, Exodus, peace, righteousness, fatherhood, covenant, heart, resurrection, renewal of heart, filial relationship with God and in particular the undoing of curse.³⁸
Morales is sensitive to some of the revivification imagery in Galatians, but resurrection is not his key theme and he does not develop the ideas. Nonetheless, he accurately rehearses:
If the result of redemption from the curse is (eschatological) life, then naturally the result of the curse is death . . . In Paul’s first statements about the Law in the epistle (
2
:
15
–
21
) he speaks in terms of death and life. . . . Again later in the epistle he speaks of the problem with the Law in terms of life (
3
:
21
b) . . . This verse is crucial, in that Paul explicitly states what the problem with the Law is and why his followers should not submit to it: it has no power to give life.³⁹
Where Morales is most persuasive is in his understanding of the curse of the Law ultimately as death. He too builds upon J. M. Scott and N. T. Wright, and this work draws a similar conclusion based on an understanding of the blessing/curse language in Deuteronomy, though the analysis differs significantly. Indeed, as the resurrection imagery clarifies, exile is death.
Morales was criticized for making Spirit the central issue of Galatians. S. Grindheim notes that the chief contrast in Galatians is between faith and works of the law, not between the Spirit and the Law.⁴⁰ Similarly, Schreiner, whilst acknowledging Morales’s actual objectives, accuses him of saying wrongly and too quickly that the Spirit is the central issue of the letter, ignoring the programmatic nature of Gal 2:15–21, where justification and the cross come to the forefront.⁴¹ Scholars can often draw sharp distinctions between the conceptual paradigms in Paul’s polemics—distinctions it is doubtful Paul himself would make. However, if justification is indeed a process whereby believers experience death to one sphere of existence and are made alive with the risen life of Jesus through Spirit, the contrasts of faith with Law and Spirit with Law are so inextricably bound that prioritising either is always going to be risky.
Morales is broadly convincing; his equation of flesh with Law in Galatians 5–6 is difficult to fully accept, though his treatment of what is often reduced to the paranaetic section of Galatians with his reading of Galatians 1–4 is a cogent one. However, the life-death imagery must be pushed further. It was not solely Paul’s reflection on Jewish texts that led him to employ these ideas as Morales claims. Rather, the resurrection of Jesus led him to re-read the exilic texts and develop the concept of rectification as revivification.
N. T. Wright
To many, N. T. Wright is the de facto target of Reformed antagonism at the New Perspective movement.⁴² Matt Kennedy of the Stand Firm Christian network once accused New Perspective scholars of undermining the gospel, pointing to a series of lectures by D. A. Carson to this effect, which isolate Wright as the chief culprit.⁴³ It seems Wright’s insistence that the gospel is unconcerned with Evangelicalism’s preoccupation with individual salvation
has inflamed passions.⁴⁴ Wright’s position is nonetheless influential, impacting supporters and detractors with equal impetus.
However, it is his proposition that many first century Jews believed they were still in exile, even after the restoration from Babylon, which concerns us here. The paucity of direct NT evidence of such a state of affairs has made it difficult for many scholars to accept his view. M. Thompson’s sentiments are typical:
Theologically, though Wright’s approach integrates many texts and makes for good preaching, one wishes that we had more explicit evidence in the NT for the exile motif to be as important and pervasive as Wright claims it to be.⁴⁵
More recently, Philip Alexander, former head of Jewish studies at the University of Manchester, defended Wright’s stance in a joint presentation of the Second Temple Judaism seminar of the British New Testament Conference (Edinburgh, 2015). He argued persuasively that the earliest Jesus communities read the Christ event and the advent of the Spirit in light of reworked traditions about an extended exile and a delay in the promised divine return.
Wright points to texts like Psalms of Solomon 11 as evidence that the theme of hope of freedom from exile was still vibrant in the first century. This Psalm speaks of return from exile, drawing on the great restoration texts in Deutero-Isaiah.⁴⁶ He adds other key ancient texts as evidence that the Deutero-Isaianic hopes remained unaddressed, including 1QH 18.14–15; 11QMelch; of such texts he claims it is clear that, within the Second-Temple period, some Jews at least were still looking earnestly for a fulfilment of the Isaianic promises.⁴⁷ Their return from Babylon had not brought about that independence and prosperity which the prophets had foretold.⁴⁸
I heartily agree with Wright that Galatians attests to the restoration promises finding fulfillment.⁴⁹ Of Paul’s statements in Gal 4:1–11, Wright suggests that in sending his son God has redeemed his people from bondage to false gods, and by sending his Spirit made them truly his children. In this way the people have come to know God and be known by him (Gal 4:9).⁵⁰ This for Wright brings the great promises of Isaiah 40–55 to fulfilment; the true God has been revealed and the idols of the nations exposed as phony. Furthermore, I follow his lead in connecting the curse of the Law in Galatians with exile and death based on the context of Deuteronomy, particularly chapters 27–30. However, Wright determines that resurrection is a minor theme in Galatians—in this I think Wright acknowledges the obvious without probing the necessary. Like many, Wright observes the close link between rectification and resurrection in Romans, where passages like Rom 4:25 make it far more explicit. Wright points out:
Resurrection is, therefore, as in much contemporary Jewish thought, the ultimate justification
: those whom God raises from death, as in [Rom.]
8
:
11
are thereby declared to be his covenant people.⁵¹
He does however, correctly acknowledge:
Paul refers here movingly to his own journey of death and new life, not for its own sake but in order to explain that this is true of all who belong to the Messiah. He now shares, participates, finds himself caught up in, the Messiah’s death and resurrection: he is crucified with the Messiah.
⁵²
Resurrection, as will be shown, is no minor theme, but paradigmatic for rectification in Galatians.
Michael Gorman
The analysis presented in this volume is in strong overall agreement with Michael J. Gorman that justification is by crucifixion, specifically co-crucifixion, understood as participation in Christ’s act of covenant fulfilment.⁵³ He argues that co-crucifixion leads to co-resurrection, which draws those of faith into a cruciform lifestyle, for which Jesus was template and Paul was example. Gorman shows with great exegetical acuity how, because God’s nature is cruciform, Jesus’ self-giving act took the shape it did. He equates being in Christ
with inhabiting the cruciform God.
His argument is both sound and, pastorally, a sharp upward call. I wish to suggest two lines of critique, the import of which will be manifest in the argument of this book. Co-resurrection is explicit in certain Deutero-Pauline texts; however, Paul treats believers’ experience of co-crucifixion as pre-cursory for eschatological salvation. As such, Paul carefully reserves his traditional resurrection lexicon for his Judgment discourses. In 1 Cor 15:35–50, Paul explains how in a corporeal sense the difference between the believer and Jesus will only be resolved at the Parousia. Rectification is a first stage event which foreshadows the finality.
In personal conversation with Gorman, he pointed out that most 20th century interpreters of Paul were afraid to speak of present resurrection, but more recently scholars like A. J. M. Wedderburn and J. Daniel Kirk variously argue for present as well as future resurrection.⁵⁴ Nonetheless, the nervousness of earlier readers of Paul is not unwarranted. Believers will not fully participate in this risen life until the eschaton, but rectification is the initial endowment of that life; it is the already but not yet life.
Paul narrates the deliverance he experienced as co-crucifixion with Christ in order that he might live to God (Gal 2:19). He claims neither to have been raised nor, in the undisputed Pauline corpus, ever says believers were raised before the eschaton. Lexically we observe the following.
Of the forty-one uses of ἐγείρω in Paul, twenty-four refer to the resurrection of Jesus. Of the seventeen that do not, ten are in conjunction with the raising of the dead at the judgment in 1 Corinthians 15, one in Rom 9:17 (citing Exod 9:16) refers to Pharaoh being raised
to the position of king, and one in 2 Cor 1:9 is a divine title. Only five of the references to ἐγείρω refer to the raising up of believers—two of these occur in the future indicative (1 Cor 6:14 and 2 Cor 4:14) and clearly refer to the eschaton. This leaves Col 2:12; 3:1; Eph 2:6; all three employ the compound verb συνεγείρω and point to a raising with Christ, which has already occurred. No undisputed Pauline text speaks of Christians being raised in the here and now.⁵⁵ However, as early as the penning of Colossians and Ephesians, Pauline devotees saw a profound correlation between Jesus’ resurrection and the experience of believers.
Jesus brought the end into the present by his resurrection, but Paul’s assertion that the risen life he lives to God he lives in the flesh
(Gal 2:20) suggests that his risen life is demonstrably inferior to Jesus’ risen life. This may appear pedantic, but the distinction certainly seems critical enough to speak of the now-time revivification of believers and only their end-time resurrection.
Secondly, Gorman, quite correctly, treats both eschatology and ethics as resurrection shaped
in Paul—it is because of co-resurrection
that the life of believers will be characterized by Christ-like faith and love as they are guided by the Spirit.⁵⁶ He even speaks of Paul’s ministry in terms of inhabiting the God of life-in-death and power-in-weakness,
claiming this is the heart of Paul’s cruciform spirituality.⁵⁷ The reasoning is largely persuasive, but for this very reason might we better comprehend both the church’s ethical program and Paul’s ministry career as resurrectiform
, or more accurately, reviviform?⁵⁸
The resurrection as God’s action in Christ is only where Paul’s death-life story in Galatians begins. Paul’s revivification language points to a much more pervasive death-life narrative. Paul’s over-vaunted problem