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Things Sacrificed to Idols
C. K. Barrett
New Testament Studies / Volume 11 / Issue 02 / January 1965, pp 138 153
DOI: 10.1017/S0028688500017586, Published online: 05 February 2009
Link to this article: http://journals.cambridge.org/abstract_S0028688500017586
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C. K. Barrett (1965). Things Sacrificed to Idols. New Testament Studies, 11, pp 138153
doi:10.1017/S0028688500017586
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Mew Test. Stud, n , pp. 138-53.
C. K. BARRETT
It will be noted that the expressions used in the three verses all differ. We
may reasonably suppose that Luke took them all in the sense of xv. 29,
which he gives as the text of the Decree itself: Gentile Christians must
abstain from the use of articles of food (et6coA60ura, plural) which have been
offered in sacrifice in idolatrous worship. That Luke simply invented this
decree seems highly improbable; that he has placed it in the right historical
context is perhaps equally improbable. Two further points may be noted at
1
See I Cor. vii. i, and cf. viii. i.
a
The material under discussion raises the question of the unity of I Corinthians; see below.
3
I believe this to be substantially the original form of the text, but the question is too large for
discussion here.
T H I N G S S A C R I F I C E D TO IDOLS 139
this stage, as we collect evidence, (i) With abstention from Et5coA66ura goes
abstention from blood and from strangled carcasses. It was natural for a
Jew to put these together: for him, food was forbidden if it was idolatrous,
even though (supposing it to be meat) it had been correctly slaughtered, and
equally food was forbidden if, though untainted by idolatry, it had been
improperly slaughtered. In I Corinthians the question of methods of
slaughtering does not arise at all. (2) With abstention from idolatrous food
goes abstention from fornication (Tropvefoc). This at first sight surprising
combination recurs in I Corinthians and Revelation.
Next come the references to et5coX69ura in the letters to the Seven
Churches, in Revelation. In the letter to Pergamum there is a reference to
those who hold the teaching of Balaam, os ESISOCOKEV Tcp BaAdx (3aAe!v
CTK&VSCCAOV EVCOTTIOV TCOV ulcov 'Iapar|A, tpotyeiv E!5COA69VTOC mi TropvEOaai
(Rev. ii. 14). This 'teaching of Balaam' may possibly be related to the
teaching of the Nicolaitans mentioned in the next verse; if so, we must look
back to the letter to Ephesus, in which the works of the Nicolaitans are
reprobated (Rev. ii. 6). Here it is important to note the recurring connexion
with fornication, and the reference to Balaam; compare the reference to the
incident of Baal Peor (in the context of the Balaam stories) in I Cor. x. 8.
In the next letter, to Thyatira, stands the condemnation of the woman
Jezebel, who calls herself a prophetess, KOC! 8i8daKEi KOCI irXavg: TOUS Epous
SouAous TTopvsOaai KOCI (potyelv E18COA60UTOC (Rev. ii. 20). Here too the eating
of eiScoAoQuToc is connected with fornication, and with Old Testament
precedent, though here the figure ofJezebel is substituted for that of Balaam.
Jezebel is described at III Reg. xvi. 31 as leading her husband into idolatry,
and at IV Reg. ix. 22 as guilty of fornication; see also III Reg. xviii. 19
... TOUS TTpoq>r|Tas Tf]s ataxuvris... Kai TOUS Trpoq>r|TCCS TCOV dAacov... ECTQIOVTCCS
(cf. also I Cor. x) the story of Balaam is linked (as it is also in the Old
Testament) 1 with both sexual immorality and participation in idolatrous
rites, and it would be natural to expect the same connexion in Jude and
II Peter also. Undoubtedly sexual vice is in mind (Jude 7; II Pet. ii. 6f., 14),
and there are some indications of idolatry too. In Jude 10, where the theme
of vice has given place to that of disrespect to angels, the point may be failure
to recognize spiritual forces behind sacrificial foods, by which, in con-
sequence, men are destroyed (q>0sipovTOci); and in Jude 15 the ungodly works
(gpyoc da£|3Eiocs) of the sinners seem to be religious rather than moral offences,
and thus in all probability to consist of some kind of compromise with
idolatry. In II Pet. ii. 10, 20 the use of the words nioccrucc and uiccauos
should be noted; these have a close connexion in the Greek Old Testament
with the defilements of idolatry.2 In both epistles (Jude 12; II Pet. ii. 13) it
is possible that the more or less oblique references to the profaned or im-
proper love-feasts3 of the schismatics may imply that the food used on these
occasions was objectionable to orthodox Christians.4
Finally, in our collection of evidence we return to Paul.
(1) We do not know why the weak Christian of Rom. xiv. 2 ate only
vegetables. One possible interpretation of Paul's statement is that the man
in question was a Jew, no longer able to obtain Jewish-killed meat because
he had become a Christian and had therefore been cast out of the synagogue,
and thus obliged to abstain from flesh altogether because only the heathen
product, improperly killed and perhaps even offered in sacrifice, was
available. There are parallels between Paul's treatment of the situation in
Rom. xiv, xv, and I Cor. viii, x; there is, however, no definite indication in
Rom. xiv, xv that either idolatry or Judaism is in mind.
(2) Together with the material in I Corinthians must be put the enigmatic
paragraph II Cor. vi. 14-vii. 1, on account of the words, quoted in vi. 17
from Isa. lii. 11, ...&Koc9&pTou nf) cnrreaQe. Taken in the light of vi. 16 (TIS
8E ovyK0CT&9ecns vau 0eoO nexoc etScoAcov;) it seems that the OK&QocpTov
envisaged here is (as in Deutero-Isaiah) connected with idolatry. It has
become so usual to read this paragraph as part of the ' previous letter', the
misunderstanding of which seems to have led to Paul's disclaimer in I Cor.
v. 9-13, which in turn is read in the light of I Cor. v. 1 (the case of iropvEia),
that it is often given an almost exclusively sexual interpretation. This,
1
Cf. also Sanh. 106a, quoted in S.-B. m, 793. On I Cor. x. 7, Billerbeck says with reference to
iraljEiv, ' I n der spateren Zeit war es ein feststehender exegetischer Kanon, dass unter s p y in der
Schrift nichts andres als Gotzendienst zu verstehen sei.' But TTCCIJEIV may suggest further overtones of
meaning; cf. Arrian's account of Sardanapalus's inscription (Alexander n, 5, 4): . . J<T6I£ KOCI TTIVE K<X1
iral3£. . .KCtl T 6 iral3E jJ<?6ioupy6T£pov £yy£yp&98ai E<pa<jav -rS> 'Aaaupitj) 6v6\icn\.
2
See for ulaavia Jer. xxxix. 34; Ezk. xxxiii. 3 1 ; I Mace. xiii. 50; and for uic«jp6s Wisd. xiv. 26;
I Mace. iv. 43.
3
In II Pet. ii. 13 drmiTais should be read, and taken as a pun on dyd-mxis in Jude. So Ewald,
quoted by J . B. Mayor ad loc.
4
The K&uoi objected to in several places in the New Testament (Rom. xiii. 13; Gal. v. 21; I Pet.
iv. 3) may have been disapproved on religious as well as other grounds.
THINGS SACRIFICED TO IDOLS 141
however, is mistaken. Fornicators are given prominence in I Cor. v. gf.,
but they are followed by others, including idolaters (v. iof.). Idolatry is at
least one of the themes of II Cor. vi. 14-vii. 1, and if it is accompanied by a
reference to sexual sin (perhaps in vii. 1) this is in line with almost all the
other material we have considered. But it must not be assumed that II Cor.
vi. 14-vii. 1 is anything other than part of a letter to Corinth subsequent to
I Corinthians.
So much may serve as a sketch of the necessary evidence. If for the moment
we set aside the Pauline material it appears that the eating of EISGOAOOUTCC was
reprobated in the strongest possible terms, and that it was coupled with
fornication. There is no doubt that this attitude persisted in the primitive
Church for centuries. Meat that had been offered to idols, and blood, had to
be avoided by Christians at all costs. The evidence for this has recently been
collected and set forth by Dr Ehrhardt. 1
In the Didache food regulations are introduced as follows (vi. 3): irepi 8E
Tfjs Ppcoaecos, 6 Suvocacu pdcrraaov.2 As Knopf (ad loc.) says, this suggests
'eine recht entwickelte Speisen- und Fastenordnung in der Gemeinde'; but
it also suggests that there were limits to Christian willingness to accept such
a rule, and perhaps also limits to the availability of the foods prescribed. On
EISOOAOQUTOC, however, no compromise was permissible: doro 8E TOU E!8COAO-
3
6UTOU Aiocv TTpoasxe' Acrrpeioc ydtp kcrnv Qecov veKpcov. This falls, as we have
seen, under the heading Trspi TT\S PpcoaEcos, and there can be no doubt that
the author of the Didache believed that to eat food sacrificed to idols was to
fall into the practically unforgivable sin of idolatry.
Justin treats the issue as a touchstone of orthodoxy. Thus in Trypho 34 he
says that Gentile Christians (and this will apply a fortiori to Jewish Christians)
-TTSCTCCV cdidav Koci Tiucopiocv uexP'S ECTXOCTOU eocv&Tou OirouEvoucn irepi TOU
UI'ITE elScoAoAcrrpfjaai UT|TE ei5coA66uTa epocyEiv. Trypho replies (35) that he
has found many who profess to be Christians E"O0IEIV T& EISCOAOQUTCC KOCI
UT|8EV EK TOOTOU (3Ac5rTrTEcr8ai AsyEiv. Justin points out that these are those
false Christians whose coming Jesus himself foretold. Irenaeus (Haer. 1, 6, 3)
has a similar comment on the Valentinians.4
Western writers extend the prohibition beyond EISCOAOQUTOC in the strict
sense to meat containing blood;5 see, for example, Minucius Felix, Octavius 30;
Tertullian, Apology 9; Eusebius, Hist. Ecc. v, 1, 26 (quoting the epistle of the
Churches of Lugdunum and Vienna). In view of this confusion we need not
1
'Social Problems in the Early Church: 1. The Sunday Joint of the Christian Housewife', in
The Framework of the New Testament Stories (Manchester, 1964), pp. 276-90, previously published in
the Festschrift for Erik Wolf.
a
Cf H. J . Schoeps, Theologie und Geschichte des Judenchristentums (Tubingen, 1949), p. 260 n. 1.
3
Cf. II Clem. i. 6; iii. 1; Preaching of Peter (M. R. James, The Apocryphal New Testament (Oxford,
1924), pp. i6f.); also the Jewish material referred to on p. 142 below.
4
Ehrhardt (p. 279 n. 2) refers to the Gospel of Thomas 14, but this seems to be of only marginal
relevance.
5
See also below on the material contained in the Clementine literature.
142 C. K. BARRETT
hesitate to add a passage which bears witness to the impression made by
Christians on the outside world. In de Morte Peregrini 16 Lucian says that
Peregrinus offended the Christians who no longer ministered to him in
prison, cocp0r| yap TI, d>s olnoci, £a8(cov TCOV drcroppi!)Tcov ccuroTs.
Another essay that should be mentioned along with Dr Ehrhardt's is that
in which Einar Molland1 argues for the continuing knowledge of and
reverence for the Apostolic Decree among Jewish Christians who, because
they abominated Paul, did not recognize the authority of Acts. Dr Molland
shows, I think convincingly, that the Jewish Christians responsible for the
Preaching of Peter (which appears to stand behind the Pseudo-Clementine
literature) preserved and obeyed the Decree, respecting it both positively
and negatively; that is, they not only observed its precepts but also refrained
from insisting, as they would have liked to do, on circumcision, vegetarian-
ism, and washings after the Jewish model, because these were not required
by the Decree.
Not only did these Jewish Christians retain, though independently of
Acts, the substance of the Apostolic Decree, they preserved (according to
Dr Molland) the correct interpretation of the prohibition of EISCOAOQUTOC.
Les Pseudo-Clementines nous donnent l'interpre'tation juste de cette prohibition.
Ce qui est interdit, c'est [participare daemonum mensae, hoc est] immolata degustare, \vel
sanguinem, vel morticinum, quod est suffocatum,] et si quid aliud est quod daemonibus
oblatum est (Rec. iv, 36), toute forme de KOIVCOVEIV TTJS TpoaTE^ns TCOV 6can6vcov niocpSs
(Horn, VIII, 23; vn, 4; vn, 8; vm, 19). La seule divergence a l'egard de la forme du
decret dans les Actes des ApStres est que les Pseudo-Clementines ont une predilection
pour l'expression Tpcnre3oc TCOV 5cci|i6vcov, et que par la participation a la table des
demons elles comprennent la manducation de tous les aliments interdits.2
It is possible that the expression TporiTEja TCOV 8aiuovcov may owe something
to Paul (cf. I Cor. x. 21), though the borrowing will scarcely be direct.
For the moment we may simply take this Clementine material as adding to
the evidence for the widespread acceptance of the prohibition of the eating
of EiScoXoQuroc; it will be necessary to recall it later when we inquire into the
fate of the Pauline attitude to this prohibition.
It is Paul's attitude we must now examine. Dr Ehrhardt believes that it
changed. He contrasts Paul's attitude to the Jerusalem 'brass-hats' in
Gal. ii with his discussion of sacrificial food in I Cor. viii. 'It is... remarkable
that only a short time afterwards, namely after the visit of St Peter to Corinth,
St Paul greatly changed his tune' (op. cit. p. 277). Peter, Dr Ehrhardt
thinks, had insisted upon the general validity of the Decree, even at Corinth.
He continues, 'The way in which St Paul now accepted the decree, and in
particular the prohibition of the eating of sacrificial meat, is highly significant
1
'La circoncision, le bapteme et I'autorit6 du dScret apostolique (Actes xv, 28sq.) dans les
milieux judeo-chr£tiens des Pseudo-C16mentines', in Studia Theologica, ix (1955), 1-39.
3
Op. cit. p. 34. Where Molland indicates omissions I have completed the quotation, using square
brackets.
THINGS SACRIFICED TO IDOLS I43
for the mutual relations between the two Apostles. Not only did he not
reject it any longer, but he even supported it strongly as a command of
charity in favour of "the weak'" (ibid.). Later he goes on,
Two conclusions may be drawn: thefirst,that St Paul apparently did eat sacrificial
meat at his first stay at Corinth; the second, that without being conscious of any
sin against the Holy Spirit, he abandoned this practice at St Peter's remonstrations
' for conscience sake', which means because of the testimony not only of any pagan
scoffers, but even more so because of the 'weak' amongst the Christians, an expres-
sion which appears not to be entirely without a certain acerbity directed at the
address of St Peter (p. 278).
With this we may compare the view of T. W. Manson,1 who also thought
that the question was raised at Corinth by Peter, or at least in his name.
Why does Paul now discuss the problem as if the Jerusalem Council had never met?
I cannot help thinking that the question was raised at Corinth by the Cephas
party, and that Paul's way of dealing with it is, and is meant to be, a snub. He
takes it as a matter of purely domestic concern within the Gentile-Christian com-
munity, the implication being that the Jerusalem compromise is doubtless suitable
for Churches like that of Antioch with a mixed membership, but that in pre-
dominantly Gentile-Christian communities Jewish taboos do not count and
Jewish-Christian visitors cannot presume to legislate in these matters for Gentile-
Christian Churches (op. cit. p. 200).
Manson seems to imply, with Dr Ehrhardt, that Paul did accept the sub-
stance of the Jewish-Christian Decree. ' Here as elsewhere Paul, even when
accepting the Jewish-Christian conclusion, insists on supplying it with an
entirely Christian basis' (p. 202)—namely that the intimacy of Christian
fellowship with Christ himself and with other Christians admits no rivalry:
You cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of demons; you cannot
partake of the table of the Lord, and the table of demons (I Cor. x. 21).
Neither of these writers seems to me to do full justice to the facts in
I Corinthians. That Paul found himself in some difficulty over the question
of sacrificial food is certainly true. It is possible that he did in some respects
change his opinion. But at no point in I Cor. viii, ix, x does he admit the
view that a Christian must never eat what has been sacrificed to an idol,
still less that he must never eat meat that has not been slaughtered in con-
formity with the Jewish regulations. On the contrary, he specifically states
that sacrificial food may be eaten. The following verses are explicit:
x. 2 5 : Trav T O ev HCCKEAACO -rrcoXoupiEvov ECTOIETE [ir\8kv ocvccKpivovTES 5 i d Tf|V
1
' The Corinthian Correspondence (i) and (2)', in Studies in the Gospels and Epistles (Manchester,
1962), edited by M. Black, pp. igo-224.
c K
144 - - BARRETT
Certainly, Paul hedges these statements by reference to the conscience, not of
the eater, or potential eater, but of his weak Christian brother. The Christian's
E^ouaicc must not be allowed to become a TrpoaKouuoc (viii. 9). To eat publicly
in an eiScoAeiov would be, he says, wantonly to bruise consciences (he does
not say that it is in itself idolatry), and it would be better never to eat flesh
at all than to drive a fellow-Christian to his doom (viii. 10, 11, 13). But this
does not constitute acceptance of the Decree; at most it is a matter of tender-
ness towards those who did accept it. The Christian has ££ouaioc, though he
must not abuse it.
There is evidence, though it is not conclusive, that if Paul did, between his
first visit to Corinth and the writing of I Corinthians, execute a volte-face it
was in a liberal rather than a conservative direction. He had written a
letter1 which the Corinthians (rightly or wrongly) had taken to mean that
they must cut themselves off completely from the immoral and idolatrous
life of Corinth—no easy task. In I Cor. v. 9-13 Paul corrects this impression.
The Corinthians are not to break off relations with non-Christians who are
•rropvoi, or (to pick out one significant word from Paul's list) idolaters. With
such persons they may uvvocvccuiyvucySoa, and the context makes it clear that
this includes auvEa6ieiv (v. 11) .2 The point is that Paul is concerned here with
Christian discipline within the community; ouveoQieiv with those outside,
which would almost certainly involve eating eiScoAoQuTa, remains possible.
We now turn to more detailed study of I Cor. x. 25, 27. What was sold in
the macellum? The answer is, food of almost every description.3 Thus Cicero
(de Div. 11, 27 (59)), sarcastically, 'Si Epicuri de Voluptate liber rosus esset,
putarem annonam in macello cariorem fore.' Compare Suetonius Tiberius
34, 2. Here annona means the price of food in general; the 'cost of living',
we might say. The macellum, however, was mainly concerned with the sale
of meat and fish. When Plautus's Euclio (Aulularia 329ff.)visits the macellum
his comment not only awakens the sympathy of the modern shopper but
shows what he was looking for:
Venio ad macellum, rogito pisces; indicant
Caros, agninam caram, caram bubulam,
Vitulinam, cetum, porcinam: cara omnia.
Plutarch does not even think of fish but only of meat when he raises the
question (Quaest. Rom. 54), 8id TI TO KpeoTrcbTua uaKeAAa KOCI UCCK&AOCS
KocAouai; Plutarch's two suggested etymologies are distinguished rather by
ingenuity than probability, but the question must reflect popular usage.4
1
The point here does not depend on the acceptance of II Cor. vi. 14-vii. 1 as part of this letter.
8
Cf. H. Greeven in T.W.N.T. VII, 852f.
3
The macellum was in an even wider sense a centre of the catering trade; one could hire cooks there
(Pliny, Nat. Hist, xvnr, 108).
1
Plutarch suggests origin in the Greek n<iy£ipos, or from a Roman called Macellus, whose ill-
gotten wealth was used to build a meat market. We maydo better with pdx0^01! iiAxonpa, P&XTI, mactare;
or with maceria, an enclosure; or best perhaps with n^SBi a fold, pen, or enclosure.
THINGS SACRIFICED TO IDOLS 145
1 2
Dr Ehrhardt accepts Lietzmann's argument that all, or very nearly all,
of the meat sold in the macellum was EI8COA66UTOV, sacrificed probably in
nearby temples, but the argument is not wholly convincing; see Dr H. J.
Cadbury's article on the macellum in Corinth in J.B.L. LIII (1934), 134-41,
with, not least important, the simple observation that macella and temples
must often have been contiguous not on account of any religious connexion
but because public buildings are almost inevitably grouped together in the
middle of a city. Dr Cadbury adds, 'The presence also in one shop [in
Pompeii] of entire skeletons of sheep suggests that the meat may have been
sold on the hoof or slaughtered in the macellum as well as sold already
butchered or sacrificed in a temple' {op. cit. p. 141).
That meat was to be had that was not iepoQirrov is coi ifirmed by Plutarch
Sympos. VIII, 8, 3, where it is said that the Pythagoreans cos uocAiaroc uev
EyeOovro TCOV iepoOuTcov dnrapxouEvoi TOTS QEOIS, which seems to mean that
the Pythagoreans, who took flesh very sparingly, ate it only in the form of
iep60uToc. It is implied that others, who did not share the vegetarian principles
of the Pythagoreans, would eat it when it had not been sacrificed—that is,
that non-sacrificed meat was available.
The extent to which the Christian shopping in the Corinthian macellum
would be forced to purchase goods with a religious history behind them must
therefore not be exaggerated. According to Professor Kitto, 3 'Barley-meal,
olives, a little wine, fish as a relish, meat only on high holidays—such was the
normal diet. As Zimmern has said, the usual Attic dinner consisted of two
courses, the first a kind of porridge, and the second, a kind of porridge.'4
This goes for the Mediterranean world in general; and there is even evidence
to suggest that meat, though rarely eaten, was not the highly esteemed luxury
that Professor Kitto suggests. F. R. Cowell writes,5 ' On one of Caesar's
campaigns it was apparently accounted a hardship when Roman soldiers
were forced to eat meat because their corn supplies had been exhausted.'
No reference is given, but I suppose Mr Cowell has in mind Bell. Gal. vn, 17:
'Summa difficultate rei frumentariae adfecto exercitu... usque eo, ut
complures dies frumento milites caruerint, et, pecore ex longinquioribus vicis
adacto, extremam famem sustentarent; nulla tamen vox est ab eis audita
populi Romani majestate et superioribus victoriis indigna.' Too much,
however, should not be built upon this; compare on the other side Bell. Civ.
m, 47: 'Non illis hordeum cum daretur non legumina recusabant: pecus
1
op.tit.p. 280.
2
H . Lietzmann, An die Korinther, I, II (Tubingen, 1949), edited by W. G. Kiimmel, pp. 49-52.
3
H. D. F. Kitto, The Greeks (London, 1951), p. 33.
4
If, as I suspect, the reference is to The Greek Commonwealth (Oxford, 1931), it is a playful exag-
geration of Zimmern's words; but many passages in Greek literature could be quoted more or less to'
this effect, e.g. Xenophon, Mem. m, 14, 2: £CT8IOUCM IISV ydp St\ TT&VTES M T&SCTITU6yov, 6TOV iraprj. The
CTITOS is farinaceous food in general, the 64/ov any sort of relish, often fish—and it may or may not be
available. The context in Xenophon is worth noting.
6
Cicero and the Roman Republic (Harmondsworth, 1956), p. 326.
146 C. K. BARRETT
vero, cujus rei summa erat ex Epiro copia, magno in honore habebant.' It
may be that the latter statement is given as exceptional, and therefore
confirms the point.
In addition to cereals and vegetables the most common food was fish. This
was certainly true in Athens, and it would be surprising if, in bimaris Corinthus,
nearer to Lechaeum and little further from Cenchreae than Athens from
Peiraeus, the same conditions did not apply. Plutarch, in a passage quoted
above (Sympos. VIII, 8, 3), adds ixQucov SE 0ucnuos ouSeis, OUSE iepsucnuos
ECTTIV; and this statement appears to be correct.
It follows from this that a middle to lower class household in Corinth
(I Cor. i. 26), buying its supplies in the macellum, would very often make
purchases that had no connexion with idolatry. The problem of EISGOAOOUTCC
would seldom arise, and possibly would never have arisen in a Gentile Church
like that of Corinth if Jewish Christians (the Cephas group, perhaps) had
not raised it. But this infrequency of occurrence is not the point. The point
is that TT5V TO EV HOCKEAACO TrcoAoO|ievov would include iepoduToc, and that
Paul says that these may be bought and eaten, and that the purchaser is not
to dvotKptvEiv. This, however, is exactly what a Jew would do.1 The briefest
way of illustrating this is to quote Billerbeck2 on I Cor. x. 25:
Dem Juden war es erlaubt, Fleisch aus einem heidnischen Fleischladen zu beziehen,
wenn das Tier nicht von einem Nichtisraeliten geschlachtet war, wenn das Fleisch
nicht mit dem heidnischen Kultus in Beriihrung gekommen war und wenn der
Inhaber der Verkaufsstelle die Sicherheit gewahrte, dass er minderwertiges, den
Juden zum Genuss verbotenes Fleisch (riB'TO) in seinem Geschaft nicht fiihrte.
It is clear that only by careful inquiry (dvctKpiais) could a Jew satisfy himself
on these points; and a quick reading of Abodah £arah suffices to show the
repeated investigations 6id TTIV ovvei5r|aiv that were incumbent upon the
devout Jew. 3 Paul is nowhere more un-Jewish than in this UTISEV dvotKpi-
VOVTES. His whole life as a Pharisee had been essentially one of dv&Kpicns, not
least into foods.
We turn to I Cor. x. 27. Some discussions of this point have been fogged
by confusion with the situation implied by viii. 10 (cf. x. 2of.), where the
meal takes place in a religious establishment (E?ScoAeiov), at the table
(Tpdireja) of a god. It is this situation that is reflected by the well-known
papyri quoted by Deissmann4 and others. These should not be quoted with
reference to x. 27, which deals with a meal given in a private house, where
the religious character of the food is at least as uncertain as that of the goods
displayed for sale in the macellum. The language of x. 27 is illustrated by
Xenophon Mem. 1, 3, 6, si 8E TTOTE KAT^EI? E0EAr|aEiEV km SEITTVOV EAQEIV; the
1
Cf. E. Lohse, ' Z u 1 Cor. 10. 26, 3 1 ' , in Z-N-T.W- XLVII (1956), 277-80, especially p. 279.
2
S.-B. in, 420.
3
Hence one reason for the existence of religious societies, within which members could be certain
of ritual purity without constant inquiry.
4
A. Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East (London, 1927), p. 351 n. 2.
THINGS SACRIFICED TO IDOLS 147
use of (E)0EACO is neutral, so that there is no ground for Calvin's note, ' h e
[Paul] is tacitly hinting that he himself does not approve of this very much,
and that it would be better if they declined'. Xenophon, however, in the
same work (Mem. 11, 9, 4) indicates the danger involved. Speaking of Crito's
kindness to Archedemus he says OTTOTE 6uoi, EKOAEI. I t is probable that
private invitations were at least sometimes connected with sacrifices, though
evidently this was not invariably so, or there would be no point in x. 28 f.
If, however, a Christian had made u p his mind in advance that he would
eat nowhere where there was any possibility of encountering EISGOAOQUTCC he
would have had to withdraw into a self-imposed ghetto; this, it appears, is
what the Jewish Christians did, 1 and is pretty nearly what all Christians
eventually did. 2 The question of the place of the Christian in ordinary life
was raised, and Paul decisively took the view that the Christian (though his
relation to the world is governed by the cos nil of I Cor. vii. 29 ff.) must not
separate himself from it. There is to be no Christian ghetto. This was an
attitude of extraordinary liberalism, 3 the more striking in that it led Paul into
almost verbal contradiction of Exod. xxxiv. 15 (^fyTroT£...KaAEaa>criv ae KOCI
q>6cyns TCOV 0UU6CTCOV OCUTCOV).
It would be wrong to underestimate the importance of what Paul says
about the claim other men's consciences make upon ours, but equally wrong
not to grasp the fact that Paul's own view was that, provided no other
Christian was hurt thereby, a Christian might freely buy sacrificial food in
the open market, might sit at table with non-Christians (who were also
non-Jews), and might eat food of any kind whatsoever. T h a t these are all
acts that we ourselves perform frequently should not blind us either to the
Pauline revolution, or to the counter-revolution that followed it.
It is evident that on this question Paul took a line of his own; it is natural
therefore to continue our discussion by considering the light thrown by his
attitude on a number of important subjects.
(1) T h e affair of the EiScoAorXrroc casts light upon the relation between
Paul and Judaism. T h e essential Jewishness of Paul has been strongly
emphasized of late. ' Throughout his life Paul was a practising J e w . . . any
deviation from orthopraxy would irretrievably close the doors of Judaism
against him.' 4 It seems that the first part of this statement must be aban-
doned—in the matter of EISCOAOQUTOC (to mention no others) Paul was not a
practising J e w ; and the second part must be reworded—his deviations from
orthopraxy did in the end close the doors of Judaism against him. T o say
1 2
Molland, op. cit. Ehrhardt, op. cit.
3
J. Weiss, on x. 25: ' Damit gibt Paulus eine grossartige Freiheit: gerade jenes vorsichtige Nach-
fragen ist vom Ubel, weil es eine Angstlichkeit und einen Mangel an Freiheit zeigt, der iiberwunden
werden soil.' E. B. Allo, onx. 27f.: 'Paul voulait eViter, autant que possible, de troubler les relations
de society et d'amiti6 de ses neophytes, qui pouvaient d'ailleurs servir a la diffusion de l'Evangile.
C'£tait la, dit J. Weiss, un Iib6ralisme extraordinaire pour un Israelite et un ancien. Le " omnia mihi
licent" n'6tait pas un vain mot, pourvu qu'on le comprit en honnete homme.'
4
W. D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism (London, 1948), p. 321.
I48 C. K. BARRETT
this is not to deny the important truth in Dr Davies's contention that Paul's
thought continued to work within a rabbinic framework, but rather to
underline Dr Chadwick's emphasis1 on the flexibility of Paul's attitude.
We cannot think that Paul changed lightly the habits of a lifetime, nor is
there reason to suppose that, as a Christian, he thought in a completely new
way about idolatry, and the rites and objects connected with it. That he no
longer lived in accordance with the ' most straitest sect of our religion' as a
Pharisee does not mean that he gave up all his Jewish beliefs. It is important
to see precisely where he differed from Judaism.
It will serve the interests of clarity and brevity if I quote Billerbeck's
careful summary2 of the attitude of the ancient synagogue to heathen gods.
A. Die Gotter der Heiden sind Engel, denen Gott die 70 Volker der Welt unter-
stellt hat B. Die Gotter der Heiden sind Damonen; ihre Anbetung ist Teufels-
werk.... C. Die Gotter der Heiden sind verstorbene Menschen, die sich wahrend
ihres Lebens als Herrscher von Volkern oder als Wohltater ihrer Generation
verdient gemacht hatten, und denen deshalb die dankbare Nachwelt gottliche
Verehrung zollte. Diese euhemeristische Erklarung des Gotzendienstes scheint sich
nur in der hellenistisch-judischen Literatur zu finden D. Die Gotter der Heiden
sind 'Nichtse' D^^N, 'Nichtigkeiten' D'bon, 'Tote' WTfo, an denen nichts
Wesenhaftes oder Wirkliches ist tttoa J^a ]'«#, die zu Herren erst dadurch
geworden sind, dass die Menschen sie zu Herren gemacht haben E. Speziell
die Teraphim sind Hausgotter, die dem Eigentumer als Orakel dienten.3
The reader of I Corinthians will immediately recognize B and D, in x. 20 f.
and viii. 4; x. 19 respectively. How did Paul combine these distinct views?4
and how, so far as he held to the belief that food sacrificed to idols was
sacrificed to demons, could he permit the eating of S18COA69UTOC?
The basic answer is to be found in the new eschatological circumstances in
which Paul believed himself to be living, circumstances which gave him a
completely new outlook on the demon world. The position is stated epi-
grammatically in the context under discussion: ... fjucov, ets oug T& TeAr| TCOV
ocicovcov Kocrr|VTr|KEV (I Cor. x. 11). Since their defeat in the death and
resurrection of Jesus the demons have come to occupy a changed position.
They have not ceased to exist, nor have they ceased to be inimical to men,
but they have lost their power to inflict radical injury upon the elect.5 From
1
2
H. Chadwick, '"AH Things to All Men" (I Cor. ix. 22)', in KT.S. 1 (1955), 261-75.
S.-B. m, 48-60. Of necessity I omit the texts, which should be carefully studied.
3
A shorter and simpler summary is given by W. A. L. Elmslie, The Mishna on Idolatry: 'Aboda
Zara (Texts and Studies, vm, 2; Cambridge, 1911), pp. 42 f. Elmslie says of the view of I Cor.
x. 20, that idols are made use of by demons, ' If this idea existed among the Jews, it was confined to
the uneducated classes, and, even there, must be ascribed mainly to Greek influence.' He quotes
the saying ofR. Aqiba, closely akin to I Cor. viii. 4 ;x. 19, NW» H3 W*? HIT m i 3 » T S T "pVpa1?
(Abodah Zarah 55 a).
4
Cf. the previous note; there seems to be no attempt in Judaism to co-ordinate the various views
held.
6
I have discussed this subject in From First Adam to Last (London, 1962), pp. 83-94 ( an d s e e
index s.v. Powers).
THINGS SACRIFICED TO IDOLS 149
this conviction, which is fundamental in Paul's thinking, follows his ap-
parently confused and inconsistent1 treatment of idolatry and idolatrous
practices. With idolatry itself he will have no dealings: 9EuyETE oard TTJS
£i8coXoAorrpias (I Cor. x. 14). To worship a demon is to deny God his due;
more, it is to throw in one's lot with the defeated, anti-God forces of the
universe, to embrace the ultimately lost cause and to perish with it. But
precisely because the cause of the demons is lost, they have no power to
infest or infect a piece of meat. Hence (conscientious scruples permitting)
the Christian may freely use EISCOAOOUTOC and eat with unbelieving friends.
To take part in idolatrous ritual is another matter. To do this is to place
oneself in the context of worship in which the demons still exercise power.
This cannot be dismissed as a merely mythological statement. We may
borrow the words of Billerbeck quoted above, and say that the demons are
' nothings' who become lords precisely in that men (in worship) treat them
as lords; or, as Paul puts the matter elsewhere, OUK OKOCTE OTI <£> -Trocpicrrcc-
VETE ECCUTOUS SouAous sis UTTOKOT]V, SoOAoi EOTE & UTTOCKOUETE; (Rom. vi. 16).
This answer is crystallized in the quotation, in x. 26, of Ps. xxiv. 1. This
verse was used not as itself a benediction but to justify the use of benedictions
over food: ...latetf "nirrtf 1S> nVs DTK B57B11 N1? (TOS. Ber. iv. 1). The Psalm
v
- v:vv I "T1v - T \ TT - : • '
was also one of the seven appropriated weekly to worship in the Temple, and
was used on the first day of the week.2 R. Aqiba connected these seven
Psalms with the seven days of creation, the first perhaps more appropriately
than most: in^isa trb&n rupm rup» aw V» nxiVni p x n 'rh ? onaiN vn n» jwina
(Rosh Ha-Sh. 31a). The Psalm thus looked back to the beginning of creation.
For the Jew, God's creation had been marred because it had come under the
control of demons; one aspect of this was that food sacrificed to a demon
became the demon's property. But for Paul, the new creation had begun, and
the end was as the beginning. It was possible to believe in a new sense: The
earth is the Lord's, and the fullness thereof; and to act upon the belief.
(2) In permitting the eating of EISGOAOSUTOC, Paul allows what elsewhere in
the New Testament was strictly forbidden. In particular, he contradicts the
requirements of the Apostolic Decree.3 The difficulty raised here is only
partly mitigated by the suggestion that the Decree was intended only for
mixed Jewish and Gentile Churches such as that at Antioch, and not for
predominantly Gentile Churches such as that at Corinth, for Paul thought
it relevant to mention his dispute with Cephas (at Antioch) when writing
to Galatia, and the Corinthian Church itself was not without a Jewish
1
J. Hering, La Premiere Epitre de Saint Paul aux Corinthiens (Neuchatel and Paris, 1949), p. 11, gives
as one reasonforseeing two letters combined in the epistle, 'contradiction entre 10. 1-Q2 qui prend
une attitude rigoriste dans la question des sacrifices paiens, et 10. 23 a 11. 1 qui en fait uniquement
une question de charite vis-a-vis des faibles, comme le chapitre 8'. But our discussion suggests that
we need not look for two letters to explain the two lines of thought.
2
See the heading of the Psalm in the LXX (Tfis mas aaffl&ruv), and Tamid vii. 4.
3
Notwithstanding Acts it is difficult to believe that Paul was present when the Decree was drawn
up.
150 C. K. BARRETT