Summary
of Historical-Homiletical Work Method on 1 Corinthians 15:12-18:
I.-
Initial Acquaintance:
A.
The
initial reading of the KJV, NIV, and the RSV showed little change in the
different translations. The major difference in verses were choice of words
that equivalent meaning but different interpretations.
Verse
12- RSV- “ as raised from the dead”
NIV- “has been raised from
the dead”
KJV- “ he rose from the dead”
Verse
13- RSV- “then Christ has not been raised.”
NIV- “ then not even Christ
has been raised.”
KJV- “ then is Christ not
risen:”
Verse
15- RSV- “to be misrepresenting God”
NIV- “ found to be false
witnesses about God”
KJV- “ found false witnesses
of God;”
Verse
19- RSV- “ men most to be pitied”
NIV- “ who have fallen asleep
in Christ are to be pitied”
KJV- “ fallen asleep in
Christ are perished.”
B.
Textual
Criticism:
There
were a few variances in the text but they were not very significant except in
verse 14. The umwn[B] is a variance in the verse. Although several important witnesses
including (B, D, 33, 81,330, 1739) read hmwv,
this may be itacism for umwv or mechanical assimilation
to the previous hmwv. The context seems to be “your faith” that correlates
to your preaching and again relates to verse 17 where it states your faith.
C.
Translation:
I
Cor. 15:12-18
Verse
12- Now, if Christ is proclaimed that he has been raised from the dead, How can
some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead/ that the
resurrection of the dead is not possible?
Verse
13- Then, if there is no resurrection of the dead, the resurrection of the dead
is not possible (neither) has Christ been raised/ Christ has not been raised
either.
Verse
14- Then, if Christ has not been raised, then our message is in vain/ has no
purpose and so your faith is in vain/ has no purpose.
Verse
15- We are found to be false witnesses of God because we testified that God
raised Christ whom God did not raise up, if it is true that the dead are not
raised.
Verse
16- For if the dead are not raised neither has Christ been raised.
Verse
17- And if Christ has not been raised, you faith is worthless/ in vain, you are
still in your sins (sins of you).
Verse
18- And then, those (the ones) having fallen asleep in Christ (died) have
perished.
Verse
19- If for this life only we have hoped in Christ, we are of all people to
be pitied.
II.
Disposition:
A.
Genre:
In
this particular pericope, Paul uses a literary device to anyalsis the question
of resurrection of the body. Christ has
been raised
Our proclamation is in vain
Result- false witnesses
Your faith is in vain and futile
Result- you’re in sin
Those is in Christ have died.
This
technique is similar to a prayer in the
Jewish text( Apoc. Bar 22-30) similar to late 1st and 2nd
century.( referenced from First
Corinthians, Interpretation, A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching,
Richard B. Hays)
The
use of the “if clause” forms a type of logical argument format for this
pericope. It is not a type of pronouncement but a debate on the
center of the Christian faith.
B.
Questions:
Is Paul’s line of questioning setting up his
following discussions that will affirm the resurrection or explain the
discrepancies the people in Corinthians have?
Is
Paul speculating that Christianity is only a promise and not a reality?
Could
Paul also mean in reference to the dead not only bodily but also spiritually?
The
use of those sleeping in Christ raises the question of interpretation of verse
18. Does sleeping mean dead? How could
one fall asleep in Christ if in Christ you are born anew?
C.
These
questions will be answered in Paul’s writings that follow.
Even though Paul was writing to a specific audience,
the question of the resurrection continues.
The question regarding asleep in Christ refers to the audience Paul is
writing to who have become Christians.
The question of following asleep may be used figuratively or poetically
to make a point in Paul’s writings.
III.
Composition:
A.
The
pericope verse 12-18 is part of chapter 15 that is an excursion concerning the
gospel on the resurrection. It follows
the opening pericope of verses 1-11 that deal with how the tradition of the
resurrection was received. Verses 12-18
give evidence for the resurrection of the body. The pericope following gives the consequences of Christ’s
resurrection. This particular pericope
lays the foundation for the argument that follows.
B.
Chapter
15 as a whole- Excursions concerning gospels of the Resurrection
C.
The
Author
The author of 1Cor. is Paul.
IV.
Context-
A.
Primitive
Christianity.
According
to Alsup, the kerygma tradition is recognized as the oldest and that I Cor. 15
is part of that tradition. The question
is what is the relationship between the kerygma tradition and the gospels. I Cor. 15 seem to make parallel illusions or
references. I Cor. 15 reflects a Pauline
addition to the original kerygmatic formula
There seems to be more appearance
stories that relate to the Hellenistic period than do resurrection stories.
V.
Distillation
A.
Salient
Features:
Paul
relentlessly reverses the reasoning of the resurrection. By doing a reversal, he convinces the
listener that not only Christ but also all humanity is raised from the
dead. His point of view is that Christ
was human and as the listener is human then resurrection is inevitable if one
believes in Christ. Otherwise all is
lost. The use of sleep in Christ is not developed nor the implications
theologically are explored. Yet, Paul
seems to be making reference to the deadly body since from the Hellenistic view
points there were many different beliefs floating around about death and
resurrection. It may also be that the
Jewish influence of resurrection was infiltrating the Hellenistic view since
many of the new leaders in the church came from Jewish heritage. It is apparent
that Paul’s honesty is very persuasive and an added attribute to his argument. Paul is positive that the resurrection of
Christ is a necessary part of God’s freeing humanity from sin and guilt. As Paul says that if you don’t believe in
the resurrection then you are left in your sin.
It seems Luedemann’s view of guilt and
psychological analysis of the resurrection cannot be applied to this
pericope. Paul closely relates the
Resurrection to being freed from sin, forgiveness and eternal life. In the discussion of forgiveness, Luedemann
may be able to hold a discussion on this issue that relates to I Cor. 15.
References used in making observations:
First Corinthians,
Interpretation, A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching, Richard B. Hays, John Knox
Press.
I Corinthians, The Anchor
Bible,
William F. Orr and James Arthur
Walther, DoubleDay & Co. Garden City, New York, 1976.
First Corinthians, An
introduction and Study Guide, John J. Kilgallen
Exegetical Report
1 Corinthians 15:35-42
But someone will say, "How [are] the dead being raised? And [with] what kind of body are they coming?
Foolish one, that which you yourself [sg] sow is not being given life unless it should die.
And that which you sow, [is] not the body the-going-to-become-one. But you sow naked seed, probably, of wheat or some other [grain].
But God gives to it a body as God willed, and each of the seeds its own body.
Not all flesh [is] the same but there is one flesh of human beings and another flesh of animals and another flesh of feathered ones and another of fish.
And [there are] heavenly bodies and earthly bodies. But the glory of the heavenly bodies is different from the glory of the earthly bodies.
Another glory of sun and another glory of moon and another glory of stars. For a star differs from a star in glory.
In this way also the resurrection of the dead. You [sg] are being sowed in that which is perishable, you [sg] are being raised in that which is imperishable.
Chapter 15 of Paul’s letter to the Corinthians is a Midrash . In the first 11 verses, Paul determines the necessity of the resurrection. In verses 12-19, he states that questioning bodily resurrection undermines Christ’s resurrection which leads to the elimination of the benefits promised by the gospel. On the other hand, since Christ has been raised the apocalypse will follow and all will be subjected to God. If there is no resurrection, then the practice of being baptized for the dead is futile and there is no hope for anything other than the current state of things, verses 29-34. In verse 35, Paul begins his explanation of the nature of the resurrection.
The genre of this passage is Midrash. Midrash is "the rabbinic term for biblical exegesis" and literally this noun means "to inquire, investigate" (Anchor Bible Dictionary, "Midrash"). Jacob Neusner quoting Gary Porton offers a more explicit definition:
Midrash is "a type of literature, oral or written, which has its starting point in a fixed, canonical text, considered the revealed word of God by the Midrashist and his audience, and in which this original verse is explicitly cited or clearly alluded to."…For something to be considered Midrash it must have a clear relationship to the accepted cannonical text of Revelation. Midrash is a term given to a Jewish activity which finds its locus in the religious life of the Jewish community (9).
Neusner describes the method of rabbinic Midrash as "seeing things as other than they seem" (44). Midrash is written as paraphrase, prophecy, or parable, according to Neusner. As paraphrase "the exegete would paraphrase Scripture, imposing a fresh new meaning. … through Midrash as prophecy… Scripture addresses contemporary times as a guide to what is happening even now—and, more to the point, what is going to happen in the near future" (7). Finally, the Midrash as parable, uses the literary form of allegory where "Scripture preserves the more profound meaning of the everyday world…" (8). In reading 1 Cor 15, I recognized that Paul intermingles the different types of Midrash. The one thing all types of Midrash have in common is that they are based on Scripture.
I see three possibilities for the Scripture that Paul is exegeting. First, he could be referring to a scripture in the Hebrew bible. However, there is no evidence of a quote readily at hand in the opening passage. I will set this possibility aside for now. Second, perhaps, the exegesis that is being done here is based on 1 Cor. 15:3: "For I handed on to you as of first importance what I in turn had received". What was it that Paul received? Possibly, he is referring to the post-resurrection appearance story summarized in verses 15:5-15:7. The third possibility is that Paul’s Scripture is from the Kerygma tradition which he states in 1Cor 15:3b-4. Possibly, that which Paul received is both the Kerygma and post-resurrection appearance stories.
In this pericope, Paul is describing the risen body. In as much as Christ is the only one who has been seen in this form, we assume that Paul is speaking about the resurrected body from the perspective of having encountered the risen Christ(15:8) and from the tradition that was handed on to him. As we attempt to discern what Paul has to say about the resurrected body, we should first reflect on the differences in perspective from first century view of body and the post-enlightenment view.
Descartes "constructed the category of nature to include only those parts of the universe that could be observed ‘scientifically’" and included the human body here (Martin 4). On the other hand, those things such as mind, soul, God, and the ‘I’ of the human self belonged to the nonphysical realm (Martin 5). Therefore, the body became a mindless machine and the human mind was the means by which a person is what they are. While this may sound similar to the system of duality attributed to Greek philosophers "Descartes’ radical separation of mind from body, his mechanistic view of the body and volitional view of the mind, is cloistering of nature as a separate ontological realm from soul, God, mind, or will…is a dichotomous system… of which the ancients knew nothing" (Martin 6).
Instead, the ancient world, including Paul, saw the world model as a hierarchy of essence (Martin 15). The body and soul of humans was made of the substance, as was all that surrounded them. Earth, water, air, fire, ether were the elements from which everything existed. Water resided above the earth, then air, fire, ether – the place where the stars, moon and sun reside and God’s (gods) domain was above all. The human body was seen as a microcosm of the macrocosm. The boundaries between the body and other elements was fluid. Human beings are a part of the earthly sphere. Blood and the spirit (pneuma) that moved in the blood came and went through the bodies pores. The pneuma was perhaps thought of as the highest of the elements that were in the body, although some may argue that the nous (mind) held this distinction. The more pneuma in the blood the less base (earthly) one was. The pneumas (spirits) also exerted force, causing action to take place. At death the body remained in the earthly sphere while the soul moved up in hierarchy according to its substance with the purer souls moving to the highest places in the ether and the less pure remaining closer to the earthly sphere. Most Greco-Roman people deprecated the body and therefore found it difficult, some impossible, to conceive of the resurrection of the body. According to Martin, "What they question is the idea that human bodies can survive after death and be raised to immortality" (122).
While Martin describes numerous perspectives, from doctors, philosophers, and others whose writings are available from the early centuries, he does not believe that the common people had access to or necessarily thought in this manner. Instead, he analyzes "the role of the pneuma in the Greco-Roman body" (21).
Martin claims that Paul is redefining the use of body (soma) in his resurrection doctrine. The pneuma is the substance of the celestial sphere or ether. Therefore, it is possible, in Paul’s thinking to conceive of a resurrected body that "is stripped of flesh (sarx), blood, and soul (psyche); it has nothing of the earth in it at all, being composed entirely of the celestial substance of pneuma" (Martin 128). This substance, pneuma, belongs to a particular hierarchy of essence. The pneuma is the stuff that celestial bodies are made of. Just as the earthly body has different flesh (sarx) that created diversity, so the celestial bodies are different in glory, creating diversity in the heavens. In death, the perishable earthly stuff is buried and rots away. In the resurrection, the imperishable celestial stuff is raised. The raised body is a body of substance, even though it is a different kind of substance. Each body, whether earthly or heavenly is given a body according to the will of God. God is sovereign throughout the hierarchy.
Martin does demonstrate that the early Christian situation is a complex one. He can be an interesting conversation partner, as we work to discover what the resurrected body is like. However, one should be cautious about the assumptions that Martin makes. Taking the writings of physicians, philosophers, and other writers of this time and interpreting Paul’s writings in light of them, may not provide an accurate picture of Paul’s position on the body. However, some of his exegetical work that is based in Paul’s letters to the Corinthians sheds some light on our discussion.
There were a variety of perspectives available to Paul in the first century. He was a Pharisee, well educated, well traveled. He was intimately familiar with Pharisaic Jewish practices and Greco-Roman culture. Most likely, Paul developed a resurrection perspective based on the diversity of his experience. Therefore, the best place to develop an understanding of Paul’s perspective, will be to look at Paul’s writings.
In a preliminary study of Paul’s use of the words soma and sarx in Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, 1 Thessalonians, Galatians, Philippians, and Philemon, I have found that when Paul uses soma he is referring to a place of indwelling (1Cor 12:12ff, 6:19, 2Cor5:1ff, Rom 8:11, 12:4). In the earthly soma, both the sarx and the pneuma can dwell. This creates a cosmic battle of sorts (Rom 7:5, 13:14,within the soma (Rom 7:5-6, Gal 5:16-17). The sarx is the place of creaturely passion and desires (Rom 7:5, 13:14, Gal 5:24) and a place of illness and suffering (2Cor 12:7, Gal 4:13).
In 1 Cor 15:35-42, we find that it is God who provides us with our bodies. God gives to those bodies flesh. It is the flesh of a body that perishes with death. When the body is resurrected, it has spirit but not flesh and is imperishable (v, 42). The glory of the resurrected bodies differs, just as the flesh of the earthly bodies differ. The analogy of the sown seed is played out throughout chapter 15. We find the beginnings of this analogy in verses 20 and 22, it continues here in 35-42 and on into verses 43-44. As seeds, we are planted in the ground (at death) and what sprouts in the resurrection is not what was planted, but a new body that no longer has flesh, but only spirit. Death leads to a new life. Flesh can not inherit the Kingdom of God (1 Cor 15:50).
What will the resurrected body be like? So far in this study we have noted that it will be our body but without the flesh. What will this be like? In Galatians 5:17-19 we find that the fleshly things are
: fornication, impurity, licentiousness, idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousy, anger, quarrels, dissensions, factions, envy, drunkenness, carousing, and things like these. While the fruit of the Spirit are: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control according to Gal 5:22-23.Bibliography
Martin, Dale B. The Corinthian Body. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995.
Neusner, Jacob. What is Midrash? Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1987.
|
RSV |
NASB |
J.B. Phillips |
Verse 50 |
I tell you this, brethren |
Now I say this, brethren |
For I assure you, my brothers |
Verse 51 |
Lo! I tell you a mystery. |
Behold, I tell you a mystery; |
Listen, and I shall tell you a secret. |
Verse 51 |
…nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable. |
…nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable. |
The transitory could never possess the everlasting. |
Verse 51 |
We shall not all sleep |
We shall not all sleep |
We shall not all die |
Verse 53 |
For this perishable nature must put on the imperishable, |
For this perishable must put on the imperishable, |
For this perishable nature of ours must be wrapped in imperishability… |
Verse 54 |
O Death, where is thy victory? |
O death, where is your victory? |
For where now, O Death, is your power to hurt us? |
Verse 56 |
The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. |
The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. |
It is sin which gives death its sting, and it is the Law which gives sin its strength. |
Verse 58 |
…knowing that in the Lord your labor is not in vain. |
…knowing that your toil is not in vain in the Lord. |
Be sure that nothing you do for him is ever lost or ever wasted. |
Step 1. a. Initial Acquaintance
Version comparisons of text: I Corinthians 15: 50 - 58
1. b. Text Critical Decisions
Several text critical
notes were of interest. In verse 51,
the phrase found in the text: ouv koimhqhso,meqa( pa,ntej de,
the word order changes, including the Sinaiticus version(a). Two versions, though carrying
less weight in our text critical schema, have also added the verb form avni,sthsoumeqa, to indicate the
distinct notion that the “change” of the bodily form will include a “raising
up.” The other text critical note of
note was contained in verses 54 and 55.
The word order is contested in several different sources, in combination
with a reliance on corrected texts, in particular the a source. This issue is
further confused by sources for the quoted text, whether from the Septuagint
version, or the original Hebrew. I followed through on this confusing
separation and rating of text sources by reading several commentaries. The outer margin notes indicate that Verse
54 contains a direct quote from Isaiah 25:8;
Verse 55 contains a direct quote from Hosea 13: 14. However, the text critical commentary
indicates many lines of argument regarding what might be the “correct” version
of each “quote.” In the end I chose to
leave the text as found in the Nestle-Aland 27th edition, 1993.
1. c. Rough Translation
50) Now this I say brothered ones, that flesh and blood (the) kingdom of God to inherit is not able, nor that which is perishable the imperishable inherit. 51) Behold, a secret to you I say: not all we will sleep, but all we will change. 52) In a moment, in the wink of an eye, in the last trumpet call: for a trumpet will sound and the dead they will be raised up incorruptible and we will be changed. 53) For one must this perishable nature to put on for one’s self the imperishable and this mortal nature to put on for one’s self immortality. 54) But when this which is to decay he may put on incorruptible and this mortal nature may put on immortality, then will come the word, the one having been written, “Swallow them down, Death, into victory.” 55) Where of you, death, (is) the victory? Where of you, death, (is) the sting? 56) But the sting of death (is) the sin, the power of the sin (is) the law. 57) But to God thanks, giving to/for us the victory through the Lord of us, Jesus Christ. 58) Therefore brothered ones of me, beloved, steadfast y’all remain, unmovable, abounding in the work of the Lord always, knowing that the labor of y’all is not in vain in (the) Lord.
1. What is the semantic difference between a “mystery” and a “secret?” How is Paul using the term in this instance?
2. If we don’t die, “fall asleep,” as stated in verse 51, where do, or will we go until the moment of changing, which is to be “at the last trumpet?”
3. What is the significance of the trumpet sounding and the dead being raised?
4. What is the significance of “putting on” the imperishable and the immortality?
5. What is the significance of the sayings in verses 54 and 5? How does the complex text critical documentation help us understand the original form?
6. Why the use of “sleep” as synonymous with “die?”
7. How do we know what “the work of the Lord” is to be for each of us?
8. What was the role of a letter to a church in the early Christian church?
Questions concerning the use of terminology, 1,4, 5 and 6 will hopefully be answered in further delving into the basis of the Greek terms used, with possible further exploration into word histories. Questions 2 and 3 may be answered by research into Hebrew beliefs of the time period. Question 8 might be answered in a genre typology exploration within the Primitive Christianity and OT/Judaism sections.
The pericope immediately preceding verses 50- 58 contains
the thoughts of Paul comparing the difference the death of “physical” body and
the spiritual body that is raised. Upon completion of chapter fifteen, the
final verses of the letter respond to upcoming visits, potentially by Paul,
most assuredly one from Timothy and personal greetings. Chapter sixteen contains one more
admonition: “Be watchful, stand firm in
your faith, be courageous, be strong.
Let all that you do be done in love.” (I Cor. 16: 13,14)
The First Letter to the Corinthians is in the letter form, though, according to Kummel, Paul’s letters tend to “rise above the general run of letters as a result of the free, well-thought-out shaping of these sections,” meaning the prescript, proem, and eschatokoll, which are shaped “by the paranesis and the communications concerning the journeys of Paul and his traveling companions.” (Kummel references Funk on this point) Kummel goes on to say that the letters of Paul are letters of the “apostle in his official capacity; they serve the furthering of his missionary ministry at a distance.” (248, 249) The significance of these comments to our study is contained in the comment that the letters are “furthering,” or to us, the letters might be seen as a continuing presence of Paul through the written word in a congregation that he has already started.
Thus, in reference to the current study in the Resurrection class, moving through the historicity questions, with a constant eye out for elements of an appearance story Gattung behind each redactional layer in the gospel narratives, I believe we can safely agree with Dr. Alsup when he states in response to the question of the appearance stories serving as “sermon illustrations to the kerygma” that “an acceptance of the gospel stories as illustrations can hardly be thought of as convincing for any sector of Christian mission in this earliest period.” (61) The first letter to the Corinthians is kh,rugma, “proclamation,” the words of a religious speaker sent by God to “preach.” Paul is the man from God, the church in Corinth is the recipient of his kh,rugma, or message of proclamation. (BDB, 430,431)
Old Testament/Judaism
The Old Testament
references to the use of trumpets sounding at the last judgment is of interest
in this particular pericope. The use of
the trumpet, or the “eschatological significance” of the horn is discussed in
the Theological Dictionary of the New Testament. The horn that will turn the tide and move forward the liberation
of the Jews will be blown “by God Himself.” (Zech. 9:14)
In discussing the apocalyptic use of the horn in Jewish cultic times,
the writer notes that the “blast of the horn makes God merciful, it confuses
Satan…..when he hears the second blast he knows the time has come to be
swallowed up, and so he withdraws.”
Additionally, the Alphabet-Midrash of R. Aquiba, 9,is quoted: “...at the
seventh [blast] they come to life and stand on their feet in their clothes, as
it is said: ‘The almighty Yahweh will blow the horn. (Zech 9: 14)’” Moving forward to the
use of the trumpet in I Corinthians 15: 52, within the realm of primitive
Christianity, again in the Theological Dictionary, the sound of the trumpet is
noted as the “eschatological signal which sounds forth at the end of the age.”
No person is designated in this passage as the “horn blower,” the one given the
honor of sounding the last note calling the living and the dead to be
transformed. We may safely deduce that
a human force will not cause the blast of the trumpet. (TDNT, 80,84,87,88)
Hellenistic World
The city of Corinth was situated between two harbors and thus became a central trading place, where the ideals, philosophies, morals and religious beliefs of many people were tested and tried amongst the population. In the midst of this vice-filled city, known for corruption, syncretism and lasciviousness, Paul started a congregation. The form of the letter allows us to ascertain with a certain amount of accuracy the problems facing the congregation, which included sexual immorality, reliance upon pagan courts for justice, eating meals at which meat sacrificed to idols was served and worship that had disintegrated into arguments over the ordering of spiritual gifts. Not the least of the problems facing the congregation was the denial on behalf of portions of the community in the resurrection of the dead. Each of these disagreements is a sign that the community was divided. Divided they could not stand, in the ideological language of the current American culture, and to the mind of Paul. The fifteenth chapter of Corinthians begins “Now I would remind you, brethren, in what terms I preached to you the gospel, which you received, in which you stand, by which you are saved, if you hold it fast—unless you believed in vain.” I Cor. 15: 1-2. R SV
Verse 51 states, “Listen, I tell you a mystery.” Paul apparently moves the use of the word musth,rion to incorporate the special sense of knowledge contained in the gnwsis, which came to be used as a name for the Gnostics, known to be heretical in their understanding of the special knowledge they had, to which “ordinary” people were not privy. In the twelfth and fourteenth chapters of I Corinthians, Paul places the two words, musth,rion and gnwsis, in such a way as to “invest the term (gnwsis) with the significance of supernatural mystical knowledge – a meaning which the word has in Hellenic Greek, especially in the mystery cults.” Paul uses this term, laden with Hellenistic notions regarding special revealed knowledge, immediately after writing about the transformation that will occur to both “the living as well as the dead.” Imagine the effect of his definitive statement on the community surrounding the congregation, perhaps even those on the edge of the church, who found the pneumatikos (spiritual).
In verse 53, Paul uses
the noun avqanasi,an. Found in
this location and I Timothy 6: 16 (where the word is applied to God,) the use
of the word in this verse indicates a negative death, or “deathlessness.” Interpreted in my translation as
“immortality,” this word indicates that the one will be “putting on deathlessness,”
or “putting on immortality.” “In 1 Cor.
15: 53, the incorruptible mode of existence of the resurrected is called avqanasi,an as in Hellenistic Judaism, the thought being not
merely that of eternal duration but of a mode of existence different from that
of sarx and aima.” (TDNT, Vol 3 pg 24.) Philo, in Life of Moses 2.51.288,
wrote, “Afterward the time came when he had to make his pilgrimage from earth
to heaven, and leave this immortal life for immortality, summoned thither by
the Father, Who resolved his twofold nature of soul and body into a single
unity, transforming his whole being into mind, pure as the sunlight.” As noted in the Hellenistic Commentary, Paul
and Philo did agree on the fact that a future life would not be based in flesh
and blood. (441) However, Philo separates from Paul with his belief that the
future of the body will be a transformation into an immaterial form, “an
immaterial form of being similar to light.”
Paul is clear in this pericope that the future of our flesh and blood
will not be a transformation into “mind, pure as the sunlight,” but a putting
on, a robbing, of our body with immortality.
The issue of clothing a body with immortality, as William Orr notes, was
particularly important for Paul. In the time he was writing the notions of
Greek philosophers stated that immortality was a “natural endowment” of
humanity. (349) Paul is clear that the attributes of immortality and
imperishability are attributes that we acquire in the power of the
resurrection, not qualities we live with on a daily basis. Paul’s believed in the power and necessity
of belief in resurrection as the engine that drove the belief-system of a
Christian. The call of this power came
from the example God provided to humanity in human likeness, Jesus, known to us
as Emmanuel, or “God with us.”
Distillation
Viewing
the information gleaned from various resources to fill in the gap of knowledge
revealed in my questions through the lens of historicity and the kerygmatic
importance of Paul’s message to Corinth, the importance of several issues comes
together in this last passage of Chapter fifteen. Paul is combating specific attitudes and issues that came from
the church at Corinth, as noted in 15: 7:1.
With religious syncretism a prominent element in the life of Corinth,
mixed with a strong emphasis on various Greek philosophic systems, such as the
Epicureans and Stoics, the strength of Paul’s message is in the forcefulness
and cogency of his argument. He calls upon the knowledge of Jewish apocalyptic
history by referring to the call of the trumpet, though in this passage we do
not know who will blow the trumpet, we can believe that the sound will emit
from heaven. Also, Old Testament passages are quoted, with minor changes that
submit the strength of scriptures of the synagogue to the force of power
contained in the resurrection.
Paul is clear that our bodies will be gathered for the final resurrection,
which I believe he is anticipating that he will be a part of at the final
moment. Verse 51 includes “all,” and
uses the first-person plural Future Indicative Passive form for the verbs,
placing Paul in the time frame of the resurrection. He obviously spoke from an apocalyptic stance, viewing the “end
time” as imminent in his lifetime.
The chapter begins and ends with a reliance on the same word, ken.os, “vain.” That which we do “in the Lord” will not
be done in vain. In 15:2 Paul wrote,
“unless you have come to believe in vain.”
The circle is completed, Paul’s arguments and analogies have been set forth
and strong encouragement is given to a church wavering on the brink of
disbelief.