PAUL THE APOSTLE : HIS PERSONALITY AND ' ACHIEVEMENT.'# BY A. S. PEAKE, M.A., D.D. RYLANDS PROFESSOR OF BIBLICAL EXEGESIS IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER. TH E uncertainty in which the chronology of Paul's life is in- volved makes it impossible for us to say with any confidence how it was apportioned between his pre-Christian and his Christian period. But before his conversion he had carried on an energetic persecution of the Christians in Palestine and had been en- trusted by the High Priest with letters authorking him to undertake ' An amplification of the lecture delivered in the John Flylands Library. the 14th Dec., 1 927. The sources for our knowledge of Paul and his work are his own Epistles and the Acts of the Apostles. Of the former I regard as genuine all but the Pastoral Epistles Genuine Pauline material is to be found in 2 Timothy and perhaps in Titus. This is confirmed by P. N. Harrison's elaborate investigations, The Problem of the Pastoral EpistLes (1 92 1 ). Harnack's most recent pronouncement is in his Die Briefiammlung des Apostels Paulus (1 926). He thinks that Dr. Hamson greatly overestimates the value of lexical statistics (pp. 74 f.) ; but he reaches a similar result ; the are pseudo-Pauline writings in which Pauline material has been embodiel most of all in 2 Timothy which may on the other hand be an interpolated Pauline Epistle (pp. 14 f.). On the other hand E. Meyer, Urspmng und Anfange des Christenturns, Vol. 111. (1 923), pp. 132-4, rejects the authenticity absolutely, and regards the attempt to find even trustworthy material in 2 Timothy as completely untenable. I have always regarded the Acts of the Apostles as the composition of Luke ; but in spite of the work of Ramsay, and even of Harnack, the critical tide has all along continued to flow strongly in the other direction; and Loisy has outstripped his German colleagues in the negative character of his criticism. It was refreshing to find that E. Meyer, in the work mentioned above, with his wide experience, immense erudition, and all the prestige which belongs to our foremost historian of antiquity had come down de- cisively on the side of tradition at this point; all the more m that at other points his views are often quite radical. 363 24 364 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY an extension of this persecution to Damascus. He can hardly, then have been quite young at the time ; if we think of him as from thirty to thirty-five we shall perhaps not be far from the mark. We do not depreciate the revolutionary effect of his conversion, if we recognise that his personality and character were by this time largely formed. The personality received a new direction, he was dominated by new motives, his character was deepened and enriched. But there was a fundamental unity beneath the differences which marked the two stages of his career. He was a Jew of Tarsus and a Roman citizen. Whatever his pride ,that he had been born and bred in Tarsus-" no mean city **- and that by birth he was also a Roman citizen, his pride of race and religion went far deeper. He gloried in the purity of his blood, he was a Hebrew, the child of Hebrew parents, sprung from the tribe of Benjamin. Even after he had become a Christian and received his commission as Apostle to the Gentiles his patriotism was intense ; hi love for his own people, which pursued him with such rancorous hate, burned with a constant and passionate glow. He yearned for the salvation of' his kinsfolk. His heart ached for them with unceasing pain. He, for whom to live was Christ and who poured out on Him all the wealth of adoration and love of a nature so rich in loyalty and affection, could yet be willing to be anathema from Him if only by so supreme a surrender he could secure their salvation. He was, it is his true, aery conscious of the defects of nation. In pungent language he speaks of the Jews as those " who both killed the Lord Jesus and the prophets, and drave out us, and please not Cod, and are contrary to all men ; forbidding us to speak to the Gentiles that they may be saved ; to fill up their sins alway : but the wrath is come upon them to the uttermost " (1 Thess. ii 14- 16). He was profoundly conscious, none the less, of Israel's religious and moral superiority to the Gentiles. The advantage of the Jew was " much every way." To his kinsmen, acording to the flesh, had been entrusted the oracles of God ; they bore the proud name of Israelites ; to them belonged the adoption and the Shekinah, the covenants, the : Law, the Divinely ordained ceremonial, the precious promises they had the patriarchs for their ancestors and from them sprang the Messiah on the human side of His being (Rom, ix. 3-5). Apostle to the Gentiles though he is, he insists that it is Israel which has been PAUL THE APOSTLE 365 and remains the true olive tree ; the Gentiles are grafted in, but in order that Israel may be incited to accept the Gospel. He desired to carry over what he could from the old religion into the new. He had a strong sense of continuity ; and here we note his balance as con- trasted with his radical disciple Marcion, who regarded the Law as the gift of an inferior God, a rigid and pedantic legalist, and thought of Jesus as making a completely new beginning. He constantly appealed to the Old Testament in his correspondence even with the Gentiles, and referred scarcely at all to Creek writers. He had all the recoil df the Jew from pagan vice, his horror of polytheism and idolatry, his passionate monotheism. He was proud of his training under Camaliel, though the fanaticism of the disciple stood in glaring contrast to the tolerance of his master. Born and trained a Jew, he remained a Jew to the end. He was a Jew-but a Jew of the Dispersion. He was proud of his city, Gentile city though it was. In those early impressionable years he was in constant contact with Gentile life. His mastery of the Creek language was such as he could hardly have acquired in later hi years. Not improbably Aramaic might often be heard in home, but in any case he must have become familiar with it in Palestine and Syria. He may have had some knowledge of Greek literature and philosophy and of various types of Gentile religion. But his Jewish conditions would insulate him from Paganism to a greater extent than is often recognised. I find it difficult to believe that the rigid Pharisee, brought up by parents who belonged to that straitest of sects, can have studied at the University of Tarsus. Nor is it likely that he would know much about Gentile religion in any intimate way. He would learn about it in conversation ; and public ceremonial he could observe. But he would never visit a heathen temple, still less would he have any contact with Mystery religions. Naturally these two factors, Jewish and Creek, did not remain distinct and flow side by side without mingling. They were blended by the unity of his personality. But he was also a Roman citizen, with an imperial outlook. To his pride of race was added the pride of possessing by birth a privilege, to which great advantage and prestige were attached and for which large sums were willingly paid. Physically he does not appear to have been impressive. He was in bodily presence weak. Apparently he suffered during a long stretch 366 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY of his ministry from some serious physical trouble. This may have been malarial fever, or possibly opthalmia ; we have scarcely sufficient evidence for diagnosis ; but the medical evidence seems not to favour the view that it was epilepsy.' Yet the immensity of his labours, the burden of the responsibility which continually rested upon him, the perilous experiences through which he passed with safety, the privations from which he suffered, the cruel mishandling he had repeatedly to endure1-all testify to the toughness of his constitution. The sugge* tion of physical insignificance is confirmed by the fact that the people of Lystra identified Barnabas with Zeus and Paul with Hermes. A famous description in The Acts o f Paul and Thecda is more detailed, but while it corroborates the suggestion as to his size and physical ap- pearance, it adds what we might otherwise have expected as to the charm and attractiveness of his personality. He is described as "a man little of stature, thin-haired upon the head, crooked in the legs, of good state of body, with eyebrows joining, and nose somewhat hooked, full of grace : for sometimes he appeared like a man, and sometimes he had the face of an angel." (Quoted from Dr. M. R James' trans- lation in The Afocryp/lal New Testament, p. 273.) I pass on to consider his intellectual qualities and equipment. Ac- cording to the statement in the speech he is said to have made to the Jews from the stairs of the castle, he was brought up in Jerusalem at the feet of Camaliel (Acts xxii. 3). This is not recorded elsewhere ; and Loisy sets it aside because it occurs in a speech which he regards as an invention by the redactor of Acts. He adds that there is noth- ing to suggest that Paul had been a rabbi though he may have listened to discourses by the rabbis. The redactor's motive in making the statement was that he wished to claim for Paul that he was perfect in Judaism, and so he asserts that the apostle had had the best Jewish education. Loisy's whole attitude to the redactor, whose very exist- ence is extremely doubtful, is so morbidly suspicious and sceptical that we may well distrust any conclusion based on the general premiss which seems to underlie his criticism, that unless we have independent corroboration we must approach hi statements with a resolute will to ' See Ramsay, The Teaching of Paul (1 91 3). Section XLVIII, " The theory that Paul was an epileptic." a See especially tfre amazing catalogue of labours and derings in 2 Cor. xi. 23-33 (cf. iv. 8-1 2, i4- 10). PAUL THE APOSTLE 367 disbelieve. The statement in Acts xxii. 3 is quite incidental. If it had been one of his fictions," the redactor would presumably have " made more of it, and introduced it when his hero was introduced. This is connected, however, with the denial that Paul had any contact with the Palestinian Church before his conversion. Mommsen inferred this from Gal. i. 22,' " I was still unknown by face unto the 1 churches of Judaea which were in Christ." Loisy takes the same view. Bousset adopted it in the first edition of his Ky?.ios Christos (1 9 1 3), but abandoned it under Wellhausen's influence in Jesus &Y Herr (1 91 6), p. 3 1 (see also Kyrios Christos, 2nd ed., p. 75). It would be just as legitimate to infer from the words in the following verse, he who once persecuted us," that the victims of his persecution " were to be found in Judaea. Indeed Wendland, whose treatment of the New Testament narratives is often pretty sceptical, says, " Gal. i 23 completely establishes the fact of his residence in Jerusalem before his conversion. There he became a fanatical zealot for the Law." Moreover, the attempt to deny outright or even to minimise this hostile collision with the community in Jerusalem involves far too violent a handling of the narrative in Acts. Nothing can be based on Paul's failure to mention the actual scene of his persecution. He does not mention Damascus itself in the reference to his conversion (Gal. i. 1 5 f.) ; and it is only from the incidental remark, "and again I returned to Damascus," that we learn that Damascus had been the starting-point for his journey to Arabia, and therefore the scene of his conversion. But for this, and the similarly incidental reference in 2 Cor. xi. 32 f., Loisy might very well, on his critical principles, have treated the whole story of Paul's connection with Damascus as one of the innumerable fictions which he credits to the account of his unspeakable redactor. I should not have tarried so long on these points, but for the fact that they are pressed against the generally accepted beliefs that Paul was a student in the Rabbinical schools of Jerusalem, and therefore trained in the type of Judaism current there ; and that he persecuted Zeitschrzyt fiir die neutest. Wissenschaft( ZNTW),1 901, p. 85. See on the other hand J. Weiss, Das Urchvistentum (1 91 3), p. 136 ; with this Von Dobschiitz expresses agreement, Der AposteZ P a l q L (1 926) pp. 49, 57. Feine, Der AposteZ Pmlus (1927) p. 420 f:, also rejects the new, arguing that " Judea " is used to distinguish the provlnce from Jerusalem, the capital city. ' Die Hellenistz'sch-Romische Kultur (2nd ed., 1912 ), p. 242. THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY the Christians in Jerusalem and therefore gained his earliest knowledge of Christianity G m h is contact with the mother church. His ~udaisi would on that supposition be Judaism of the Dispersion ; and the Christianity with which he first came into contact would also be ~hristianityo f the Dispersion and not of Jerusalem. It would there- fore be possible to suspect that it was already somewhat Hellenised or at least de-Judaised? It must be remembered that this is not dis- interested criticism. Its object is, by discrediting Paul's contact with the Palestinian Church before his conversion, to detach his interpreta- tion of the Gospel from that of the primitive community. This involves the rejection of the whole representation that he had anything to do with the persecution of the Palestinian Christians, and this again is made much easier if the whole story of his residence in Jerusalem can be set aside, with the incidental advantage that the typeof Judaism in ' Heitmiiller (ZNTW,1 91 2, p. 330) says Paul is separated from " Jesus not only by the primitive community, but by yet another link. The development runs in this series : Jesus-primitive community-Hellenistic Christianity-Paul." Bousset had independently reached the same con- clusion, and warmly approved of Heitrniiller's formulation (Kyrtbs Chvistos, 2nd ed., p. 75, cf. yesus der Herr, pp. 30 .).ff The Christians at Damascus may have represented Hellenistic Christianity ; but if we can trust the nama- tive in Acts-and in its main features we have found it trustworthy-then Paul's contact with that group was later in time than and much inferior in im- portance to his contact with the primitive community. The question might This also be raised whether Paul had been in contact with Jesus Himself. has been generally-and in my judgment rightly- regarded as improbable ; Ib ut among ourselves the affirmative view ha been taken by Ramsay and J. H. Moulton. It has been defended most thoroughly bd ' J. Weiss in his Pmhs. und]esus (1 91 O,.pp. 22 ff ., Eng. transl. Paul an Jems, 1909, pp. 28-56 Cf. also his note Dar Urthnj.tentum, p 137. 1 cannot refrain ham adb ing how deeply I deplore the premature death of a scholar so gifted and so stimulating, which deprived us of his own conclusion of Dm Ur&rz'stentum, of the contemplated companion volume dealing with the religious background of primitive Christianity and the life and teaching of Jesus, and of his com- mentary on 2 Corinthians. Von Dobschiitz agrees with J. Weiss' contention (Der AjosfeC PauZus, p. 50), and says, " If Paul was not accidentally absent from Jerusalem, scarcely anything else is possible than that he himself saw Jesus there and perhaps was even present at His execution. The former may be inferred from 2 Cor. iii 16; the latter would best explain the central significance which he Crucified later possessed in the preaching of the apostle " (p. 3). See also the striking discussion in Feine, op. n't., pp. 43 1-5, reaching the same conclusion. Loofs ( Wer war Jesus Chn'stus? 191 6, p. 163) favours this view, but adds that the question is one of subordinate signiticance. El Meyer (op. n't. IIL, 339) regards it as very dubious. PAUL THE APOSTLE 369 which he was trained was not that of the Rabbinical schools in Jerusalem, but the Judaism of Tarsus affected by its Gentile environ- ment. It is, of course, obvious that he was familiar with Judaism as it existed in Tarsus ; but it would be specially with its religion, ethics and peculiar customs that he would be in contact as a boy ; the know- ledge of Judaism as a theology, of the scholasticism of the rabbis and their exegetical method and dialectic he would gain in Jerusalem. There, too, he would become acquainted with Christianity, as it existed in its primitive form. He was, accordingly, thoroughly educated on Jewish lines. The positive value of this education consisted not so much in the intrinsic value of what he actually learnt as in the intellectual training which the discipline gave him. At the same time it did equip him very effectively for dealing with his Jewish Christian critics when he was contending for the freedom of the Gospel. His controversial passages exhibit great subtlety of argument and skill in dialectic. If we feel, as at points we must, that the reasoning does not impress us, we ought not to criticise the apostle on that account. He was not writing for us but for men of his own age and race. He met them on their own . ground and turned their own weapons against them. As we come to know him, we realise more and more how thoroughly Jewish he was- a truth of which we ought not to lose sight when we are reconstructing his theology. But he was not lost in intricate subtleties, nor did he concentrate on minutiae. He handled large subjects in a large way ; he could lift them clear out of aU littleness and narrowness. He dealt with trivial things in a great way, not with great things in a trivial way. He treated them in the light of eternal principles. He was a controversi- alist of the first order, in virtue not only of the keenness and resource- fulness with which he analysed the position of his opponents or the skill with which he expounded and the cogency with which he defended his own positions, but in virtue also of his sweep of view and his gift of relating the particular to the universal. Nor can we deny him the virtue of originality. However much he drew from various sources-and the extent of hi debt and the identity of his creditors are the subject of animated debate-we ought to recognise to the full how largely his presentation of Christianity was 370 THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY his own. He was a pioneer of the first rank. He felt that Christ had made all things new and he was deeply conscious how fresh and new his own message was. But we should do him a grave injustice if we thought of him as simply formulating new ideas. He had the systematic gift and built his ideas into a coherent structure? The Gospel which he preached did not consist of a number of disconnected doctrines ; it was a system in which the ideas were intimately related to each other and fused into an organic whole. To him we owe the first Christian theology, apologetic, and philosophy of history. But though the theology is a great intellectual achievement and could have been created only by a profound and original thinker, it would be a serious error to think of it as the product of pure reasoning. It was rooted in a great religious and ethical experience and we can understand and do it justice only as we have entered into the spiritual conflict which darkened his life under the Law and have passed on into his radiant assurance of in- ward peace and reconciliation with God. That personal experience gave h ih is central doctrine of a mystical union with Christ, achieved by an act of self-renouncing trust in which he died to his old life and rose again to the new, attaining in Christ a new status, a new character and a new destiny. It supplied him kith hi interpretation of his old life without Christ. The futile struggle between the higher and the lower nature, which ruptured the inward harmony of his personality when he awoke to the consciousness of a moral order and instinctively rebelled against it, suggested his doctrine of the flesh, that wholly evil side of him in which sin slumbered till it was wakened by the coming of the Law. That this individual experience found its explanation in a racial experience, is true, and that in formulating this explanation Paul went into history and discovered it in the two racial personalities, Adam and Christ, is also true. And that in doing so he drew upon doctrines which he received from others and did not entirely create may be freely recognised. But Paul's theory did not start with these representative figures ; it had its rise in the drama of tragedy and of rapture which had been enacted within his own breast. But naturally, lI am well aware that a strong current runs in the opposite direction, represented in an extreme form by such scholars as Wrede, but stated in a more moderate form by others. I adhere to the position I stated in my Quintessence of Paulinism (1 91 8), pp. 5 f. PAUL THE APOSTLE with his philosophic interest, he could not rest content without moving behind the experience of individuals to discover a universal cause. It may seem a trivial matter whether we suppose that he started with the universal and deduced from it the particular instance, or whether the individual case came first and led on to the generalisation. But really it is not trivial. For our estimate of Paul it matters much whether his central doctrines were born out of his own moral struggle and victory, or whether the personal doctrine was but the logical application of a philosophical theory. The doctrine which is born out of experience comes to us with other credentials than one which is created by theological speculation, and it speaks to us a far more intimate message. Paul was not the incarnation of cold inhuman thought, there was a pro- foundly emotional element in the experience which lay behind his doctrine. To this aspect ot the apostle's personality I must now turn. He had an emotional nature of exceptional depth and richness. hi He loved his people who had spurned him and crucified Lord with a love far surpassing the common measure. I have already reminded you that he bore unceasing pain and sorrow in his heart for his kinsfolk according to the flesh ; and if only they could be saved was willing to become himself anathems from Christ. He loved his Churches and prayed constantly for them ; he was heartbroken over their failures, but filled with joy when he heard of their moral and spiritual triumphs. He was able to inspire deep affection in his converts. He had a re- markable attraction for younger men whom he gathered about him. They served him with filial devotion ; he returned it with kindness and generous confidence and loved them with a deep and tender affection. He counted love the finest grace of the Christian character, the loftiest virtue of the Christian life, apart from which all spiritual gdts, however splendid, lost their value. He sang of its excellence in sweet and noble strains, whose matchless phrases still strike on our ears as at once an inspiration and a challenge. In Paul strength and sweetness met t%ether. For he was not all sweetness. He had a virile character ; he was a dominant and masterful personality. He knew his own mind and was prepared if hi necessary to impose his will. Hec ould on occasion cow opponents into submission. He had great moral courage. He did not shrink from rebuking even Peter, the most commanding personality among the immediate disciples of Jesus, the most revered and influential member THE JOHN RYLANDS LIBRARY of the apostolic band. Paul was Peter's junior and his apostolic status. was by no means universally conceded. The attunpts Of this upstart, once a rigid Pharisee and resolute persecutor, to force the pace were hotly resented. The Jewish Christians who had followed Peter in hi5 liberal attitude towards the Gentile converts now shared the moral cowardice of his retreat. Even Barnabas had been carried away and had giien a misplaced exhibition of a conciliatory temper towards the- emissaries of James, but of bigoted exclusiveness towards his Gentile brethren. Then the long-suffering Paul, who had watched with pain the growing rii within the fellowship, could keep silent no longer. He withstood Peter to his face before them all and in incisive words brought home to him the inconsistency with his principles which his. timorous narrowness involved.' Yet where principle was not at stake Paul himself was conciliatory. He displayed a sympathetic imagination in his attitude to views which he did not share ; a tender consideration for the scruples of weaker brethren, which his robust good sense brushed aside as in themselves in- significant. These weak brethren for whom Christ had died were very dear to hi. He flames out in indignation at the selfish and flippant lack of consideration shown to them by the strong, the men who rightly saw that such scruples had no substance and encouraged the weak ta disobey their conscience. " Who is tripped up," he exclaims, and I " do not burn with indignation at the outrage ? " ' Loisy judges' Paul to have been more to blame for his lack of modera- tion than Peter and Barnabas for their concession to Jewish prejudices. He supposes that the Church of Antioch did not stand by him, and that he no longer had any connexion with it: The evidence of Acts xviii. 22 f. to the contrary is set aside (see his L'Epitve aux Galates, I91 6, pp. 124 ff., Les Actes des Apbtm, pp. 607- 1 1, 61 4-6). Loisy, it must be remembered, is very unsympathetic with Paul. He says that Barnabas was at least as great. a man ; greater, he thinks apparently, if he wrote the Epistle to the Hebrews (01n. 'r., p. 61 6). Von Dobschiitz, on the other hand, believes that we must infer from Paul's way of telling the story and from the later course of events that the victory lay with Paul, but that Paul had lost his joy in co-operation wih Barnabas (01n. 't., p. 9). E. Meyer, reminding us here of the Tiibiigen critics, argues that the controversy left a permanent breach between Peter and Paul, the senior apostle attacking Paul in his own churches (Galatia, Corinth) and finally in Rome (01a. 't., III., 424-6,432-6, 441 f., 455-9,464,493-500). It- is not likely that this will find much acceptance. Paul's subsequent relations with Jerusalem, espedally his zeal in raising funds to relieve the impoverishes members of the mother Church, make the theory of a bitter and permanent feud with Peter very difficult.
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