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Paul, The Lawyer, on Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 September 2015
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Saul, a Jew, later called Paul, was born in the predominately Greek city of Tarsus located in Asia Minor. The Greek Jew was a zealous Pharisee and a contemporary of Jesus although he had not seen him. One day in approximately 35 A.D. he was traveling to Damascus to arrest Christians who were to be punished (persecuted). On the road to Damascus he was met by Christ, who asked him: “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me? And he (Paul) said, ‘Who are you Lord?’ And he said, ‘I am Jesus whom you are persecuting …’” (Acts 9:4-5). Paul fell into a coma and lost his sight which was restored three days later by Christ's agent. He was utterly convinced and never doubted that he had been authorized by Christ to be an apostle.
The most important facts that should never be lost sight of are, first, that Paul's experience on the road to Damascus was so dramatic, emotional, and intense that his consequent profound faith in Christ must supply the premise of any interpretation of his epistles. Second, quite different but also extremely important is the almost universal agreement that Paul was a genius. In sum, we are dealing with the discourse of a genius, a very emotional one, who had an overwhelming experience that made faith in Christ paramount in all aspects of his subsequent life.
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References
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See Sutherland, , Statutory Construction 315, § 51.05 (4th ed. 1973)Google Scholar. Sutherland added “… unless it appears that the legislature intended to make the general act(s) controlling.” The Cal. Civ. Code § 3534 (Deering 1984)Google Scholar provides: “Particular expressions qualify those which are general.” See Fourco Glass Co. v. Transmirra Products Co., 353 U.S. 222, 228-29 (1957). The classical maxim is Lex specialis derogai legi generates.
“Concrete instructions can help control interpretations of the general or theoretical statements about the relationship between behavior and the law.” Sanders, supra n.9, at 94.
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57. Justification by faith alone is a “Pauline Creation.” Bornkamm, G., Paul 115 (1971)Google Scholar. Cf. Matt. 5:17 ffGoogle Scholar. and Luke 16:17Google Scholar. In view of Paul's legal training and his life as a Pharisee, it is difficult to accept Shoeps' thesis that Paul “failed to grasp the inner meaning of the Mosaic law namely, that it is an instrument by which the covenant is realized … he tears asunder covenant and law, and then represents Christ as the end of the law.” Schoeps, supra note 52, at 218, 213.
58. “In the course of his work among Gentiles he had fully internalized the Gentile point of view and identified himself with it.” Räisänen supra note 4, at 258. So, too, Sanders, supra note 9, at 152-3.
Hübner: “What Räisänen and Sanders say is untenable and misjudges the essense of Paul's experience of his call.” Letter, supra note 8.
59. Luther, , 25 Works—Lectures on Romans 330 (Oswold, H. ed. 1972)Google Scholar.
60. In Galatians, “Paul aims at an either/or decision since all is either won or lost.” Beker, supra note 9, at 45. Beker draws a nice distinction between a “polemic of persuausion” (Romans) and a “polemic of confrontation,” a “combat” letter (Galatians). Id. at 104. “It is further remarkable, that all five of the groups of metaphors just mentioned [justification, reconciliation, forgiveness, redemption, adoption] are taken from the practice of law.” Deissmann, A., Paul—A Study in Religious History 176–77 (2d ed. 1927)Google Scholar.
“Paul found in the sacred texts what he was looking for, and often interpreted them against their original intention.” Räisänen, supra note 4, at 73; also id. 95 note 13.
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61. Paul's appeal “was obviously crowned with success, for the Galatians remained a Pauline Christian community,” Schoeps, supra note 52, at 78.
62. Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 347 U.S. 483 (1954).
63. Schweitzer, supra note 11, at 160.
64. Schoeps, supra note 52, at 278.
65. Räisänen, supra note 4, at 6.
66. Beker, supra note 9, at 95. Beker detects “occasional inconsistencies.” Id. at x; but he also writes (consistently?) that the logic in Galatians is “often inconsistent.” Id. at 57-58.
67. Baeck, L., Judaism and Christianity 163 (1958)Google Scholar. After noting that Paul's epistles have been criticized as “disjointed, loose, full of warmth and zeal,” John Locke (1632-1704) wrote that Paul “knew how to prosecute his purpose with strength of argument and close reasoning … He is certainly a coherent, argumentative, pertinent writer.” Locke, John, A Paraphrase and Notes on the Epistles of St. Paul 14–16 (London, 1823)Google Scholar.
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69. Räisänen, supra note 4, at 83.
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“… grace revealed itself originally in the law. This was perverted when the law was misunderstood, as a demand for achievement. In this persuasion, however, the law brings death …” Käsemann, supra note 6, at 198.
72. “As a former Pharisee he could not distinguish between the cultic and the ethical Torah, as later Christianity did, for to him the law was indivisible.” Käsemann, id. at 186.
73. Sandmel, supra note 3, at 45.
74. “Side by side with his numberless moral exhortations to Christians to battle against sin, there are confessions of Paul the Christian himself, testimonies that even one who has experienced the new creation still knows at times the old deep sense of sin.” A. Deissmann, supra n.60, at 179. Cf. Gal. 2:17Google Scholar.
“But the only concrete sin qua sin in his life, the sin which he mentions, is that he persecuted the church ( 1 Cor. 15:9Google Scholar).” Stendahl, supra note 8, at 14.
75. Even if Paul was not conscience-stricken, unless his unhappy experience as a Jew is premised, “it becomes unintelligible how and why Christ superseded the law.” “When he indicts the Jew for transgressing the law or for boasting … he must have known something of both in his own Jewish life.” Beker, supra note 9, at 241. “We can never exclude with certainty the possibility that Paul was secretly dissatisfied with the law before his conversion call.” Sanders, supra note 9, at 152. And see supra note 56. Sandmel writes of Paul's “inability to live up to the Law” and of “the personal, subjective difficulty which the Law occasioned for Paul.” Supra note 3, at 28, 29, 33, 48, 56.
If, as some maintain, the Galatians were attracted to the law and if it is assumed that this was also true of Gentiles generally, the question arises—why did not Paul agree with the Judaizers and thereby win more converts? That he did not do this, that, indeed, he did the very opposite as regards salvation, supports the thesis that (1) the Galatians were unique; for (other) Gentiles the law would be a burden and handicap conversion. Or (2) Paul had such a serious personal problem with the law that despite its attractiveness to Gentiles he could not use it even to increase conversion.
76. Sanders, supra note 10, at 132.
77. Id.
78. Beker, supra note 9, at 74, 77, 78, 81, 86, 99. “Romans 1:18–4:25Google Scholar, then is essentially a dialogue with the Jews.” Id. at 83. “To be sure, the direct dialogue with the Jew ceases with Rom. 5:1Google Scholar …” Id. at 78.
Cf. “… the Jews become the main topic only in Romans 9-11. In Romans 1-4 even taking into account 2:17-29, Paul's view is focused on the Gentiles.” Sanders, supra note 9, at 30.
79. See supra text accompanying note 51.
80. Sanders, supra note 9, at 123.
81. Id. at 128.
82. Id. at 130.
83. Id. at 128-29. Cf. Hübner: “In Romans 2:6f-13Google Scholar Paul was not ‘un-Pauline,’ since these passages are directed at Romans 3:9Google Scholar, but Romans 3:9Google Scholar is the premise for the argumentation of Romans 3:21 ffGoogle Scholar. Consequently, I see no difference in Chapter 2 from that which is found elsewhere in Romans. Sanders and Räisänen construct contradictions here where none exist.” Letter, supra note 8.
“When Paul sought to be a Jew to Jews, it was not just formally but materially toto caelo different from when he sought to be a Greek to the Greeks.” Barth, K., Church Dogmatics, IV/3/2, p. 877 fnGoogle Scholar.
84. Sanders, supra note 9, at 131.
85. Id. at 131-32.
86. Id. at 148. Compare this generalization with the statements quoted in the text above, and also: “There is, first, the famous statement that those who do the law will be righteous Romans (2:13)Google Scholar.” Id. at 125.
87. “Thus Cullmann writes on the basis of Rom. 1-3: ‘All divine salvic efforts … his revelation in the law could in principle already have led men to salvation, had Gentiles and Jews responded to them with faith.’” Translated and quoted by Räisänen, supra note 4, at 151-52.
So, too, Locke, J., A Paraphrase and Notes on the Epistles of St. Paul; 249–50 (London 1823)Google Scholar.
88. Sanders, supra note 9, at 132.
89. Sanders, , On the Question of Fulfilling the Law in Paul and Rabbinic Judaism in Donum Gentilicium 103–04 (Bammel, H., Barrett, C. & Davies, W.D. eds. 1978)Google Scholar.
90. Ridderbos, H., Paul: An Outline of His Theology 135 (1975)Google Scholar quoted in Sanders, supra note 9, at 124.
91. That Jews were the primary target (even “man,” e.g., 2:1, clearly refers to Jews) is evident from 1:21, 32. From 1:18-2:8 Paul accuses the Jews of practically all the crimes and sins which the prophets levelled against them. There follow immediately the crucial verses 2:6-7, 13. Later verses such as 2:17-18, 23 reinforce the opinion that Paul was primarily addressing Jews. “It is plain from … the whole tenor of this chapter (Rom. 2) that St. Paul, by these words means the Jews …” John Locke, supra note 87, at 262.
92. Sanders, supra note 9, at 66, ital. added, and 85; Räisänen, supra note 4., at 145; Beker, supra note 9, at 86 and 235; Betz, supra note 15, at 165.
93. Plato, , The Republic 379–80 (Jowett, B. trans. 1898)Google Scholar. For criticism that Plato was unfair to Aeschylus, see Lloyd-Jones, H., The Justice of Zeus 87 (1971)Google Scholar.
94. Räisänen, supra note 4., at 158-59.
95. “Paul's assertion of the sin-engendering nature and purpose of the law is … ‘infantile absurdity.’” The last two words are Loisy's, translated and quoted in Räisänen, supra note 4., at 13. Parkes, J. finds Romans 5:20Google Scholar ridiculous and “offensive to all Christian conceptions of God.” Jesus, , Paul and the Jews 129 (1936)Google Scholar.
96. Sorrells v. United States, 287 U.S. 435 (1932).
97. “… in fact the law was given for the purpose of leading up to righteousness by faith, even though negatively (3:22, 24); Sanders, supra note 9, at 67.
98. Hübner, H., Law in Paul's Thought (1984)Google Scholar.
99. Id. at 55. After referring to studies that find the interval between the two epistles to be from three to six months, Räisänen adds that even two years would be a short time “for the alleged development.” He concludes: “But I do not find any straightforward development from any one extant letter to another.” Räisänen, supra note 4, at 8-9.
100. Hübner, supra note 98, at 63.
101. Id. at 61-63.
102. Id. at 63.
103. Id. at 65.
104. IV Blackstone, , Commentaries on the Laws of England, 21Google Scholar.
105. Hübner, supra note 98, at 53.
106. Id. at 7.
107. Id. at 21-23. Hübner makes two points in support of his interpretation: (1) “Godfearing men who did not undergo circumcision, but assuredly committed themselves to observe the essentials of the law.” And (2) “those in Jerusalem could not be in agreement with … the law as enslaving power.” Letter, supra note 8.
108. Id. at 63, 65.
109. Id. at 65.
110. Id. at 55.
111. Id. at 66. Hübner wrote: “the interpretation of Romans 2 from a forensic perspective cannot be correct [along] with your view that this chapter also serves a mission to the Jews. In Romans (and in Rome!) the question concerned an internal Christian discussion.” The writer specified a few verses and was not generalizing about Romans 2. Professor Hübner also wrote: “I consider your remarks in Romans 2:6f-13Google Scholar to be correct in part.” Letter, supra note 8.
112. Hübner, supra note 98, at 63, 81.
113. Id. at 5.
114. Id. at 54.
115. See Aristotle's comment on the importance of the audience in the text supra at note 38.
116. Hübner, supra note 98, at 26, 78-79, 81-82.
117. Hall, J., General Principles of Criminal Law Ch. 2 (2d ed. 1960)Google Scholar.
118. Hübner, supra note 98, at 26, 78.
119. Id. at 4. “We would have to suppose that when he wrote Galatians Paul was prepared to deny what he had been taught and believed in all his life, that God gave the Law …” Sanders, supra note 9, at 67.
120. Hübner, supra note 98, at 26.
121. Hübner, supra note 98, at 26, 30.
122. Id. at 29.
123. Id. at 26, 28, 32. Hübner writes that his interpretation that angel was the “orginator,” not the “mediator,” “is supported by many.” Letter, supra note 8.
124. Hübner, supra note 98, at 32.
125. Hübner does not discuss the possibility that Paul had problems with the Law when he was a Pharisee. As regards the distinction drawn in the text, it may be recalled that in the Apology and in Crito, Socrates does not criticize the law; he criticizes the jurors and others who administered the law. After quoting Mt. 23:23 E. Schillebeeckx writes: “Neither Jesus nor Paul directs his point against the law as such, but against autocratic compliance with the law.” Schillebeeckx, E., Paul the Apostle 28 (1983)Google Scholar.
126. See Hall, J., Law, Social Science and Criminal Theory 33 (1982)Google Scholar.
127. For ProfessorSanders, 1 Cor. 9:19–23Google Scholar is “hyperbolic.” Sanders, supra note 9, at 186. Interpreting those verses to mean that Paul lived according to the law in order to reach a stated goal, he finds an “intrinsic improbability—almost impossibility … how could he have been a Jew to the Jews and to the Gentiles in the same church?” Granted. But in the forensic perspective only speech is relevant, and 1 Cor. 9:19–23Google Scholar were words addressed to members of his church who, far from being offended by them, would admire Paul's skill and dedication. In defense of Paul's veracity, it should be noted that the contexts immediately preceding 1 Cor. 9:19–23Google Scholar include “proclaim the gospel,” “preach the gospel,” “entrusted with a commission” and again “preaching” in verse 18, which is immediately followed by 19-23 where the crucial word is “became.” Given that context, it is surely possible that when Paul said “became,” he had in mind “preached.” How much of an exaggeration is it to say that for Paul “living” meant “preaching”?
128. “Justice can be reached only if both the demand of the universal law and the demand of the particular situation are accepted and made effective for the concrete situation. But it is love which creates participation in the concrete situation.” Tillich, P., Love, Power, and Justice 15 (1954)Google Scholar.
129. See Hall, J., Plato's Legal Philosophy, in Studies in Jurisprudence and Criminal Theory Ch. 3 (1958)Google Scholar.
130. “The new man needs no law.” Luther, quoted in Whale, J.S., The Protestant Tradition 96 (1955)Google Scholar.
“Nothing is more false than to say to somebody: since I love you and you love me, I don't need to get justice from you or you from me, for love eliminates the need for justice. Such language is used by people who want to avoid the obligations which are connected with justice.” Tillich, supra note 127, at 82.
131. Tillich, id. at 83. For Calvin's “didactic” view of law, see Calvin, J., Institutes of the Christian Religion, Vol. XX, Bk. 2, Ch. 7, § 12-13 and at 349-59, 659 (McNeill, J.T. ed. 1960)Google Scholar.
132. In his letter Professor Hübner wrote: “A dialogue between representatives of legal and theological science is a scientific desideratum. It is precisely the theologian's question about law in the New Testament that makes dialogue with a lawyer a necessity.” He also said he will be giving a joint seminar with a colleague who is a legal scholar. Letter, supra note 8.
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