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Paul, James and the Apostolic Decree
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2009
Extract
The problem of the original setting of the Apostolic decree (Acts xv. 20, 29, xxi. 25) is still with us, in spite of the epoch-making and powerfully influential work of M. Dibelius and E. Haenchen on Acts xv as a whole. After analysing that chapter in detail, Dibelius concluded that the Decree stemmed from pre-Lukan documentary tradition but denied that the events described by Paul in Gal. ii. 1–10 could be the setting for the creation of the tradition Haenchen went still further, endorsing Dibelius' reservations about source criticism and veering decisively towards the view that Luke himself, dependent no doubt upon a contemporary and non-literary tradition, was responsible for the material He too disputed any connection with Gal. ii. 1–10 and followed C. von Weizsäcker in tracing the Decree to an attempt to cement together Jewish/Gentile Christian relations, certainly later in time than the controversy in Antioch described in Gal. ii. 11–14. The history of research into this problem during the last few decades has shown a quite remarkable degree of unanimity in accepting two basic conclusions: (I) Lukan theology is quite sufficient to explain the presence of the Decree in the Acts narrative of the so-called Apostolic Council, i.e. Luke's view that Gentile converts participate in that true Judaism set out by Moses and fulfilled in Jesus, provided they respect the law. (2) The Decree is the product of a process of conciliation. While scholars disagree as to whether Jerusalem was involved in the process, it is widely agreed that the conciliation was in time later, not earlier, than the clash in Antioch.
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References
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3 See p. 441.
4 It is more in line with an appreciation of Lukan technique and a recollection of the fluctuations of gospel traditions of one and the same incident to speak of approximations and general equivalences rather than equations.
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2 ‘Quellenanalyse’, pp. 160–4. On Haenchen's general point of principle that just as we could not reconstruct Mark if we only had Luke, so too we cannot usefully expect to find from Acts alone its sources, it is worth mentioning that even without Mark we could deduce from evidence of stylistic variation, dislocations, doublets and the like that Luke did use sources, and precisely the same phenomena in Acts open up precisely the same conclusions.
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1 Benoit, , op. cit. pp. 781, 788Google Scholar argues that the journey of Acts xiii-xiv must be placed before the Council on other grounds: (i) On any other showing there is too much activity to fit between the Council (dated A.D. 49) and the beginning of the mission in Corinth (dated autumn A.D. 50). (ii) This journey is needed to provide a setting for the raising of the issue which the Council had to discuss. But against this: (i) Chronology is too uncertain to provide a firm foundation and in any case there is no reason to regard the Acts xiii-xiv journey as taking an inordinately long time. (ii) Not even Acts sees the events of Acts xiii-xiv as the sole cause of the Council. Indeed, it was possible for the issue to arise anywhere where the Gentile outreach had been successful; cf. Acts xi. 19–26, Gal. i. 21.
2 See p. 434.
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1 This position is not jeopardized by the ύμας of Gal. ii. 5 (on which see p. 435, n. 2), nor by the reference to Arabia in Gal. i. 17. The absence of any further reference to Arabia in Pauline material suggests either that he was not evangelizing Gentiles there – had he done so, it is likely that the circumcision issue would have arisen before fourteen years had elapsed – or that if he was, he was un-successful. Cf. Bornkamm, , Paul, p. 27.Google Scholar
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5 This is the case in view of άπο ίακωβου (Gal, ii. 12), whether or not we follow B. Reicke in taking οί περιτομης as referring to Jews rather than Jewish Christians. ‘Der geschichtliche HintergrunddesApostelkonzils and derAntiochia-Episode, Gal. 2, 1–14’ in Studia Paulina (seep. 432Google Scholar, n. 2), pp. 172–87, esp. 177.
1 Similarly, Gaechter, P., Petrus and Seine Zeit (Innsbruck, 1958), pp. 251–4Google Scholar; Hengel, M., ‘Ursprünge’, p. 18Google Scholar; Holtz, T., ‘Bedeutung’, p. 125Google Scholar; Bornkamm, G., Paul, p. 47.Google Scholar It is necessary to resist the argument of Ogg, G., op. cit. p. 97Google Scholar (and similarly, Munck, J., op. cit. p. 94Google Scholar) that the readers would assume that Paul achieved his purpose and therefore he felt no need to mention it. ‘It is unbelievable that he would have adduced as proof of his apostolic authority an incident in which it was set at nought.’ Against this: (i) The above-mentioned form-critical observations about the records of the three events have to be taken more seriously. (ii) The real possibility has to be allowed that this incident is known and being used by the anti-Pauline forces in Galatia and, no doubt, elsewhere. So, rightly, Weizsäcker, C. von, op. cit. pp. 189–90, 197.Google Scholar
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1 Note here the text-critical problem relating to τινας…ηλθον/τινά…ηλθεν (Gal. ii. 12) Manson, T. W., Studies, pp.,78–9Google Scholar (followed by Bruce, F. F., ‘Galatian Problems’, pp. 308–9Google Scholar) prefers the singular readings on the grounds that (i) manuscript support is strong, (ii) the plural readings can be explained as a confused reminiscence of Acts xv. 1, and (iii) the fact that Paul apparently tackles only Peter tells against the view that either James or a deputation of right-wing Jewish Christians arrived in Antioch. However, while the phrase (ii. 12) certainly precludes the presence of James himself in Antioch, one must note that the plural readings are also strongly attested. Moreover, Peter was probably the prime target for the Pauline counter-attack because he, unlike the delegation, had actually changed his position in the presence of the Antiochene church, and he, unlike the delegation, was in the strict sense an apostle.
2 The attempt of Schoeps, Paul, pp. 102, 106–7Google Scholar to divide the delegation froml James is unconvincing.
3 Schlier, H., op. cit. p. 70Google Scholar, sees in Gal. ii. 3 a ‘Befehl’ but in E. 14 only a ‘Beispie’. Eckert, J., Die. urchristliche Verkündigung im Streit zwischen Paulus and seinen Gegnern nach dm Galaterbrief (Regensburg, 1971), pp. 198–9Google Scholar, also weakens the text when he declares that Paul's description is misleadingly partisan: ‘Denn daB Kephas in der Regel heidnisch lebte ist ebensowenig wahrscheinlich wie, daB er auf die Heiden einen Zwang ausübte, jüdisch zu leben.’ But if Peter condones and endorses in Antioch a demand which is rooted in Judaism, Paul's language is not so exaggerated as Eckert claims. More correctly, Donfried, K. P.–Fitzmyer, J. A., ‘Peter in the Pauline Letters’, in R. E. Brown-K. P. Donfried-J. Reumann, Peter in the New Testament (London, 1974), p. 26Google Scholar: ‘the imposition on Gentile converts of aspects of the Mosaic Law, especially the food regulations’ (my italics).
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7 ‘Bedeutung’, p. 123.
1 This incident, rather than Acts xv. 37–9, indicates the essential cause of the break between the two men.
2 See above, p. 440.
3 A similar conclusion, but one based on substantially different argumentation, was reached by Bacon, B. W., ‘Peter's Triumph at Antioch’, J.R. IX (1929), 204–23, esp. pp. 215–16Google Scholar, and by Porter, J. R., op. cit. (p. 431Google Scholar n. 5), pp. 172–4.
1 Cf. Käsemann, E., ‘Die Legitimität des Apostels’, Z.X.W. XLI (1942), 33–71Google Scholar and Barrett, C. K., A Commentary on the Second Epistle to the Corithians (London, 1973), pp. 30–2.Google Scholar
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