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Dr IAN ELMER… |
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CLICK HERE FOR INDEX TO THIS SERIES ON ST PAUL ![]() The tensions and conflicts within the Church seem to be ageless. In today's commentary Dr Ian Elmer examines the tension between the search for truth and the search for certitude — which Bishop Geoffrey Robinson has pointed to as one of the key lines of conflict in our contemporary Church — through the perspective of similar tensions that existed between St Paul and his followers and Peter and James and their followers. Parallels between the Church of Paul's day and our own… In 1927 Bertrand Russell delivered a lecture called "Why I Am Not a Christian", in which he criticised Christianity for its irrationality and its inability to accommodate change. More recently, Richard Dawkins and other neo-atheists, have mounted an attack upon all religious devotion, claiming it to be delusional or worse — the "root of all evil", as Dawkins put it. Something similar is at work in Bishop Geoffrey Robinson's recent discussion of different types of Catholics/Christians — seekers of truth and seekers of certainty. In all these cases we are attempting to reduce complex social structures and processes down to simple formulae. The problem is certainly not a new one, and we can see parallels between the Church of Paul's day and our own. As we noted in an earlier commentary, Paul admits that he was always a bit of a zealot; an aspect of his character that remained unchanged even after his conversion to Christianity (Gal 1:14; Phil 3:6; cf. Rom 12:11). Paul may have jumped ship from Judaism to Law-Free Christianity, but he remained a zealous and unbending advocate for his chosen religious tradition. Paul persecuted the Hellenists for their apostasy from the Law. After his conversion to the Hellenists' movement, he became equally zealous in propagating the Law-free mission to the Gentiles. For this reason, he was branded a "heretic" by the Apostolic Community in Jerusalem and he spent the last two decades of his life defending his Law-free Gospel. But who was right, Paul and the Hellenists or Peter, James and the Jerusalem Apostles? On the other hand, we must ask if we can reasonably argue that Paul, a Johnny-come-lately on the scene of Christianity, a persecutor of the Church who later "jumped ship", understood the import of Jesus' mission and message better than those who had been Jesus companions and kin? Paul himself makes no such claim. He attributes both the content of his Gospel and his commission to preach it to a direct revelation (Gal 1:11-24; cf. 1 Cor 9:1; 15:8-11). Seekers of certitude — security in conformism… Reading between the lines of Paul's account of his disputes with Jerusalem in Galatians and the Corinthian correspondence, it appears that Christian Jews, like James and Peter, seem to have radicalized their "Jewishness" to a point where they advocated a sort of ancient form of the doctrine "Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus" – to wit, "outside the [Christian Jewish] church [and its adherence to the Mosaic Law] there is no salvation". In Bishop Robinson's terminology, we might call the adherents of the Jerusalem church, seekers of certitude. There is security in being a conformist.
Paul and the Law-free Christians, by contrast, went to the other extreme and claimed that "the Law was no more". Jerome Murphy O'Connor (1996) even goes so far as to suggest that a close reading of Paul's letters suggests he opposed any sort of hierarchical authority, preferring to allow communities to settle their own disputes — such was Paul's distaste for "legalism". So called "liberal Catholics" embrace Paul as the quintessential "seeker for truth", who was willing to tear down all institutions and laws to follow his vision. We can see the depth of the divisions here, and the complexity of the issue involved. There may have been right on both sides. We cannot demonise either Paul or his opponents. Our own Catholic past is similarly complex, and we cannot really demonise anyone or any part of the system. It does not come down to a simple choice between being seekers of truth or seekers of certitude. All-too-often rallying cries to "return to the spirit of Jesus" are heard. Many would want to tear down the edifice of the Church, its hierarchical structures and its traditions to get back to the "original genius" of Jesus. But, as a biblical scholar I am always conscious of how little we really can know of the historical Jesus independent of the Church's tradition — very, very little indeed, I suspect. Hence, we must always rely upon the witness of the tradition as preserved by the guardians of the apostolic succession. Returning to the criticisms of the likes of Bertrand Russell and Richard Dawkins, we might note that at this point in our discussion we can see that there are clear parallels between the Church and the scientific community. In the realm of science we recognize that the cumulative weight of acquired knowledge must always be brought to bear on each new scientific endeavour. So too, the weight of tradition as safeguarded by the Church must always be taken into account when we seek to understand the "truth" of Jesus' message. Paul's "success" probably an accident of history… We can learn from the mistakes of both Paul and his apostolic opponents. Paul's zealotry almost destroyed his entire mission. James' and the Jerusalem Apostles' inability to compromise led to a schism within the growing Christian movement. And, Paul's ultimate success probably resulted from an accident of history – the destruction of the Temple (70 CE) and the complete annihilation of the apostolic, Christian-Jewish community at Jerusalem. Deprived of its leadership and the focal point of their faith practice (i.e., the Temple cult), those Christian Jews who survived the conflagration became gradually more and more irrelevant in an ever-increasingly Gentile and Law-free movement. I think there is a message in this for all of us. Catholicism has transmuted itself many times throughout its history — even if it has often done so only after stubborn resistance. This is not too unlike science, as well, which usually does not seek to overturn what has gone before but to resolve problems within an existing framework. The goal of science is resolution, not revolution, the latter generally being a last resort. Science tenaciously, and properly, holds on to that which works — and, I believe, that the real strength of Catholicism rests in that it has done the same. ![]() CLICK HERE FOR INDEX TO THIS SERIES ON ST PAUL Bibliography and Further Reading:
What are your thoughts on this commentary? ©2008 Ian Elmer |
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Dr Ian Elmer is a lecturer in New Testament at ACU National (formally Australian Catholic University). He is also a member of the Centre for Early Christian Studies, and was recently admitted into ACBA (Australian Catholic Biblical Association). His research specialities are Paul and First-Century Christianity. He is the author of published articles in the Australian Ejournal of Theology and in Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church (a publication of the Centre for Early Christian Studies). He doctoral thesis was entitled Paul, Jerusalem and the Judaisers: The Galatian Crisis in its Broader Historical Context.

