The Charles Gore Lecture 2000
Coming Home to St Paul? - Reading Romans a Hundred Years after Charles Gore
Lecturer: N. T. Wright, DD - Lector Theologiae
Tuesday, 14th November 2000 at 6.15 PM
1. Introduction
My title reflects a famous conversation between Charles Gore and William Temple. Temple himself describes it like this: Bishop Gore once said to me that he paid visits to St. John as to a fascinating foreign country, but he came home to St. Paul. With me the precise opposite is true.
But which Paul was it to whom Charles Gore came home?
A hundred years ago Gore was a Canon of Westminster, living with his small community at no. 4 Little Cloister. In addition to his many other interests, he gave himself energetically during his eight years as a Canon to the public exposition of scripture. He published the results in books on the Sermon on the Mount, on the Epistle to the Ephesians, and then, in 1899 and 1900, his two volumes on Romans. He was in his middle forties, a seasoned scholar, a passionate preacher, a controversial figure in church and theology, with a Christian social conscience of unusual intensity. We dont have to hunt far in his commentary on Romans to discover the principles from which such a life sprang.
Gore himself would urge us not to focus on his writings for their own sake, but to learn afresh from Paul. This is a task many Anglicans find daunting, and many downright distasteful. As Gore says on the first page of the commentary, Romans is still . . . viewed with discomfort and neglected by those who most value the name of Catholic and, we would have to add, a good many others as well. I wish this was because, like Temple, they visited Paul with a sense of strange beauty but came home to St John; I fear it is rather because today people visit both Paul and John with a sense of reluctant duty and come home to the television.
In this lecture I shall describe the main points of Gores commentary on Romans, calling attention to three features of his interpretation where, I shall argue, he had rightly guessed at Pauls deeper meaning without yet seeing how the text of the letter could actually get him there. I shall then suggest, with a very broad brush, that advances in Pauline scholarship since Gores day help us to do with more exegetical thoroughness what he was wanting to do. When we in turn come home to St Paul a century after Charles Gore, we find in the Apostle more, but not less, than the Canon had seen. We may, perhaps, in the words of a poet twelve years old when Gore wrote his commentary, arrive where we started, and know the place for the first time.
2. Gores Romans: Issues and Questions
Gores commentary is written at a popular level. It is lively, occasionally sermonic, and peppered with illustration and application. The underlying scholarship peeps out in the notes: he knows the Fathers, and has read Lightfoot, Westcott and Hort, and of course the then recently published Sanday and Headlam. He refers to Ritschl and other Germans from time to time. He makes use of inter-testamental Jewish texts. But none of this troubles the general reader. The line of exposition is clear and forthright.
Gore had been grasped by one of the main thrusts of Romans, and was determined that his readers be grasped by it as well. Whenever he comes near the subject of the grace of God freely given to sinners in Jesus Christ and him crucified; whenever he can say something about God being not a hard taskmaster but a loving father; whenever Paul suggests to him the question of whether we save ourselves by our moral efforts or whether all our moral effort is but a feeble response to Gods sovereign love then the staunch Anglo-Catholic catches fire, his prose becomes elevated, and he preaches the gospel of Gods love and grace as well as any Protestant or Evangelical. He names, shames and demolishes the characteristically English Pelagianism, along with all attempts to rely on past traditions, including Evangelical and Catholic, instead of scripture. He is aware of much nominal Christianity, and knows that Paul will have none of it. His own personal devotion to Jesus Christ, and single-minded determination to serve him, shines through page after page.
Early in the commentary, and repeatedly throughout it, he raises the question: is the Paul of Martin Luther the real Paul? Last week a learned Italian theologian accused Martin Luther of being the patron saint of the fast-food hamburger; we should be wary of attributing all our bêtes noires to the German reformer. We must distinguish Luther himself from Lutheran tradition, and later low-grade caricatures. But was Paul, Gore asks, really advocating a standard protestant individualism? He is anxious to be fair to Luther, and to explain why his protest was necessary in its day. But he is still more anxious to wean his hearers off any assumption that what they know as Protestantism will do justice to the depth of Pauls thought.St. Paul, he writes, has for us undercut and antiquated the theological standing-grounds of the sixteenth century, and substituted for them something both truer, completer, and freer.
Gores question anticipated by nearly eighty years one of the greatest shifts in Pauline studies to have occurred since critical scholarship began. In 1977 Ed P. Sanders published his Paul and Palestinian Judaism, whose aim was to rebut what had become a four-hundred-year long tradition, especially associated with Lutheran theology and exegesis, of how to understand the Judaism to which Paul was reacting and hence of hence of how to expound Paul himself. Despite some weaknesses, I regard Sanders central thesis as secure: the Judaism of Pauls day was not a kind of primitive version of Pelagianism, of a self-help morality which seeks to justify itself by the unaided performance of moral good works. Judaism bases itself upon the grace of God which established the covenant with Abraham and brought Israel out of Egypt. Observance of Torah flows from gratitude. Sanders did not succeed in working out a new way of reading Paul to match this insight; that task remains unfinished among scholars today. But the old Protestant picture of Paul opposing self-help moralism or ritualism, the doing of good works to earn Gods favour, with the gospel of grace and faith simply will not stand up historically. To this we shall return. Gore had on his side the very structure of Romans itself, and some of its inner logic.
It has become notorious in the century since he wrote that one of the hardest things to do with Romans is to explain the relationship between its different sections. How do chapters 911 relate to the rest? And how do chapters 14 belong with 58? What is the connection between justification in chs. 3 and 4 and baptism in ch. 6? When, twelve years after Gores commentary, Albert Schweitzer published his book Paul and His Interpreters, he elevated the difference between these two sections of Romans into his central organising principle, making them represent two different types of theology which Paul had brought together, only one of which represented the heart of his thought. Schweitzer called these two types the juridical, represented by the law-court language in chs. 3 and 4, and the mystical, represented by the being-in-Christ thought of chs. 68. But for Gore no such split was necessary. One does not have to play off justification against incorporation into Christ; theologically one can, and Gore does, hold them together as indeed of course Paul himself does elsewhere, for instance in Galatians 3.214.7.
Gore answers his own question by insisting that though one is justified by faith alone, the faith which justifies is never in fact alone. It goes with a lively incorporation into the body of Christ, and with all that is meant by baptism, through which one comes to live the communal and sacramental life. Gore emphasises that each Christian must make this real for him or herself; there are no passengers on this boat; but individualism is out of the question. Justification is, says Gore, all about membership in the sacred people, the Israel of God.
Gores exposition of what we may call the ecclesiological dimension of Pauls thinking issues in a robust exposition of Romans 1215. Romans 12, he points out, is not simply a set of individual ethics but the description of what it takes to live together as a community something which Gore had himself been endeavouring to do, in Pusey House, in Radley, then in Westminster, and which was to bear remarkable fruit in the newly formed Community of the Resurrection. His treatment of chapters 13, 14 and 15 bear the same stamp. Precisely because he holds together justification and the life of the church, these chapters do not fall off the back of the commentary as they do so often. However, in my view he fails to follow through his own insights about the roots of Pauls ecclesiology within the Jewish covenant theology of the Old Testament and of the first century.
In particular, he falls back as, granted his theology, he scarcely needed to do on the view that chs. 911 are an episode, a discussion without which the letter would still flow perfectly well. Explaining that he had originally been put off these chapters because of their Calvinist misuse, he offers a careful though not very deep exposition of what they are actually about, namely, the plight of unbelieving Israel. What he never sees but would have been helpful to his whole theme is the organic connection of chs. 911 to all that had gone before, especially chs. 3 and 4. He sees that the church needs warning against anti-semitism he is aware of writing immediately after the affaire Dreyfus but he can still declare that the twin climaxes of the letter are chapters 3 and 8, not, as it would seem to most today, chapters 8 and 11.
Thus Gore, though he uses the idea of the church as the community of the renewed covenant as a principal means of tying together individual faith and the life of the church, points beyond what he exegetically achieves. The same is true in the other emphasis which his followers would not be surprised to see: a strong note of social protest against oppressive systems and structures. As with the warmth of his personal devotion, one senses that he had only to get a whiff of social justice in a text before he was on to it, calling (for instance) for a new sense not just of sin but of social sin. And, though he does not develop the connection very far, this belongs closely with his splendid exposition of the groaning of creation and its promised renewal (8.1825). He not only sees the Jewish roots of Pauls thought at this point, and his close awareness of the pain at the heart of creation itself; he sees that here Paul stands over against all false and one-sided spiritualism and materialism. The religion of the Incarnation he writes, as represented by St. Paul, recognizes [the material world] as Gods creation and the temple of His presence. For Gore that phrase, the religion of the Incarnation, said it all. That was, for him, the heart of Christology and hence the heart of the revelation of God, and it inspired alike his Pauline vision of the eventual renewal, as opposed to the abandonment, of all creation, and his lifelong passion for social justice, at a time when such a theme was far less common than it is today.
But once again, at least in his commentary, he did not tie the two together. Here too I believe we can point beyond where he got to, and offer a reading of Romans which, from an unexpected angle, gives fuller grounding to the his concerns.
The Paul, then, to whom Charles Gore came home was a man of passionate devotional allegiance, theological conviction, ecclesial commitment, sacrificial holiness, and social concern. What I now wish to propose is that exactly this Paul was in fact more present in the very text Gore was expounding than he himself had seen, and that when we offer a more tightly-knit and historically grounded exegesis we find that these themes, so far from being left behind, are more securely based and suggestively worked out. I turn, then, first to Pauls exposition of the new covenant in Christ, and second to his exposition of the challenge to paganism in general and, perhaps to our surprise, to Caesar in particular.
3. Paul and the New Covenant
When we come home to Paul, the man we discover is a first-century Jew. For the last half-century most scholars have seen Paul as a Jewish thinker, rather than one who swapped Jewish categories for gentile or hellenistic ones. We stand on the shoulders of W. D. Davies 1948 book, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism, which took the elements of Paul that had been used in the hellenistic hypothesis and showed that they were better explained by seeing Paul as a Rabbi who believed the Messiah had come. Significantly, this was just when theologians were becoming aware, after the Holocaust, of the dangers of treating Judaism as the wrong sort of religion. Since then most of the Pauls offered by scholarship have been Jewish, though, as with Jesus, the further question, what sort of Jew, remains controversial.
The so-called new perspective on Paul, launched by Ed Sanders in the mid-1970s, has developed this further. But neither Davies, nor Sanders, nor their followers, have advanced a satisfactory new picture of Paul as a whole religion, theology, exegesis, and contemporary application. I want to suggest a reading of Paul and Romans, building on the work of Davies and Sanders while modifying some of their proposals, through which we can do more fully what Gore was trying to do, namely, hold together the warm personal faith by which one is justified and membership in the church, the covenant people promised by God to Abraham. This will lead on to the two other concerns, the moral and the social.
Four interlocking points form the foundation.
The first is Pauls understanding of the purpose of Gods covenant. In line with much Jewish thinking, he believed that Gods covenant with Israel was itself designed to put the world to rights, to bring justice to the entire cosmos. Israel is the light of the world, carrying Gods commission to bring that light to the pagans. Part of Pauls critique of Israel is precisely that they have turned this commission into a mere privilege. In Gores stringent language about Christian leaders, they wanted to shine rather than to serve.
The second is that when Paul says Christ he regularly intends us to hear, not a proper name merely, but the title Messiah, meaning by that not least the one in whom Israels identity is bound up. The Messiah represents Israel, so that what is true of him is true of them, and vice versa. The Messiahs death and resurrection is therefore the means whereby, and the sign that, Israel according to the flesh has passed under judgment, and the new covenant has been constituted whereby all who belong to the Messiah Jew and Gentile alike are part of Gods people. Jesus messianic death and resurrection is his faithful obedience to the covenant purposes of God; through him, God has now accomplished what he always purposed. Put together the first two points: because of the meaning of the covenant, Gods achievement in Christ cannot be restricted to the salvation of individual souls, but must reach out to the bringing of Gods eventual justice to the cosmos.
The third point is the meaning of the righteousness of God one of the key phrases in Romans. This righteousness, in line with the Jewish background, is not the status which God gives, imputes or imparts to faithful humans; nor is it a moral principle or energy which God places within us. It is Gods own faithfulness to the covenant. Jews of Pauls day wrestled with the question, how can God be faithful to the covenant, granted all that has happened? What will this covenant faithfulness look like when it is finally unveiled? Pauls answer, decisive for the shaping and theology of Romans, is that Gods righteousness, his covenant faithfulness, has been unveiled once for all in Jesus the Messiah, and in the gospel announcement of his death and resurrection.
The fourth point is that the Exodus story forms the narrative substructure of much of Pauls writing. The Exodus was the great redeeming action, accomplished in fulfilment of Gods covenant promises to Abraham. Paul now uses Exodus-language to explain the significance of the Messiahs death and resurrection. He shapes the whole of Romans 48 around a long retelling of the story: the promise to Abraham in ch. 4, the passage through the baptismal water by which freedom is attained in ch. 6, the giving of the Spirit to do what the law could not in chs. 7 and 8, finally reaching the inheritance, the whole redeemed creation, at the climax of ch. 8.
The Paul of Romans is thus a deeply Jewish thinker, rethinking his Jewish categories around his belief that the crucified and risen Jesus is Israels representative Messiah. Within this scheme of thought, the key focal points stand out. Jesus obedient death is the central covenant action, revealing Gods love and grace in decisive and climactic action, dealing with sin by condemning it in his flesh (8.3). Justification by faith is the juridical declaration in the present time which anticipates the verdict of the last day: faith that Jesus is Lord, and that God raised him from the dead, is the result of the Spirits work through the gospel and what God has thus begun, he will certainly complete. Justification is not merely lawcourt language, however; if it were, it would be isolated from the life of the church and from Christian morality. Justification is also covenant language, as in Romans 4 (a sustained exposition of Genesis 15, where God establishes his covenant with Abraham), and has to do precisely with Gods setting up of the single family, consisting of Jews and Gentiles together, characterised by faith rather than by possession or keeping of Torah. It is a measure of Gores insight that he glimpsed some of this at least, even though he did not follow it through.
Romans 911 is not, then, an extraneous aside, but a necessary and intrinsic part of the letter. It addresses questions Paul cannot avoid, which he has indeed noted earlier. It is also, arguably, the first point of immediate relevance he wants to get across to the predominantly Gentile Christians in Rome. He wants them to see how Gods righteousness, Gods covenant faithfulness, works out in practice; he tells the entire covenant story in Romans 9 and 10, from Abraham right through to the Messiah and, beyond, to the Gentile mission whereby they themselves have come to faith. But that same covenant faithfulness means that unbelieving Jews will always remain within the scope of Gods love. God has not cut them off for ever, and if Gentile Christians suppose he has, they are making the same mistake of ethnic superiority which Paul had made in his pre-Christian days and now saw in many of his fellow Jews.
In the same way, chapters 1215 focus on the question of how Christians from different cultural backgrounds should live together in a single community a question of particular relevance to Rome, where groups from different backgrounds often lived separately, as in some modern cities. This reaches its climax in an often-ignored passage, 15.113, the final theological and practical paragraph before the lengthy closing material. The main purpose of the letter is not, after all, simply to tell Rome that all have sinned and can be justified by faith through the death of the Messiah; it expounds those truths, as the centre of the unveiling of Gods righteousness, in order to build on them these great arguments about the mission and unity of the church.
When, therefore, we come home to Paul as a first-century Jewish covenant theologian, expounding his belief that in Jesus Christ the faithfulness of God has burst unexpectedly upon Israel and the world, we discover a way of doing more securely what Gore was determined to do in holding together justification by faith and membership in the church.The larger story of Israel within which Paul lives, which I have labelled with the word covenant, enables both of these to be held with equal force and appropriate correlation. As Gore himself exemplified, warm personal faith and strong membership in Christs body belong together.
4. Paul, Paganism and Caesar
This brings us to the other two areas in which Charles Gore was eager to explore Pauls thought, but was not able to substantiate his hunches. First, how does Paul integrate justification by faith with his strong moral teaching? Second, what does Paul have to say on what we loosely call social justice?
At the heart of Paul we find his opposition, not to Judaism, but to paganism. Precisely because he remains a deeply Jewish thinker, believing that the God of Abraham is the one true God, now revealed in Jesus the Messiah, he stands firmly and Jewishly opposed to paganism of every sort. On the cross, the true God has defeated the false gods, and this victory must now be worked out in Christian lives and Christian communities.
Paul, then, did not derive his ideas from paganism. There are parallels, cross-over points of theme and language. But Paul intends to confront the world of paganism with the news that the God of Abraham is its rightful God, the Jewish Messiah is its rightful Lord, and that those who give allegiance to this God and Lord are the true heirs of the world, the truly human people. As in the Areopagus speech, Paul declares to the pagan world that what it has been groping after all along is now revealed by the true God in the gospel of Jesus.
The basic challenge of Pauls gospel is not, therefore, against self-help moralism though if Paul had ever met proto-Pelagians, which is unlikely, he would have put them straight. There were pagan moralists, and Paul has words for them too, but his main challenge is against idolatry and the dehumanisation that results from it. Humans are made in Gods image, to reflect his glory; those who worship that which is not God find that their imagebearing capability, their glorious humanness, begins to unravel. Those, however, who worship the true God (this is what Paul means by the obedience of faith) will rediscover their genuine humanness. All sinned, and lost Gods glory; those whom God justified, them he also glorified. If Romans 3 and 4 are about justification, Romans 58 are not so much about sanctification as glorification, with sanctification as a sub-category. Christian holiness, for Paul, means becoming more truly human. And the faith which justifies, itself the gift of God by the Spirit and the response to Gods grace in the gospel, is also the core of that worship in which humanity is renewed.
Watch how this works in the four main sections of Romans. In the first four chapters, Paul demonstrates that, through the death and resurrection of the Messiah, God has established the community he promised to Abraham, the single family of Jews and Gentiles together, characterised by faith in the gospel. At the close of ch. 4 he describes Abrahams faith: it was his belief in Gods promise to give him and Sarah a son in their old age. Paul here deliberately contrasts this faith with the faithlessness described in Romans 1.1832, where idolatry in the pagan world results in the fracturing of the glory, the imagebearing, that was humanitys vocation. This naturally leads on to Romans 5, in which Christ is seen as the true Adam, the source of genuine humanity, generating by the Spirit a renewed human life of holiness and hope. In the climax of Romans 8, Paul sees the whole creation, not as itself divine thats the mistake of paganism but as Gods good creation which is designed to be flooded with God, renewed by the Spirit, to experience its own Exodus when the children of God are themselves raised from the dead. That which paganism has wrongly worshipped will one day share the freedom of the glory of Gods children. Paganism is, after all, a parody of the truth, wanting to steal the beautiful empty chalice instead of waiting for it to be filled with the wine of Gods love.
Then, in 911 and 1216, Paul challenges the Roman church not to behave as pagan society around is behaving. Roman anti-Judaism is well known in classical literature. The church had been largely Gentile after the expulsion of the Jews from Rome in the late 40s, and now had to face the question of its attitude to the large number of recently returned non-Christian Jews, and also its attitude to Jewish Christians. His appeal in both cases is that the church should learn to live as Gods true humanity, in accordance with his covenant faithfulness and the call to unity in Christ. The main thrusts of the letter, therefore, can be seen all through to flow from Pauls essentially Jewish understanding, rethought in Christ, and to tell against paganism in general, and any attempt on the part of Christians to go with its flow. All of this continues to tie together the emphasis on justification by faith with that on Christian holiness, without confusion or muddle. If faith is genuine, the attachment to God in Christ which it expresses cannot but issue in a searching and serious holiness of life. Gores exposition of Romans 6.111 and 12.12 makes it clear both that the huge moral demands made by the gospel are simply a response to grace, being in no way an attempt to place God in human debt, and that the demands are indeed total.
Within this, however, one particular emphasis is emerging in very recent study, and it provides the other missing link which joins Pauline theology closely with the vocation to social critique and to work for Gods justice in the world the very thing Charles Gore was eager to do. Romans, I suggest, indicates that Paul intended his gospel to subvert not merely paganism in general but the imperial cult in particular.
The imperial cult worship of the Emperor, and of Rome was the fastest-growing religion in Pauls world. The early emperors drew back from claiming actual divine honours for themselves in Rome and Italy during their lifetime. But there was no such restraint further east. In any case, being styled son of god, following the apotheosis of the previous emperor, was almost as good especially when, from Augustus onwards, emperors were able to claim that their dynasty had brought peace and justice to the warring world. New temples to Caesar and Rome were springing up; some city centres were redesigned to give them maximum prominence. Paul could not have missed it. Nor could he have dismissed it as of merely political rather than religious importance; he would not have made that distinction. Whereas almost all works on Paul assume that Romans 13.17 is his only comment on Caesar, this is far from the truth.
Recent studies of Philippians have shown that Paul was capable of addressing this issue sharply and subversively. The Christ-poem in Philippians 2.511, though its sources and theology are Jewish, parodies some aspects of the Caesar-cult; when Paul says Jesus is Lord, he means that Caesar is not. The end of Philippians 3, likewise, refers to Jesus as Saviour, Lord and King in a way which certainly intends a contrast with Caesar. Similar hints are found in 1 Thessalonians and elsewhere.
But it is in Romans itself, written to Christians right under Caesars nose, that the subversive theme emerges most strikingly. Caesar claimed to be son of god; his accession day, or birthday, was hailed as good news, euaggelion; he was regarded as the Lord of the world, the one to whom all nations owed allegiance. Through his powerful rule Justice and Salvation had come to the world: Roman justice, Iustitia, first became a goddess under Augustus. With all that in mind, think through the famous first paragraph of Romans (1.117), which by common consent introduces the themes of the whole letter, and watch it come up in three dimensions. Paul introduces himself as the apostle of God, commissioned to announce the gospel of Gods son, who was now the rightful lord of the whole world and who claimed obedience and loyalty from all. Through this gospel, God was powerfully at work to produce salvation, because in the gospel Gods righteousness, his justice, had been unveiled. That is why, says Paul, he is not ashamed to be coming to preach in Rome. The gospel of Christ, by strong implication, upstages the gospel of Caesar.
The same point is stressed at the end. In the final climax, urging Christians of different backgrounds to unite in worship of the one true Lord, Paul quotes from the royal prophecy of Isaiah 11. The root of Jesse shall appear, the one who rises to rule the nations; in him shall the nations hope. Pauls hearers knew that there was already a king who ruled the nations. The opening and theological closing of Romans declare that Caesar is a parody of the true lordship of Jesus.
Once we understand how the theme of Gods justice unveiled in the gospel actually works, the rest of the letter will fall into place. The renewal of all creation in Romans 8 can be seen as the climax it really is, instead of being sidelined as in so many individualized readings of Romans. Caesars attempt to bring the world into new peace and harmony are to be upstaged by Gods great act of liberation. Caesar, of course, ruled the world by sheer force, with crucifixion both as his primary weapon and as a regular symbol of his authority. Pauls theology of the cross, as the secret means whereby God has defeated the powers of the world, comes into its own in a new way, standing on its head this symbol of imperial arrogance and making it instead the symbol of all-powerful divine love. Romans as a whole, by expounding Gods creation of the single family of faith in which Jew and Gentile come together in one body, provides the charter for what we must call a counter-empire: a worldwide, multi-ethnic family owing allegiance to Jesus as Lord rather than Caesar, and looking forward to inheriting the renewed creation.
Within this framework, Romans 13.17 can be seen for what it is. It is a Jewish-style statement that rulers are not divine, but owe allegiance to the one God. When this is realised, the rulers are to be obeyed, because God desires that evil should be checked, that anarchy should be resisted, that laws should be enacted through which societies can live in order and peace. Paul inherited the tradition of, among other things, Jeremiah, in which the Israelites are instructed to pray for the welfare of Babylon as long as they are living there, and of Daniel, in which, though the rulers of the world are regularly warned, judged, condemned and demoted, Daniel and his companions are promoted to high ranks of Services within the imperial household. God desires order, it seems, not chaos; when the rulers discover they are not divine, they can once more be Gods agents, whether knowingly or not, to promote good order in the world.
Paul did not suggest to the Romans, a tiny and fragmented church in a huge pagan capital, that they should begin to campaign for better laws and more effective justice. He might as well have told them what sort of aeroplanes they should be building for the next stage of his mission. But, just as elsewhere he laid the foundation for revolutions yet to come, so in his subversive, almost cheeky, upstaging of Caesars claims with those of Jesus, I believe he laid the foundations for a fully integrated and theologically coherent Christian social agenda which we today ignore at our peril. Just as justification by faith and the life of the church are held together with Pauls wider covenant theology, and just as grace, faith and moral effort belong together, so the whole theology of salvation and the responsibilty to promote Gods justice in the world are held together, within that same covenant theology, by Pauls high Christology and by his grand vision of the eventual renewal of all creation, the bringing of Gods healing justice to bear on the cosmos as a whole. Once again, in learning to see in Paul things that Charles Gore never dreamed of, we are nevertheless meeting a figure to whom he would have been happy to come home.
5. The End of Our Exploring
Time permits only the briefest of conclusions. I allow myself three points only, corresponding to the three main points I have made.
First, when we locate Pauls theology of justification within his larger covenant theology, we see that it is not simply a controversial doctrine which we might now be able to agree on, but is the doctrine which itself commits us to ecclesial membership and hence ecumenical endeavour. Justification means not simply that God accepts us by grace through faith; it means that all who believe in Jesus Christ belong together in one worshipping family, sharing at the same table. When we integrate Romans 3 and 4 with the incorporative theology of Romans 58 and the practical instructions of Romans 14 and 15, we discover that this ecumenical work is never a matter of one side giving the orders to the others, but of all working together, preferring the way of tolerance of things indifferent to an insistence on solving all problems before we can unite in shared worship. Paul has so often been a sign of division, but when we come home to him he offers us ways to grown into real union.
Second, the integration of Pauls ethics with his theology, such as Gore glimpsed in Romans and we have developed further, suggests that mainstream western churches need to look hard at some of todays familiar assumptions. Justification means, at one level, that God accepts us as we are. But Gods acceptance is always the transforming acceptance of holy love, demanding from us not a slack acquiescence in whatever state we happen to be in, but serious and Spirit-helped moral effort in becoming what God intends for us. Without this, we slip back into the worst of both worlds, holding the form of a bare and caricatured protestant justification-theology but without any of the lively devotion that has traditionally accompanied it. An integrated Pauline ethic never says, Because God has accepted me, I can stay as I am. It always says that the mercy of God invites me to present my body as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable. It never asks, What am I allowed to do? Can I get away with this? It always asks, How can I live according to the Spirit, not according to the flesh? How can I be transformed by the renewing of my mind, rather than being conformed to the present age?
Third, the social and political implications of reading Romans against the background of the Caesar-cult need to be teased out in more detail. As with many aspects of post-Enlightenment thought, we have tended to assume that there are really only two possible positions, the quiescent and the revolutionary. Most have assumed that Romans 13 means that Paul was politically quiescent; you might suppose that my new proposed reading means he was straightforwardly revolutionary. As with the Enlightenment splits between sacred and secular, and between individual and community, this is far too simplistic. Paul stands in the tradition of apocalyptic and covenantal Judaism that includes Isaiah, Jeremiah and Daniel: earthly powers must learn that they are not divine, but once that lesson is learned they have a positive place and purpose in Gods will for the world.
The church has found it difficult to maintain this balance. From the second-century Apologists, who both appealed to rulers and suffered martyrdom, through the Constantinian settlement, through the many different models of church/state relationship essayed in the Middle Ages, the Reformation and thereafter, in this country and elsewhere, the church has struggled to hold together its double responsibility: to live by the gospel of Jesus which proclaims him as the worlds true Lord, and to live as good citizens of a state which may or may not acknowledge that Lordship. Here at Westminster that balance is symbolically maintained by our crowning of monarchs right in front of the text from Revelation, written in gold above the high altar: The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ. Confrontation and collaboration are both appropriate expressions of this responsibility; it may result in martyrdom, as with Bonhoeffer, or it may result in partnership, as with (to think of our roots) Aidan and Oswald. Here again this Abbey symbolizes both, with its royal tombs and its martyrs memorials.
What this responsibility rules out, I think, are Erastianism at one end and dualist disengagement at the other. Few today want the former; but the clamour for disengagement is loud, particularly in the press. Some argue for disengagement on Christian grounds; but what is really driving the agenda is the secularist desire that the church should mind its spiritual business and leave the state to look after society and politics in other words, that the church should not even think of saying that Jesus is Lord and Caesar isnt. But Pauline Christianity is not about discovering a way of being religious or spiritual, or a private route to salvation. It is about announcing, and living by, the message that Jesus is Lord of all. To retreat into the private world of our own religious life is not a way of keeping ourselves pure from the non-Christian world; it is, ironically, a way of compromising with the world, giving in to its sacred/secular split.
We must of course look hard at how our present Establishment correlates with our ecumenical collaboration, and indeed our relation to quite different worldviews. But to disengage because such questions exist is to scrap the car because the steering needs adjusting. If Daniel had not been at Belshazzars court, no-one would have been able to read the writing on the wall. Precisely at this time of massive worldview-confusion in the country and the wider world, we need all the engagement we can get if we are to play the same prophetic role, announcing the gospel of Jesus and living by it within Caesars world.
Who then is Caesar in a modern liberal democracy, a tradition which is itself profoundly though ambiguously influenced by Christianity? That is a harder question. Caesar does not live in either Buckingham Palace or Downing Street, nor yet in the Stock Exchange or Fleet Street though each possesses some Caesar-like attributes. But there are powers in our world that want to become Caesar, and the church of Jesus Christ is one of the main obstacles in their way. As readers of Paul we will be unwilling to stand aside and give them a free run: not because we seek political power for ourselves, but because we believe that if, in the old pietist phrase, Jesus Christ is not Lord of all he is not Lord at all.
The call to social justice in the present, in the light of Gods promised recreation of the whole cosmos, stands in parallel to the call to Christian holiness. Christians are called to live in the present in the light of Gods future; it wont do to say God will make us holy hereafter, we must make it real right now. Similarly, it wont do to say that God will one day solve the problems and theres nothing we can do in the meantime. Precisely because God will one day put the whole world to rights by the Spirit, we Christians, indwelt by that same Spirit, should go to work today, as Charles Gore did, to inaugurate as far as possible that world-renewing justice which will do what Caesars justice claims to do but cannot.
A fresh reading of Romans, then, grateful to Charles Gore but determined to press on beyond, can invigorate Christian discipleship and mission like little else. The end of our exploring is to come home to the Paul from whom we started, and know him for the first time. As we do so, we may find fresh ways towards an integrated and challenging Christian worldview: to fold again the tongues of flame into the crowned knot of fire, so that the fire and the rose may be one.
© Copyright N. T. Wright 2000