This document examines Paul's eschatological views as expressed in 2 Corinthians 5:1-10 compared to his earlier and later letters. It makes three key points:
1) In 2 Corinthians, Paul sees his own death as more probable than surviving until Christ's return, though he desires to witness the Parousia.
2) 2 Corinthians suggests deceased Christians receive their spiritual bodies at death rather than at the Parousia.
3) The passage implies deceased Christians are in an intermediate state until the resurrection, rather than immediately present with the Lord.
The document analyzes how Paul's perspective on these issues in 2 Corinthians compares to his thoughts expressed elsewhere, to determine if his eschatological
This document examines Paul's eschatological views as expressed in 2 Corinthians 5:1-10 compared to his earlier and later letters. It makes three key points:
1) In 2 Corinthians, Paul sees his own death as more probable than surviving until Christ's return, though he desires to witness the Parousia.
2) 2 Corinthians suggests deceased Christians receive their spiritual bodies at death rather than at the Parousia.
3) The passage implies deceased Christians are in an intermediate state until the resurrection, rather than immediately present with the Lord.
The document analyzes how Paul's perspective on these issues in 2 Corinthians compares to his thoughts expressed elsewhere, to determine if his eschatological
This document examines Paul's eschatological views as expressed in 2 Corinthians 5:1-10 compared to his earlier and later letters. It makes three key points:
1) In 2 Corinthians, Paul sees his own death as more probable than surviving until Christ's return, though he desires to witness the Parousia.
2) 2 Corinthians suggests deceased Christians receive their spiritual bodies at death rather than at the Parousia.
3) The passage implies deceased Christians are in an intermediate state until the resurrection, rather than immediately present with the Lord.
The document analyzes how Paul's perspective on these issues in 2 Corinthians compares to his thoughts expressed elsewhere, to determine if his eschatological
This document examines Paul's eschatological views as expressed in 2 Corinthians 5:1-10 compared to his earlier and later letters. It makes three key points:
1) In 2 Corinthians, Paul sees his own death as more probable than surviving until Christ's return, though he desires to witness the Parousia.
2) 2 Corinthians suggests deceased Christians receive their spiritual bodies at death rather than at the Parousia.
3) The passage implies deceased Christians are in an intermediate state until the resurrection, rather than immediately present with the Lord.
The document analyzes how Paul's perspective on these issues in 2 Corinthians compares to his thoughts expressed elsewhere, to determine if his eschatological
The passage discusses Paul's personal relationship to the Parousia of Christ, the time of the receipt of the spiritual body, and the location and state of deceased Christians according to 2 Corinthians 5:1-10.
The three issues are 1) Paul's personal relationship to the Parousia of Christ, 2) the time of the receipt of the spiritual body, and 3) the location and state of deceased Christians.
In 2 Corinthians 5:1-10, Paul envisages receiving a σῶμα πνευματικόν (spiritual body) comparable to Christ's at the time of his death.
Tyndale Bulletin 22 (1971) 32-57.
THE TYNDALE NEW TESTAMENT LECTURE, 1970*
2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10: WATERSHED IN PAUL'S ESCHATOLOGY?
By M. J. HARRIS
In 1870 there appeared in France from the pen of a Protestant theologian who was a disciple of Schleiermacher and Ritschl, a volume entitled L'Aptre Paul. Esquisse d'une histoire de sa pen- se. 1 Louis Auguste Sabatier's aim was, in his own words, 'to write not a general biography of Paul, but a biography of his mind and the history of his thought' 2 which would refute the denial, both by the orthodox and by the Tubingen rationalists, of progression in Pauline theology. 3 As the first thoroughgoing proponent of the 'progressive character of Paulinism, as he termed it, 4 Sabatier ignited a flame which has been burning steadily ever since, despite repeated attempts to extinguish it or reduce its size. Numerous a priori objections, for example, have been levelled against the hypothesis that development is traceable in Pauline theology: precisely what constitutes development or progression of thought is disputed, it is alleged; the extent of the corpus Paulinum is contested; the chronological sequence of Paul's Epistles is uncertain; any criteria used for grouping Paul's letters for the purposes of comparison must necessarily be arbitrary; the Pauline correspondence is largely occasional; the argument from silence, which is not infrequently appealed to in support of developmental theories, is notoriously insecure; Paul's extant letters all fall within a limited period of his life roughly speaking, the second half of his career as a Christian missionary, when he might fairly be supposed to have reached Christian maturity; the essentially paradoxical character of
* Delivered at Tyndale House, Cambridge, July 1970.
1 Strasbourg, 1870.
2 Paul, 4 ET by A. M. Hellier, ed. G. G. Findlay, Hodder and Stoughton, Lon- don (1899) 2.
3 Ibid., pp. ix-xiii.
4 Ibid., p. 2. 2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 33
Christian verities gives pause to the effort to classify parts or the whole of Paul's theology according to successive stages of development. The validity of such arguments is not to be denied, but rather than rendering the quest to retrace any part of the apostle's spiritual and intellectual pilgrimage nugatory, these a priori objections simply form easily discernible sign- posts which remind travellers of the hazards of the way. The present paper does not aim to offer a systematic exegesis of 2 Corinthians 5:1-10, but rather will highlight three issues arising from the passage which impinge directly on the notion of development in Paul's eschatological thought. They are: 1. Paul's personal relationship to the Parousia of Christ; 2. the time of the receipt of the spiritual body; and 3. the location and state of deceased Christians. The evidence of 2 Corinthians 5 on these three points will be examined and compared with that of earlier and later Pauline Epistles in an attempt to determine the nature and the per- manency of any altered perspective which might be apparent in this chapter. For the purposes of this discussion, it is assumed that I Corinthians 15 was penned after I Thessalonians 4 and before 2 Corinthians 5 5 and that the date of Philippians is subsequent to the second Corinthian Epistle. 6 The evidence of the Pastorals has not been included.
1. PAUL'S PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP TO THE PAROUSIA OF CHRIST Not without reason has it been observed that throughout 2 Corinthians can be heard 'the rustling of the wings of the angel of death'. 7 Nowhere is this rustling more strident than in the passage 4:7-5:10 which deals with the sufferings and
5 No scholar known to the present writer (except W. Schmithals, Paulus und die Gnostiker, Herbert Reich, Hamburg (1965) 179f., 184) accepts the authenticity of these three Epistles but rejects the sequence 1 Thessalonians 4-1 Corinthians 15- 2 Corinthians 5.
6 Particularly when the Roman provenance and therefore late dating of Philip- pians are assumed, the implications of an Ephesian dating immediately before or after I Corinthians must not be ignored. See nn. 23, 62 below, and also P. Hoff- mann, Die Toten in Christus 2 , Aschendorff, Mnster (1969) 323-329.
7 H. Weinel, St. Paul. The Man and his Work, ET by G. A. Bienemann ed. W. D. Morrison, Williams and Norgate, London (1906) 379. Of 2 Corinthians, E. B. Allo writes (Saint Paul. Seconde pitre aux Corinthiens, 2 Paris (1956) 18) : Cette ptre si originale sous tant d'aspects, prend en plusieurs passages un ton, un coloris trs spcial, du fait que Paul y parat been plus proccupe qu'ailleurs de son tat physique prcaire, et de l'ide de la mort.'
34 TYNDALE BULLETIN
rewards of the apostolic office. Yet although Paul felt himself encompassed by affliction, perplexity and persecution (2 Cor. 4:8f.) which were sapping his physical strength, he was simul- taneously conscious of the operation of divine life in and through him. was apparent in his bodily existence at the same time as (2 Cor. 4:10f.), at the same time as (2 Cor. 4:16). Concurrent with the steady, irreversible process of physical debilitation was a process of spiritual renewal. 2 Corinthians 5:1-10 is primarily concerned with the outcome of these two processes, viz. the dismantling of the earthly tent-house (2 Cor. 5:1) and the swallowing up of mortal existence by immortal life (2 Cor. 5:4). That is, (2 Cor. 5:1) is to (2 Cor. 4:16a) what (2 Cor. 5:4) is to (2 Cor. 4:16b). 8
For we know', Paul writes in 2 Corinthians 5:1, 'that whenever our earthly tent-dwelling be destroyed, we become possessors of a building provided by God, a permanent heaven- ly house not built by human hands.' That . . . is not equivalent to . . . , . . . 9 or .. . hardly needs to be demonstrated, since a concessive use of (without other particles) seems to be lacking in Paul and in the New Testament in general, while far from there being any indication in the context that Paul is merely envis- aging his death as a remote and almost hypothetical possi- bility, 2 Corinthians 4:10-12, 14, 16 points to the apostle's awareness that at any time in the near future the (2 Cor. 4:12) could reach its climax in his actual death. Furthermore, in this protasis in 2 Corinthians 5:1 can be regarded simply as a conditional particle only if an expression such as be added: if I die 10 could not stand unqualified, since Paul believed in the universality of death (Rom. 5:12; 1 Cor. 15:22).
8 While the outcome of the is clearly the of 2 Corinthians 5:1, the of this verse does not mark the result of a process of , as though in 2 Corinthians 4:16 referred to a building process. The , is related to 2 Corinthians 4:16 only through , . . . : not until the terminated the could the building from God be acquired. It is the of 2 Corinthians 5:4, not the of 2 Corinthians 5:1, which alludes to the climax of the process of inward renewal. As such, implies the acceleration of the process of Christificationthat is, an act of transformation.
9 Cf. 2 Corinthians 4:16, . . . . . .
10 It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the of 2 Corinthians 2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 35
In light of the improbability that , is concessive and the necessity of qualifying the protasis if bears its regular condi- tional sense, a third proposal merits consideration. Examples are to be found in the LXX, 11 in the Pauline Epistles, 12 and in the remainder of the New Testament, 13 where followed by the aorist subjunctive approximates to in meaning. In such cases the conditionality of the protasis is not necessarily compromised by the notion of temporality. Thus in 2 Corinthians 5:1 it was when, but only when, the tent which formed his earthly house had been dismantled that Paul was to become a possessor of the . He did not write . . . because only the actual arrival of death would frus- trate his natural desire to be alive to witness the Parousia. Yet it would appear that, at the time of the composition of 2 Corinthians (or at least of 2 Cor. 1-9), his pre-Parousia de- cease seemed to him more probable than his survival until the Advent. In particular, 2 Corinthians 4:14 apparently pre- supposes that his of the of Jesus (2 Cor. 4:10) and the within him (2 Cor. 4:12) would ultimately issue in his death, but just as the preserva- tion of his life amid apostolic tribulation witnessed to the resurrection power of Jesus (2 Cor. 4:8-11; cf. Phil. 3:10), so his preservation in death through a resurrection like Christ's ( , 2 Cor. 4:14) would testify to God's transcendent power (2 Cor. 4:7, 14). 14 Although the distinction between and in 2 Corinthians 4:12, 14 (cf. 1:14) need not imply that Paul expected that the Corinthians, unlike himself, _____________________________________________________ 5:1 refers to death. For L. Brun, ZNW 28 (1929) 219E, however, denotes the Vollmass and Gesamtresultat of the process of destruction, of past and future apostolic sufferings and afflictions, without signifying or including death in the literal sense, while W. Mundle, writing in Festgabe fr Adolf Jlicher, J. C. B. Mohr, Tbingen (1927) 95f., sees in the term a general reference to the destruc- tion and termination of earthly corporeal existence and therefore an allusion to a twofold possibilityPaul's transformation at the Parousia or his death before the Parousia.
11 Isaiah 24:13; Amos 7:2; Tobit 4:3 (BA); 6:17 (BA) (S reads ) cited by Arndt, 210.
12 1 Corinthians 16:10; 2 Corinthians 9:4; 13:2 (all combinations of and ).
13 Matthew 9:21; John 6:62 (?) ; 12:32; 14:3; 16:7 ( ?); Hebrews 3:7f. (=3:15; 4:7 and Ps. 94:7f. LXX); 1 John 2:28 ( A B C P) (K L read ); 3:2; 3 John 10.
14 2 Corinthians 4:14, like the qualifying which follows the over-confident in 2 Corinthians 1:10, indicates Paul's awareness that divine deliverance from death (cf. 2 Cor. 1:9f.; 4:811; 6:9) was not guaranteed even to an apostle. 36 TYNDALE BULLETIN
would be spared death before the Parousia, it certainly suggests that he was reckoning himself among those destined to be raised as well as transformed. There is compelling evidence, on the other hand, that before the time of 2 Corinthians, Paul reckoned on the probability of his own survival until the Advent. In 1 Thessalonians 4, in the course of his reply to the Thessalonian Christians who were grieving over the pre-Advent death of some fellow-be- lievers because they feared that they had thereby forfeited the right to share in the Parousial glory of Christ, Paul twice uses the expression ( ) (1 Thes. 4:15, 17). It cannot be claimed that, because neither writer(s) nor addressees had already died, was an inevitable designation, for subsequently Paul classed himself with the dead (see 1 Cor. 6:14; 2 Cor. 4:14; Phil. 3:11). Nor need the use of imply that Paul believed in a fixity within the two designated groups (i.e., of ) since presumably he was not merely comforting the Thessalonians concerning the past but also reassuring them for the future: they were to cease mourning ( , Thes. 4:13) for those of their number who had died and never recommence mourning should others die (cf. , Thes. 4:13; and 1 Thes. 5:10). Yet 1 Thessalonians 4:15 provides more than a general and impersonal statement of the two categories of Christians at the Advent. 15 are identified, not merely as 'those alive at the coming of the Lord' (as if Paul had written simply ), but as 'we who shall continue living until ( 16 ) the Lord's Advent'. The asyndetic is epexe- getic, further describing the : 'we who are now 17
15 Pace A. L. Moore, The Parousia in the New Testament, E. J. Brill, Leiden (1966) 110.
16 ( ), which should be construed with and not (as A. Wimmer, Bib 36 (1955), 275f, 285) with , is not simply the equivalent of (cf. Thes. 2:19; 3:13; 5:23; 1 Cor. 15:23) but specifies the temporal limit () of the . Paul is not prone to confuse and (N. Turner, A Grammar of New Testa- ment Greek, Vol. III. Syntax, T. and T. Clark, Edinburgh (1963) 256).
17 While F. Prat (The Theology of Saint Paul. I, ET by J. L. Stoddard, Burns Oates & Co., London (1933) 76 n.1) claims that in 1 Thessa- lonians 4:17 gives to both (nos viventes) and () (nos superstites) its future connotation, B. Rigaux (Saint Paul. Les ptres aux Thessaloniciens, J. Gabalda & Co., Paris (1956) 540) comments nous admettons volontiers que les prsents doivent tre entendus comme tels et non pas "ceux qui seront vivants la parousie". 2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 37
alive [viz. those] who are destined to survive until the Parou- sia. The interpretation of I Corinthians 15:51 bristles with problems. The original text, it seems, read . . But does the enigmatic phrase , which, to judge by the textual variants, caused considerable difficulty to the scribes, signify universal survival until the Parousia, universal escape from death at the Parousia, majority survival until the Parousia, minority survival until the Parousia, or the survival of at least some Christians until the Parousia? If, as the majority of grammarians believe, 18 is equiva- lent to , the first two views are excluded. Again, on last interpretation ([Christians such as] we shall not all asleep) it is difficult adequately to explain why Paul not write or simply . The viable alternatives, then, are: (I) 'not all of us [presently alive] shall fall asleep', i.e., while some of us may die, most of us will not; (2) 'we shall not, all of us [pre- sently alive], fall asleep', i.e., while most of us will die, some of us will not. Two observations favour the latter view (minority survival until the Parousia): in a negative sentence, may stand for 19 ; in writing , and not, as logic might have demanded, , Paul probably intended the emphasis to be placed on (note the . . . parallelism), rather than on the negative. For the exegesis of the concluding clause of I Corinthians 15:51 ( ), the most secure point of orienta- tion is undoubtedly the parallel expression in verse 52, where and are clearly contrasted. Thus the 'we shall be changed' of verse 52 would indicate that the we shall all be changed' of verse 51 refers to the universal transformation of Christians alive at the Parousia, rather than to the transformation of all Christians, survivors and deceased, at the Parousia. On this showing, the essence of the was not that a transformation of both the living and the dead was to occur immediately at the Parousia, 20 but rather that
18 See, e.g., BDF, 224 para. 433 (2); N. Turner, Syntax, 287.
19 See the discussion of T. C. Edwards, A Commentary on the First Epistle to the Corinthians, Hodder and Stoughton, London (1885) 452f.
20 So J. Jerernias, NTS 2 (1955-1956) 159. 38 TYNDALE BULLETIN
those Christians who did not, by a pre-Parousia death, qualify for the transformation which was the prerequisite for the inheri- tance of the kingdom (1 Cor. 15:36, 50), nevertheless would all, without exception, undergo the required transformation at the Parousia. While we who are now alive shall not all fall asleep, all of us who survive until the Parousia will be changed.' shows that Paul now regarded survival until the Parousiaand not, as in 1 Thessalonians 4, death before the Parousiaas an exceptional experience among Christians in general, 21 while , when compared with in verse 52, indicates that he yet could still classify himself with those who would remain alive until the Advent. But even when Paul could reckon on his survival until the Parousia, along with a majority (as in 1 Thes. 4:15, 17) or a minority (as in 1 Cor. 15:51f.) of Christians, he did not dis- count the possibility of his being 'poured out as a libation'. In 1 Thessalonians 5:10 he speaks of the Lord Jesus Christ 'who died for us so that whether we wake or sleep we might live with him' (RSV). In spite of the potent arguments that may be adduced in favour of the view that and here allude, possibly in a proverbial expression, to being awake and being asleep (in a physical sense), the context of 1 Thessa- lonians 4:13-5:11 supports the traditional exegesis in which and specify, in the manner of and (= ) in 1 Thessa- lonians 4:13-17, the two categories of believers at the Parousia. 22
But here, be it noted, Paul is simply stating alternative possi- bilities ( ), not expressing his personal expectancy (as in 1 Thes. 4 and 1 Cor. 15) or reckon- ing with the implications of a distinct probability (as in 2 Cor. 5). Again, with its assertion 'God raised the Lord and will raise us up in turn by his power', 1 Corinthians 6:14 is equally clear evidence that Paul always perceived that a pre-Parousia death was not impossible for himself or any Christian. In this
21 Thus also C. H. Dodd, New Testament Studies, Manchester University Press, Manchester (1953) 110; C. K. Barrett, SJT 6 (1953) 43.
22 Thus, e.g., F. Guntermann, Die Eschatologie des Hl. Paulus, Mnster (1932) 50, 283, 290. 2 CORINTHIANS 5:110 39
matter of Paul's 'life expectancy' it is appropriate only to speak of possibilities or probabilities, never of certainties. 2 Corinthians 5, therefore, marks a decisive turning-point in the apostle's estimate of his own relation to the Parousia. No longer is his pre-Advent decease a possibility more hypo- thetical than real. For the first timeto judge by the extant Pauline Epistleshe has begun to reckon with the implica- tions of that possibility, a possibility which has ceased to be a distant reality by becoming a probability. 23
2. THE TIME OF THE RECEIPT OF THE SPIRITUAL BODY
Attention may now be given to the second question raised by any exegesis of 2 Corinthians 5:110the time of the receipt of the . By some scholars the of 2 Corinthians 5:1 has been identified with the Church as the Body of Christ or as the New Temple: 24 by others it is equated with heaven it- self, with celestial beatitude, with the heavenly Temple, with a celestial dwelling-place (cf. Jn. 14:2), with a vestment of celes- tial glory, or with the heavenly mode of existence. The princi- pal objection to all such identifications lies in the fact that, in view of 2 Corinthians 4:16a, it seems incontestable that the of 2 Corinthians 5:1 a alludes primarily, if not solely, to the physical body and that therefore it would destroy the parallelism and opposition of the two parts of 2 Corinthians 5:1 if the second, antithetical were referred to anything other than some form of embodiment. 25 Moreover, the corre- spondence between Paul's delineation of the 'building' in 2 Corinthians 5:1 and his description of the spiritual body in Corinthians 15 also points unmistakably to the identification of the with the . Both are of divine origin ( ; cf. I Cor. 15:38), spiritual (; cf. 1 Cor. 15:44, 46), permanent and indestructible (; cf. 1 Cor. 15:42, 52-54), and heavenly ( ; cf. I
23 If, however, Philippians is dated before 2 Corinthians, the significance of 2 Corinthians 5 would be eclipsed since Philippians 1:19-26; 3:11 shows Paul seriously reckoning with the possibility of a pre-Advent decease.
24 See, e.g., E. E. Ellis, Paul and His Recent Interpreters, William B Eerdmans, Grand Rapids (1961) 41f.
25 This argument assumes that . is in apposition to . 40 TYNDALE BULLETIN
Cor. 15:40, 48f.). 2 Corinthians 5:1-10 may legitimately, therefore, be treated as dealing with the believer's receipt of the . But when did Paul expect to receive a body of glory com- parable to Christ's? There can be little doubt that in I Corin- thians 15, as in Thessalonians 4, he envisaged believers as being transformed at the Parousia. It was at the coming of the Lord that the dead in Christ would rise and perhaps then wit- ness the transformation of the living (1 Thes. 4:15f.); it was at his coming that all those who belonged to Christ would be made alive (1 Cor. 15:22f.). Attempts to find in 1 Corinthians 15 inchoate adumbrations of the view that the loss of the , was to be immediately followed by the reception of the are less than convincing. First, Paul's use of the analogy of the seed cannot be taken to prove or even to suggest an immediate continuity between successive forms of embodiment. 26 Secondly, in the statement 'the dead will be raised imperishable' in 1 Corinthians 15:52, the becoming need not have preceded the which occurs at the Parousia. Paul probably regarded the two events as concurrent, 27 not separated by the interval between the Christian's death and Christ's Parousia. In the place, that 1 Corinthians 15:35 reads 'With what kind of body do they come ()?' and not 'What kind of body do they receive [at the Parousia]?' can scarcely be deemed significant. 28 Since this verse embodies Paul's version of his objector's ques- tions (be the objector imaginary or real) and not his own queries (which might reflect his own thought), it is inadmissible to supply a phrase such as 'with Christ at his coming' with the verb and assume that Paul implies that the receipt of the spiritual body antedated the believer's emergence from the grave or coming with Christ. What is the testimony of 2 Corinthians 5 on this point? The apodosis of the conditional clause in verse 1 reads - . Does here signify present posses-
26 See, however, R. H. Charles, Eschatology. The Doctrine of a Future Life in Israel, Judaism and Christianity, 2 Schocken Books, New York (1963=1913) 450, 453, 459.
27 Cf. E. Teichmann, Die paulinischen Vorstellungen von Auferstehung und Gericht und ihre Beziehung zur jdischen Apokalyptik, Freiburg i.B. (1896) 51; G. Vos, The Pauline Eschatology, William B. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids (1961=1930) 213.
28 But cf. R. F. Hettlinger, SJT 10 (1957) 188.
2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 41
sion or future acquisition? Any interpretation which sees the as a present possession has the effect of converting a conditional sentence into a concessive sentence: 'If and when I die, I acquire a spiritual body' becomes 'Even if I die, I nevertheless still possess an . As it is, the apodo- sis would become true if and only if, or when and only when, the protasis was fulfilled. Not before or until the of th had occurred could the receipt of the take place. Just as the speci- fies the future act of dying, so the refers to (or at least implies) a future act of acquisition. Furthermore, unless the building from God be distinguished from the 'habitation from heaven' of verse 2, 29 the possession of this building is a future experience, an object of earnest hope ( , verse 2), not a present reality. 30
If, then, the of 2 Corinthians 5:1 alludes to a future acquisition of the spiritual body, does this occur at the Parousia or at death? Not a few commentators interpret the verb as a futuristic present: 31 what is, in fact, to be obtained only at the Advent has become, to faith, an assured possession of the present, this sure conviction arising from the apostle's know- ledge of the character of a God whose word was his deed and from the pledge of the resurrection-transformation God had already given in the Spirit (2 Cor. 5:5). But, apart from the fact that the futuristic present is usually found with verbs of motion, what consolation would be offered Paul in the event of his death ( . . . ) by the knowledge that at the Parousia is he would receive a spiritual body? The moment when the consolation is needed must be the moment when the con- solation is given; and the consolation received at death cannot simply be identical with that assurance of the future acquisi- tion of the resurrection body which is already possessed during life. Since the receipt of the at the Parousia was, on this view, guaranteed whether or not death had oc-
29 As is done by M. E. Thrall, The First and Second Letters of Paul to the Corin- thians, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1965) 146f.
30 . . . cannot, accordingly, be reckoned parallel to (Heb. 8:1) or (Heb. 13:10).
31 See, e.g., K. Deissner, Auferstehungshoffnung und Pneumagedanke bei Paulus, Leipzip (1912) 57; A. T. Robertson, A Grammar of the Greek New Testament in the Light of Historical Research, 4 Nashville (1934) 881f., 1019. 42 TYNDALE BULLETIN
curred previously, any notion of conditionality in 2 Corinthians 5:1 is virtually obliterated. It remains to propose that dates the possession of the spiritual body from the moment of the destruction of the earthly tent-dwelling, i.e., from the moment of death. 32 On this view, the present tense might stand in the apodosis for two reasons. First, after . . . which points to a single, specific occurrence in the future, a punctiliar future might have been expected in an apodosis whose realization was dependent on the prior or simultaneous fulfilment of the condition. And the successive aorists in verses 2, 3, 4 (- [bis], , ) which are used to denote the future reception of the spiritual body would point in the same direction. But in Hellenistic Greek, the punctiliar future of ( shall acquire') is scarcely ever found. 33
And, at least in Pauline usage, never expresses (although it always presupposes) punctiliar action. 34 Consequently may stand for in specifying a future acquisition. 35
And, it might be observed, the certainty of this future acquisi- tion is expressed solely by not by the tense of . Secondly, alongside this linguistic and negative explanation of Paul's use of should be set a theological and positive motive, the principal reason for the usage. He may have wished to indicate that between the destruction of the and the receipt of the there was no interval
32 So also, inter alios, G. B. Winer, A Grammar of the Idiom of the New Testament, ET by J. H. Thayer, Andover (1872) 266 (The future would have been inexact; the instantaneous entrance into a new habitation, the moment the takes place, is intended to be expressed'); C. F. G. Heinrici, Der zweite Brief an die Korinther, 8 Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, Gttingen (1900) 172 (, bestimmt den Zeitpunkt des Besitzantritts: mit dem Eintritt des hat der Gestorbene statt des zerstrten Leibes den von Gott her- rhrenden Leib'); R. H. Charles, Eschatology, 458f. ('When we dieobserve the determination of the point of timewe have [], we come into possession of, an immortal body in heaven'); H. Hanse, , TWNT II 825 (Those who bear the spirit [verse 5] are at once invested with the heavenly body at death, and do not have to sleep until the resurrection).
33 Cf. MM 270; E. Mayser, Grammatik der griechischen Papyri aus der Ptolemer- zeit, II. 1, Walter de Gruyter & Co., Berlin (1926) 212.
34 In eight of the twelve uses (excluding Mk. 16:18 and including Rev. 2:30 [ 046 vg syr]) of in the New Testament, including the three Pauline occur- rences, its linear significance is clear (Mt. 12:11; Lk. 11:5; Jn. 8:12; Rom. 13:3; 1 Cor. 7:28; Gal. 6:4; 2 Tim. 2:17; Rev. 2:30), while in Matthew 1:23 and pos- sibly Mark 10:21 (=Mt. 19:21; Lk. 18:22) denotes punctiliar action.
35 That might be used in a punctiliar sense is apparent from Romans 6:22 and 1 Corinthians 9:37. 2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 43
of homelessness. The moment one residence was destroyed, another was received. 36 would then point to an imme- diate succession between two forms of embodiment without implying a long-standing or even momentary coexistence of two bodies. 'As soon as our earthly tent-dwelling is taken down, we are the recipients of a building from God.' Nor is the only indication in 2 Corinthians 5 that death is regarded as the moment of acquisition of the . Any exegesis of this passage must postulate a reason for Paul's use of the doubly compounded verb , since in I Corinthians 15, in a similar context, the form is employed. 37 It has become almost traditional to posit an essential distinction between these two verbs: the one (), it is claimed, is used of the resurrection of the dead, the other () Paul reserves as a distinctive term denoting the special experience of Christians who survive until the Advent. Those who have been temporarily stripped of their corporea- lity by death, at the resurrection are reclothed by the spiritual body, while those who survive to witness the Parousia are overclothed by the resurrection body: as T. S. Evans has aptly expressed it, 'the naked indue, the not-naked superindue'. 38
On purely linguistic grounds, however, the validity of the alleged distinction, as it applies to 2 Corinthians 5, must be seriously questioned. J. H. Moulton cites in 2 Corinthians 5:3 as an example of 'the survival in NT Greek of a classical idiom by which the preposition in a compound is omitted, without weakening the sense, when the verb is re- peated'. 39 In such cases, claims Moulton, the simplex may be treated as fully equivalent to the compound, although he adds but of course in any given case it may be otherwise explicable. 40
What is more, the fourfold use of in 1 Corinthians 15:53f. with reference to the transformation (cf. , 1 Cor. 15:51f.) which must be experienced by any corruptible,
36 That, in its relation to the verb of the apodosis, the aorist (subjunctive) after or in the protasis is future perfect in sense (N. Turner, Syntax, 114), doe not militate against this proposal.
37 'Tout le raisonnement invite a donner son entiere valeur au prefixe ' ( J. Dupont, . L'union avec le Christ suivant saint Paul, Descle de Brouwer, Paris (1952) 136.
38 Exp 2nd series 3 (5882) 174.
39 A Grammar of New Testament Greek. Vol. I. Prolegomena, 3 T. and T. Clark, Edinburgh (1908) 115.
40 Ibid. 44 TYNDALE BULLETIN
mortal man ( , ) before he can inherit incorruptibility and immortality shows that the verb is not a term used exclusively to describe the resurrection of the dead. Why, then, if it was not to mark a difference between the transformation of the living and the resurrection of the dead, did Paul use in 2 Corinthians 5:2, 4? It seems doubtful whether the motive was merely to create alliteration, since precedes , although allitera- tion abounds in 2 Corinthians. Nor is there basis for treating the - as intensive (to put on in increasing measure or to be completely clothed) as though there were stages of incorpora- tion into the Body of Christ 41 or degrees of investiture with the spiritual body. Positively, it may be contended that Paul chose in preference to in order to indicate that the continuity between the successive forms of corporea- litythe and the was such that the presupposed no 42 and was therefore more accurately an , 43 the physical body (not the 'inner man' 44 ) being the over which the of the resur- rection body was cast, 45 or, to preserve Paul's mixed metaphor, the earthly tent-dwelling forming the ; and the heavenly habitation the . Paul viewed himself as donning the resurrection body without having first doffed the earthly body it was to be a case of addition without prior subtraction, 46
a case not of investiture succeeding divestiture but of 'super- investiture' without any divestiture. That the earthly house is said to be destroyed (verse 1) does not militate against this conclusion, since unlike verse 1, verse 2 is developing the transformationnot the 'exchange'motif in relating the to the . Thus by his use of in 2 Corinthians 5:2, 4 Paul may be reinforcing the effect of
41 As R. F. Hettlinger, SJT 10 (1957) 189, 190 n. 5, 192, 193 n. 4, maintains.
42 So also H. Windisch, Der zweite Korintherbrief, 9 Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, Gttingen (1924) 161.
43 Although this noun is not attested, it may be conveniently used as the sub- stantival equivalent of (2 Cor. 5:2, 4).
44 As G. Wagner, RHPR 41 (1961) 389, believes.
45 Superinvestiture () is therefore not a privilege reserved for Christians alive at the Parousia but the experience of every Christian either at death or at the Parousia. The - in signifies neither intensity nor direction nor exactly supplementation but rather addition by superinduement.
46 For a contrary view, see C. F. D. Moule, NTS 12 (1965-6) 107, 116, 123. 2 CORINTHIANS 5: 110 45
, by emphasizing that the moment of death is also the moment of investiture, that the and the are virtually coincident. 47
However the ostensible discrepancy between 1 Corinthians 15 and 2 Corinthians 5 with regard to Paul's view of the time of the Christian's receipt of his spiritual body be explained, 48
this difference between the two passages should not be ignored. t furnishes a second reason for regarding 2 Corinthians 5 as a significant milestone in the progression of the apostle's eschatological thought.
3. THE LOCATION AND STATE OF DECEASED CHRISTIANS
The third and final area of study concerns the location and state of the Christian dead. It is here that 2 Corinthians 5:8 is relevant. Against the exegetes who refer verses 6-10 of 2 Corinthians 5 to the Parousia, 49 it must be asserted that a temporal distinction can hardly be drawn between the de- struction of the earthly house (verse 1) and departure from the mortal body (verse 8), referring the former to the time of death but the latter to the Advent. The of verse 8, like the of verse 1, transpires at death. Moreover, there is no 'reason to suppose that an interval of time separates the from the . As in Philippians 1:23, the joining the two infinitives is explicative: to have departed from this life is to have taken up residence in the presence of the Lordthe second occurrence, like the first, transpires articulo mortis. This conclusion is con- firmed by the two previous verses. The implication of verse 6 is that the state of and the state of are coincident: as soon as residence in physical embodiment ceases, so also does absence from the Lord. Again, verse 7 envisages walking and seeing
47 Another reason for Paul's use of could conceivably have been to assert, against certain Corinthian proto-Gnostics (cf. 1 Cor. 15:12) who might have maliciously understood the of 1 Corinthians 15:53f to imply that disembodied immortality formed the content of the Christian hope, that the house from heaven was put on over, and therefore replaced, the earthly house: it was not a case of simply assuming () (a disembodied) immortality.
48 See, e.g., W. D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism, 2 SPCK, London (1955) 314-320.
49 See, in particular, P. Hoffmann, Toten, 281, 284f., 321. 46 TYNDALE BULLETIN
as two mutually exclusive and imme- dately successive states of Christian existence. If death termin- ates the believer's life of faith, it also inaugurates his face-to- face vision of Christ. , accordingly, depicts the location and state of the Christian immediately after his death. The phrase clearly implies 'spatial' proximity to Christ, and since Paul believed that Christ, after his resurrection, ascended to heaven and the right hand of God, 50 the 'dead in Christ' must be 'located' in heaven prior to the Advent of Christ. But what of their state? What is the significance of ? Once it is recognized that the ingressive aorist it (take up residence) has no implication of movement or direc- tion, the temptation of claiming 51 that denotes both linear motion and punctiliar rest on arrival loses its attractiveness a claim which, in any case, fails to recognize that in Hellenistic Greek the distinction between motion and rest has become obscured so that with the accusative, when used to indi- cate a relationship between persons, may mean simply 'with', in the presence of. 52
may merely be the equivalent of , or better, . Moreover, when denoting a relationship between living persons ( [= ), the preposition itself contains no idea of reci- procity of action. But with this said, it seems inadequate to conclude that the believer's dwelling with the Lord implies no more than his incorporation in Christ, 53 or his impassive spatial juxtaposition to Christ, or a state of semi-conscious subsistence or suspended animation. When Paul describes the future state of the believer as one of dwelling () in the company of () the Lord, he must be referring to some heightened form of inter-personal communion, particularly since the Christian's eternal destiny 54 would scarcely be de-
51 See, e.g., P. E. Hughes, Paul's Second Epistle to the Corinthians, Marshall, Mor- gan & Scott, London (1961) 178 n. 53.
52 Cf. BDF, 124 para. 239 (I); P. F. Regard, Contribution l'tude des prpositions dans la langue du Nouveau Testament, Ernest Leroux, Paris (1919) 552, 556, 579.
53 See E. E. Ellis, The Gospel of Luke, Thomas Nelson, London (1966) 269.
54 But J. N. Sevenster (Some Remarks on the in 2 Cor. 5:3', in Studia Paulin in honorem Johannis de Zwaan, Bohn, Haarlem (1953) 207) distinguishes 2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 47
picted as qualitatively inferior to his experience of fellowship with Christ upon earth while walking . Just as o (used of the Spirit in the believer) 'denotes a settled permanent penetrative influence', 55 so (used of the believer with the Lord) suggests a settled permanent mutual fellowship. But had Paul always believed that at his death the Christian departed to Christ's immediate presence to enjoy face-to-face communion? While 1 Thessalonians and 1 Corinthians con- tain no express statements concerning the whereabouts of the Christian dead before the Advent, several considerations make the conclusion inevitable that in the early stages of his career, Paul regarded deceased believers as 'spatially' separated from Christ although still corporately joined to Christ. (1) In 1 Thessalonians 4:16f. the kinetic imagery is uniform: there is a of Christ (verse 16), and an ; of the dead (, verse 16) followed by the rapture of both dead and living ( , verse 17) [ ] (verse 17) to meet their absent Lord. Then follows, it may be assumed, the formation of the tritimphal train and an ascent into heaven. (2) In 1 Thessalonians 4:17b implies that it is after, and only after, the at the Parousia that either the living or the dead (together the subject of ) will be , in 'spatial' proximity to Christ. (3) If the Thessalonians were anxious primarily about the participation of the dead in the benefits of the Parousia, their grief would have been further allayed had Paul been able to refer to the present state of the departed as one of heavenly beatitude in the presence of Christ. (4) The of 1 Thessalonians 5:10 could scarcely allude to a post-mortem and pre-Parousial experience of proximity to Christ 56 but must be referred either to the period commencing at baptism 57 (in which case nearness to ____________________________________________________ between a preliminary , in a disembodied state immediately after death and the finara (1 Thes. 4:17) in an embodied state after the Parousia.
55 W. Sanday and A. C. Headlam, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, 5 T. and T. Clark, Edinburgh (1902) 196.
56 See per contra P. Feine, Theologie des Neuen Testaments, 3 Leipzig (1919) 370, 543; J. A. Sint, ZKT 86 (1964) 60, 73, 77.
57 Thus R. C. Tannehill, Dying and Rising with Christ, Alfred Tpelmann, Berlin (1967) 133f. 48 TYNDALE BULLETIN
Christ is not implied), or, as is far more probable, to the resur- rection state following the Parousia (cf. Rom. 6:8b). (5) As long as death itself could be conceived of as a punish- ment (1 Cor. 11:29f.; cf. 5:5), it must have remained improb- able that Paul could have simultaneously regarded it as effect- ing a believer's glad reunion with Christ. (6) The Christian's face-to-face vision of God (implying `spatial' proximity to Christ) referred to in 1 Corinthians 13:12, was not to be experienced until , that is, not until the Advent occurred when would supersede rd (verse 10). (7) While, in 1 Thessalonians and 1 Corinthians, death does not sever the relation (note the expression , 1 Thes. 4:16; cf. 1 Cor. 15:18) and thus separate the believer from Christ (cf. Rom. 8:38f.), in these Epistles it does not, as in 2 Corinthians 5, create the eschato- logical relation and thus end a believer's relative exile from Christ (cf. 2 Cor. 5:6, 8). The two passages in 1 Thessalonians which prima facie point to an opposite conclusion are, upon closer inspection, seen to be indecisive. The of 1 Thessalonians 3:13 with whom the Lord Jesus comes are more probably angels than saints; but even if the expression did refer to saints or to saints and angels, the reference to 'all the holy ones' shows that the coming alluded to must be either a judicial coming subsequent to the Parousia or a descent to earth after the meeting of dead and living Christians with the Lord. Believing as he did at this time, that the majority of believers would still be living at the Parousia, Paul would scarcely refer to believers who were with Christ in heaven as . Secondly, in 1 Thessalonians 4:14 Paul asserts that through the power of Jesus ( ) God will bring with him ( ) those who have fallen asleep. Does this mean that God will restore departed saints to their living brethren when they accompany Christ at his return? It should be noted that in this verse is parallel to the earlier and is therefore equivalent to 58
58 If the whence and whither of the be pressed, it is more probable in the context that and should be supplied than and . 2 CORINTHIANS 5:110 49
(cf. 2 Cor. 4:14; I Cor. 6:14), that adumbrates Paul's conception of Christ's resurrection as the ; of believers' resurrection, and that is the subject of , not . Precisely where, at this stage, Paul 'located' the dead in Christ prior to their meeting the Lord in the air remains un- certain; it sufficed for him to know that the dead were pre- sently (1 Thes. 4:16) and had not perished (1 Cor. 15:18) and would ultimately be also (1 Thes. 4:17; 5:10). However, if he interpreted his own kinetic imagery of Thessalonians 4 literally, he must have assumed, perhaps unconsciously, that departed saints were waiting in their graves or in Hades or Sheol until the dominical was given as the prelude to the resurrection transformation. Concerning the state of before the Parou- sia in this early period of Paul's thought, several observations may be made. First, the verb whose nine Pauline usages are, significantly, restricted to 1 Thessalonians and Corinthians, 59 seems to be basically if not exclusively puncti- liar in meaning, 60 being employed not so much to describe the intermediate state per se, but rather to symbolize the Chris- tian's manner of entry upon that state and perhaps to allude to the certainty of his exit from it. Certainly the apostle's use of does not compromise his basic anthropological monism by suggesting that either an inanimate body or a disembodied spirit 'sleeps' until 'awakened' by the sound of the archangel's trumpet-blast. While, then, the term does not in itself imply any psychopannychitic cessation of consciousness or insensibility, this euphemism for death would seem, in the context of Pauline usage, to portray Christian resurrection as a restoration of the person to full self-conscious activity and development after a period of depressed conscious- ness and reduced vitality perhaps spent in Sheol as a 'paralysed personality'. On this view, the intermediate state would be an interval of reduced consciousnessnot of unconsciousness,
59 I Thessalonians 4:13, 14, 15; I Corinthians 7:39; 11:30; 15:6, 18, 20, 51.
60 In I Thessalonians 4:13 (D G K have ; Cor. 15:20; Mt. 27:52) may as easily mean (concerning) those who, from time to time, fall asleep' as 'those who are asleep' (but cf. R. E. Bailey, ZNW 55 (1964) 164) Similarly, in I Corinthians 11:30, may denote a (repeated) occurrence (not a few are falling asleep, obdormiunt) and not a state (several are sleeping, dormiunt). See, however, P. Hoffmann, Toten, 204f. 50 TYNDALE BULLETIN
suspended consciousness, or latent existencewhich is but a shadowy counterpart of either earthly or heavenly existence. The fact that all the Pauline uses of are confined to 1 Thessalonians and 1 Corinthians cannot be dismissed as inconsequential or coincidental, for it has already been shown that these two Epistles reflect the apostle's expectation of surviving until the Advent together with the majority or mino- rity (respectively) of the Christians then alive. Never, therefore, does Paul allude to his own death as a 'falling asleep'. 61 On the contrary, when in 2 Corinthians 5 he is considering the implications of his own death before the Advent, he seems de- liberately to avoid using the term in referring to the depriva- tive nature of deathin verse 1 death is a , not a and to substitute for the notion of that of . 62 Paul may have discarded the -concept because the dual idea of the believer's reception of the at death and his conscious fellowship with Christ after death seemed to him incompatible with the concept of waiting in 'sleep' until the Parousia inaugurated the relationship and the was received. 'Sleep' foreshadows resurrec- tion; 'dwelling with the Lord' presupposes resurrection. 63
Thus far it has been argued that in three respects 2 Corin- thians 5:1-10 marks a significant stage in the development of Pauline eschatology. But merely to isolate these altered eschatological perspectives is not to prove that the passage forms a dividing line in the progression of the apostle's thought: 2 Corinthians 5 could, conceivably, simply be an aberration rather than a watershed. An examination of the Pauline cor- respondence subsequent to 2 Corinthians, however, shows such a hypothesis to be unwarranted. In vain does the exegete search Paul's Epistles written after 1 Corinthians for any indication of the apostle's expectation
61 Cf. K. Hanhart, The Intermediate State in the New Testament, T. Weyer, Groni- gen (1966) 76, 109f., 113, 120.
62 If Philippians was written before 2 Corinthians, it was not in 2 Corinthians 5 but in Philippians 1 that Paul for the first time viewed death as an . to Christ's immediate presence where personal communion was enjoyed.
63 Paul's belief that in his resurrection state Christ possessed a Phil. 3:21) would more naturally imply that communion in- volved the believer's possession of the than that 'face-to-face' fellowship should be experienced between a bodiless spirit and its embodied . 2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 51
of his own survival until the Advent expressed in terms com- parable to 1 Thessalonians 4:15, 17 or I Corinthians 15:51f. In Romans 13:11f., where Paul writes For salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believed; the night is far gone, the day is at hand', he is appealing to the perpetual 'imminence' of the Advent (verse 2a) and the incessant reduction of the interval between the resurrection of Christ and his Parousia (verse 11b) as incentives to moral resolution and ethical earnest- ness (verses 12-14), but he does not indicate whether or not he anticipated being still alive when that interval expired. in Philippians 4:5, like in Romans 13:12, is no evidence that Paul never discarded his expectation of witnessing the Parousia as a survivor. Since the phrase is verbally reminiscent of a passage in the Psalms where the near- ness of the Lord is associated with his hearing and answering prayer, 64 it is probably to be linked with the following verse, supplying the reason why anxiety is misplaced and petitionary prayer can and should incessantly be offered. But even if it be interpreted as the ground for the preceding statement and therefore in a temporal sense (since the Lord is soon to vindi- cate your cause, forbear; cf. Rom. 12:18f.), the imminency and certainty of the vindication, rather than its immediacy, may be stressed. Furthermore, the referred to in Philippians 3:20f. was for Paul no prerogative of survivors until the Advent but was the prerequisite for all, both living and dead, who would inherit the kingdom of God (cf. 1 Cor. 15:50-53). 65 While it is certainly true that the phrase 'our lowly body' more naturally applies to living persons than to decomposed corpses, it should be remembered that Paul is comparing the present inferior nature of human embodiment with a future glorious corporeality, not the state of his or the Christian's body immediately before and after either a future resurrection or a future transformation. Thus , standing opposed to as humanity is to divinity and man's corrupti-
64 Psalm 144:18 (cf. 118:151): .
65 In Paul's view, while only the dead are 'raised' (e.g., 1 Cor. 15:52), both the living and the dead are 'transformed' (, 1 Cor. 15:51f., of the living; of (1 Cor. 15:52) compared with (I Cor. 15:42), for the change in the dead). Thus the dictum 'the resurrection of the dead and the transformation of the living', if taken to imply that the dead' are not transformed and the living are not raised, both distorts and pre- serves (respectively) the truth.
52 TYNDALE BULLETIN
bility to divine glory, may mean 'of us (mortals)' and not specifically 'of us (Christians)'. Evidence is not lacking, on the other hand, to suggest that after the turning-point represented by 2 Corinthians, Paul continued to regard his survival until the Advent as less probable than his prior death. Romans 6:5, with its assurance that Christians are destined to experience a resurrection comparable to Christ's, seems to presuppose that Paul was anticipating a pre-Parousia death for himself and his readers. Again, in itself the argument of Romans 11 does not necessitate a prolonged interval before the Parousia and the prior intervention of Paul's death, but as C. H. Dodd com- ments, 'the forecast of history in chap. xi. is hardly framed for a period of a few months or years'. 66 The testimony of Philippians 1:19-26 on this point is indecisive. Here, reckoning with the possibility of his experiencing a martyr's death in the near future (cf. Phil. 2:23f.), Paul expresses his earnest wish that he might glorify Christ whether by living or by dying (verse 20). Subjectively, his desire tended to be that the glori- fication of Christ should be accomplished by his death, since that also effected his departure to Christ's presence. But although, in actual fact, either alternativedeath or life, execution or releasecould be his experience in the immediate and uncertain future, in verses 25f. (and possibly verse 19; cf. 2:24), perhaps optimistically, he expresses an assurance () of the successful outcome of his trial and therefore the preservation of his life, which he grounds ( ); verse 25) objectively on the pastoral needs of the Philippian church (verse 24). Philippians 3:11 seems more conclusive, however. The element of doubt inseparable from testifies to Paul's self-distrust and modesty of hope, not to any uncertainty of his own salvation and certainly not to the improbability of his dying before the Advent. Compared with Corinthians 6:14 (God will raise us), this verse states Paul's resurrection hope personally (. . . that if possible I may attain the resurrection from the dead), the apostle apparently assum- ing that he himself would enter the heavenly commonwealth after first dying. Here is no general 'whether we wake or sleep' (1 Thes. 5:10) but a personal statement which proposes no
66 The Epistle to the Romans, Hodder and Stoughton, London (1932) 209. 2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 53
alternatives. Paul's death, whether by martyrdom or not, would consummate his participation in Christ's sufferings dur- ing his life (cf. Phil. 3:10). What of Paul's view, after 2 Corinthians, concerning the time of believers' transformation? It must be frankly admitted that after 2 Corinthians 5 there are found no explicit expres- sions of a belief in the Christian's resurrection at death. Whether Paul maintained the viewpoint of 2 Corinthians 5 can be determined only by examining his subsequent letters for traces of the continuing influence of his newly-formed conviction. On no reading of the evidence can it be claimed that the theology of death reflected in 2 Corinthians 5 rendered super- fluous the notion of the future Parousia, resurrection and judgment. 67 Yet the first two of these motifs do not seem to have been retained in an unmodified form. 68
(1) With the drastic and permanent reduction of Paul's life expectancy about the time of 2 Corinthians, his Parousia hope, although undeviatingly maintained until the end of his life, came to be less frequently expressed in his letters. It would appear to be less than satisfactory to account for this pheno- menon simply by pointing to such external factors as change of audience and purpose, while ignoring the possible influence of a sharpening of focus in one section of the screen of Pauline eschatology. Paul's Advent hope did not, as is frequently asserted, 69 recede from the foreground to the background of his thought; the significance of articulus mortis became more clearly defined, making probable certain transpositions of emphasis. (2) Where Paul's Advent expectation does find expression in later letters, it lacks some of its earlier intensity. The nexus
68 Logic might demand that resurrection at death should presuppose judgment at death, but nothing in 2 Corinthians 5:10 either demands or excludes the view that the divine assessment of believers' works precedes or coincides with their reception of the . For a powerful defence of the interpretation of this verse as a reference to a so-called 'particular judgment' occurring after the death of each Christian, see A. Feuillet, Recherches de science religieuse 44 (1956) 397-401.
69 See, e.g., A. M. Hunter, Paul and his Predecessors, 2 SCM, London (1961) 249.
54 TYNDALE BULLETIN
existing between Paul's anticipation of dying before the Advent and this waning of intensity is less logical than psychological. While the probable intervention of his own death between the two Advents of Christ did not reduce the significance of the second epochal event, it was natural that the latter should be awaited less excitedly, not because he would no longer be a personal participant in the events of the Parousia but because it had ceased to be the next personally significant event in the eschatological timetable. (3) In Paul's later description of the Parousia, its apocalyptic concomitants, previously so prominent, have largely dis- appeared. If, as the years progressed, Paul's eschatological expectation became more mystical in content and less apoca- lyptic in form, this dual process would have been hastened once it was recognized that one purpose of redemptionthe in- dividual believer's conformity to Christ's was achieved at death, not simply at the Parousia. (4) The Advent has become, in the apostle's later writing, essentially the open manifestation of a presently hidden state rather than the inauguration of a new era. Once Paul arrived at his conviction that the transformation of his would occur at the Parousia or at death, whichever were the earlier, 70 and as long as he believed that his death would, in all probability, precede the Parousia, this latter event would be associated, not with the completion of the process and the beginning of the state but with the of an already existing state which had commenced at death. Not only did the Parousia signify the arrival of the Saviour and the revelation of his wrath (2 Thes. 1:7f.; 2:8; Rom. 2:5; 12:19). It now also involved the of the glorious state of the sons of God (Rom. 8:19), the disclosure of present realities rather than the creation of new. The purpose of the Advent was not simply the glorification of the saints (2 Thes. 1:10) alive at the time, but in addition the manifestation of glorified saints (Col. 3:4). How was the concept of resurrection affected by Paul's new insights? The fact that the term ; is never used by
70 Admittedly, this is a rationalization of Paul's alleged later view. He himself may or may not have been conscious of the need or way to reconcile his new belief with his retention of hope for a Parousia. 2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 55
Paul after 1 Corinthians does not imply that his hope of the resurrection of the dead was discarded in favour of a belief in the immortality of the soul, since Philippians 3:11 alludes to and references to a future resurrec- tion of believers are not restricted to passages written before 2 Corinthians. 71 Rather, it may be suggested, Paul's view of resurrection was undergoing certain modifications. Resurrec- tion was coming to be regarded less as a catastrophic corporate event lying in the future and more as a continuing individual process 72 inaugurated at baptism and consummated at death, with its outcome manifested at the Parousia. One "reason for the difference between the doctrine of resurrection expli- cated in I Corinthians 15 and that portrayed in Colossians 2-3 may be found in the new theology of death-resurrection seen in 2 Corinthians 4:16-5:10. Once death came to be reck- oned with in personal terms and as the normative Christian experience, 73 the way was prepared for resurrection to be viewed from an individual perspective, and therefore not merely as an event occurring for all Christians at a single mo- ment in the future, but also, and particularly, as a process of spiritual renewal involving assimilation to Christ and the formation of the 'spiritual body' (2 Cor. 3:18; 4:16b; Rom. 6:4; 8:29; 12:2; Col. 3:1f.), 74 a process commencing with the individual believer's baptismal identification with Christ's death and resurrection (Rom. 6:4) and climaxed in his assump- tion of the image of Christ (cf. 1 Cor. 15:49) at the moment of death. Resurrection as a future event, it may be presumed, represented the Parousial assembling together of deceased and living Christians in union with Christ (cf. 2 Thes. 2:1 and their subsequent corporate completeness as the glorified Body of Christ (Phil. 3:11). The Parousiaremained the object of Paul's desire as long as he lived since only that event, with its concomitant of resurrection, could effect collective con-
71 See 2 Corinthians 4:14; Romans 6:5, 8; 8:11.
72 Cf. G. Matheson, Spiritual Development of St. Paul, Blackwood and Sons, Edin- burgh (1890) 168-175.
73 See D. M. Stanley, Christ's Resurrection in Pauline Soteriology, Pontifical Biblical Institute, Rome (1961) 77.
74 It is significant that in 2 Corinthians (1:22; 5:5) and subsequently (Rom. 1:4; 8:11, 15-17, 23; Eph. 1:13f.; 4:30), Paul's doctrine of the Spirit becomes more intimately related than previously to the concept of resurrection (see F. Gunter- mann, Eschatologie, 1921.; K. Deissner, Auferstehungshoffnung, 1o0-Ito). 56 TYNDALE BULLETIN
summation at the same time as bringing individual complete- ness. Not the resurrection of the body articulo mortis but the resurrection of the Body articulo Parusiae brought full . Finally, if the Roman provenance of Philippians be accep- ted, it can scarcely be denied that after 2 Corinthians 5 Paul continued to believe that the post-mortem condition of Chris- tians was one of conscious fellowship with Christ in heaven. Philippians 1:20-23 indicates that while he awaited his trial, Paul's personal desire, other considerations apart, tended to be that he should glorify Christ by a martyr's death, which would involve his immediate passage into Christ's presence. 75 The of Philippians 1:23 is clearly parallel to the of 2 Corinthians 5:8, while the corresponds to the implied in the Corinthian passage. Spatial propinquity to Christ and personal enjoyment of his fellowship are not to be postponed until the Parousia but commence at the moment of death. It can therefore be seen that because the altered eschato- logical perspectives of 2 Corinthians 5 were subsequently maintained by Paul, the eschatology of this passage cannot be deemed a temporary aberration in his thought. Nor, on the other hand, do the modifications of outlook and clarifications of doctrine evident in 2 Corinthians 5 constitute a radical re- vision of Pauline eschatology, since the cardinal concepts of his eschatologyParousia, resurrection, judgmentwere not abandoned, but (in the case of the Parousia-resurrection motif) merely redefined in the light of new insights. 76
Positively it may be claimed that 2 Corinthians 5:1-10 marks a watershed in the development of Paul's eschatology. (I) Probably owing to his recent and profoundly disturbing confrontation with death in Asia (2 Cor. 1:8-11), Paul, ap- parently for the first time, recognizes the probability of his dying before the Parousia. (2) Whereas previously the apostle had regarded the resur- rection of deceased Christians as transpiring at the Parousia,
75 This is not to imply that the experience of being with Christ immediately after death was a special privilege reserved for Paul (and other martyrs) (contra A. Schweitzer, The Mysticism of Paul the Apostle, ET by W. Montgomery, A. and C. Black, London (1931) 135-137).
76 It was therefore not a case of the retention of familiar terms while the ideas lying behind them were discarded (contra E. Teichmann, Auferstehung, 67, 74). 2 CORINTHIANS 5:1-10 57
in 2 Corinthians 5 he envisages his own receipt of a comparable to Christ's as occurring at the time of his death. (3) By the time of the second Corinthian Epistle Paul has ceased viewing the Christian dead in general as resting in sleep in the grave or Sheol until the Parousia and now antici- pates his and therefore their enjoyment of the bliss of conscious personal communion with Christ in heaven immediately after death. These three modifications in secondary elements of Paul's eschatology were, in all probability, not unrelated. It remains to suggest that in Paul's (2 Cor. 1:8), possibly a drastic illness which curtailed his evan- gelistic endeavour in Troas (cf. 2 Cor. 2:12f.; 7:5) during his third 'missionary journey', is to be discovered the potent leaven under whose influence his conception of the 'intermediate state', which until the period before 2 Corinthians had been somewhat indeterminate, became fermented in a process of clarification whose outcome is represented by 2 Corinthians 5:1-10, where, owing to the relinquishment of his expectation of living until the Parousia caused by the , Paul elucidates the significance of articulus mortis for the Christian, a doctrinal innovation which in turn enabled him to clarify his view re- garding the location and state of the Christian dead.
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