1. Introduction
A half century ago, Arthur Peacocke, a well-known proponent of the compatibility of Christian theology with science, presaged the more recent interest being shown in ancient conceptions of πνɛῦμα and their potential usefulness for redescribing the so-called participatory elements of Paul's thought. In Peacocke's 1971 Science and the Christian Experiment, he complains that ‘apart from the direct biological connection, it is hard to see what sort of solidarity we might have with Christ …. Indeed the concept of solidarity seems too vacuous in any sense other than the biological.’Footnote 1 Peacocke therefore turns his attention to the role of πνɛῦμα in early Christian thought. As conceptualised by Peacocke, πνɛῦμα is that which ‘is immanent in the created world … the power and presence of God as he fulfils the potentialities of matter’.Footnote 2 The word ‘matter’ here signals the distinctiveness of Peacocke's account of solidarity with the messiah, for πνɛῦμα is understood to be that which interacts directly with matter, particularly living matter, and thus makes possible a quasi-biological conception of what in previous generations had famously been called ‘Christ-mysticism’.Footnote 3 C. F. D. Moule, reflecting on Peacocke's approach, grasps the nettle: ‘[Peacocke] is saying that little sense can be extracted from language which speaks of us as in Christ, but more from language which speaks of the Spirit as in us’.Footnote 4 This sentiment aligns closely with the tenor of several more recent discussions, the contours of which are as follows: there is a renewed interest in Paul's notion of solidarity with the messiah, particularly the messiah as ‘seed of Abraham’; alleged spatial expressions of this solidarity reflected in Paul's uses of various prepositions have stimulated new hypotheses about the discourse(s) in which Paul is participating; there is an urge to provide an account of Paul's notion of solidarity that is less ‘vacuous’ and more ‘biological’; and although it appears that Paul's understanding of χριστός does not supply what is needed for any such account, his understanding πνɛῦμα perhaps does.
The concerns represented in this sketch of recent scholarship are all reminiscent of Peacocke's. Moreover, beyond these concerns, what has become prominent since the 1970s is a focused interest in how Paul understood ethnic identity.Footnote 5 Thus, determination to give a more concrete account of solidarity with Christ according to Paul is coupled with an effort to understand Paul not as the founder of a ‘universal’ religion in which ethnic distinctions are obliterated (‘in Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek’),Footnote 6 but as a Jew who remained a Jew yet had become convinced that some of the heritable benefits of his kinspeople bestowed by their tribal deity had now also been made available to pagans, who, importantly, remained pagans (‘we are Jews by nature and not gentile sinners’).Footnote 7 With these aims in mind, several scholars have recently set their hands to developing a hypothesis concerning the role of πνɛῦμα in genealogical descent according to Paul, offering a ‘realistic’ account of gentile inclusion among Abraham's seed and the simultaneous preservation of distinct Jewish and gentile ethnic identities.Footnote 8 Caroline Johnson Hodge is to be given primary credit for this hypothesis.Footnote 9 Some of the premises of Johnson Hodge's argument, especially the materiality of πνɛῦμα in Stoic and Pauline cosmology, also appear in the work of Dale Martin and Troels Engberg-Pedersen, and her ideas are developed and applied further by Stanley Stowers and even more so by Matthew Thiessen.Footnote 10 However, to my knowledge Johnson Hodge is the first to work out a coherent theory of the role of material πνɛῦμα in establishing patrilineal descent according to Paul. I will therefore describe Johnson Hodge's proposal in some detail before noting more briefly how Stowers and Thiessen have extended her ideas. I will then assess the hypothesis that Paul believed that the infusion of material πνɛῦμα into gentile believers established a genealogical, quasi-physiological, relation to Abraham such that pagans became ‘real, material’ seed of Abraham while simultaneously remaining gentiles.Footnote 11 In this assessment, it is not my aim to evaluate the proposal that Paul, like the Stoics, conceived of πνɛῦμα as a material substance. This suggestion is a premise of the theory under scrutiny, but I do not adjudicate on whether that premise is correct. I thus grant that it is possible that Paul conceived of πνɛῦμα as a material substance irrespective of whether in Paul's thought πνɛῦμα plays the specific role in gentile inclusion among Abraham's seed that Johnson Hodge, Stowers and Thiessen propose.Footnote 12 My present concern is the relation between πνɛῦμα, whatever its ontology, and genealogical descent according to Paul. I determine that the nature of this relation between πνɛῦμα and descent in Paul's thought is not adequately explained by the hypothesis under review. Therefore, I conclude by offering an alternative account of Paul's understanding of the forging of Abrahamic descent.
2. Description
In her 2007 work If Sons, Then Heirs, Johnson Hodge brings together ancient medical conceptions of πνɛῦμα, Stoic cosmology and what she sees as the linguistic features of a discourse of patrilineal descent to develop her account of gentile adoption into Abraham's family in Paul's thought. Concerning πνɛῦμα, she observes:
Medical and philosophical texts consider pneuma to be a physical entity, matter, and they often conceive of it as air or breath. Medical writers explain that pneuma is the vital substance of the body … the crucial procreative element … In its finest form, pneuma constitutes the very particles which make up the soul.Footnote 13
Johnson Hodge goes on to describe a particular quality of πνɛῦμα according to Stoic philosophy – its ability to blend with other substances. This blending, referred to as κρᾶσις, is explained by Chrysippus:
Certain substances and their qualities are mutually coextended through and through, with the original substances and their qualities being preserved in such a mixture; this kind of mixture [Chrysippus] calls specifically ‘blending’ [κρᾶσιν]; … [S]uch a coextension of blended bodies occurs when they pass through one another, so that no part among them fails to participate in everything contained in such a blended mixture.Footnote 14
Given this quality of πνɛῦμα, Johnson Hodge deems it ‘the perfect catalyst for joining peoples together’, and in line with Martin and Engberg-Pedersen she proposes that this material conception of πνɛῦμα is a feature of Paul's own cosmology.Footnote 15
Turning to linguistic matters, Johnson Hodge suggests that two prepositions, ἐκ and ἐν, commonly appear in discourses of patrilineal descent to express the relation of progeny to progenitor. Thus descendants are said to be both ‘from’ and ‘in’ their ancestors. To illustrate the use of ἐκ in such descriptions, Johnson Hodge points to examples in Aristotle, Plato, Josephus, the Septuagint and Paul himself.Footnote 16 These examples are relatively clear, and the use of ἐκ in genealogical discourse is peripheral to our present concern. More relevant is Johnson Hodge's proposal concerning the use of the preposition ἐν in discourses of patrilineal descent. To illustrate the use of ἐν to express the relation between ancestor and progeny, Johnson Hodge adduces evidence again from Aristotle, who speaks of offspring being ‘in the generator’ (ἐν τῷ γɛννῶντι) (Gen. an. 716a22); Philo, who describes what is preserved ‘in the seminal principles’ (ἐν τοῖς σπɛρματικοῖς … λόγοις) (Legat. 55); Seneca, who discusses that which is ‘in the seed’ (in semine) (Nat. 3.29.2); and LXX Gen 25.23, where Rebecca is told, ‘two nations are in your womb’ (ἐν γαστρί σου). Johnson Hodge then turns to Paul's epistles, where she finds that two Pauline idioms, ἐκ πίστɛως and ἐν χριστῷ, are best understood as expressions of patrilineal descent. She proposes that Paul uses the first expression, ‘out of faithfulness’, as a kind of wordplay ‘to create a new discourse of kinship for gentiles in which they spring from the faithfulness of Abraham and Christ’.Footnote 17 What is of more interest here, because it involves a somewhat more complex and problematic claim, is Johnson Hodge's theory about Paul's ‘in Christ’ language. For this, Johnson Hodge looks to Paul's language in Gal 3.8, 14, where she perceives an illuminating analogy between Abraham and the messiah, according to which both are progenitors ‘in’ whom their posterity may be said to exist. Paul ‘adapts this notion of descendants being “in” the patriarchs to create a way for gentiles to join Abraham's lineage by being “in” Christ’.Footnote 18 But how does being ‘in Christ’ create a way for gentiles to join Abraham's lineage? To explain, Johnson Hodge appeals to Stoic pneumatology as described above. Since for Paul, as for the Stoics, πνɛῦμα is a material substance, ‘the gentiles join Christ by taking his pneuma into their hearts, incorporating his substance into theirs. In this way, this procreative pneuma creates new kinship, and does so materially.’Footnote 19 The result of this is that ‘the gentiles receive the ancestry of their new kin’ and thus the messiah ‘can serve as a link for them to the lineage of Abraham’.Footnote 20 In other words, to be ‘in Christ’ is to be ‘in Abraham’ because the messiah's πνɛῦμα consists of the substance of Abraham, given that the messiah is a natural descendant of Abraham. To use Johnson Hodge's paraphrase of Gal 4.6 (to which we will return presently), ‘Once God sends “the spirit of his son” into their hearts, the gentiles are now sons.’Footnote 21
After Johnson Hodge's monograph appeared, Stanley Stowers published an essay in which he elaborates on her proposal in two ways. First, Stowers integrates into Johnson Hodge's hypothesis of patrilineal descent his account of Paul's messianology, which he had articulated earlier in his A Rereading of Romans.Footnote 22 In contrast to Albert Schweitzer, whose work on Christ-mysticism Stowers generally admires for its ‘realism’, Stowers regards Jesus’ messiahship as a specifically anti-climactic component of Paul's understanding of the Christ-event.Footnote 23 In dying, Jesus foreswears his Davidic messianic prerogatives, and this foreswearing constitutes his primary act of faithfulness.Footnote 24 This faithfulness in turn results in Christ's vindication at his resurrection wherein he is granted the divine πνɛῦμα, the ‘stuff’ by which gentiles ‘in Christ’ gain entry into the physical lineage of Abraham.Footnote 25 Second, to clarify how possession of Christ's πνɛῦμα effects Abrahamic pedigree for gentiles, Stowers looks to the notion of ‘contiguity of substances: a matter of extension, identity, and contiguousness’.Footnote 26 This construct provides a materialist paradigm for conceptualising how gentiles’ possession of Christ's πνɛῦμα includes them in Christ's own genealogical identity. Because ‘[t]he same stuff makes Christ and believers contiguous’, and because ‘Christ participated in Abraham and shared his stuff’, believing gentiles ‘who come to share the pneuma of Christ … share in this contiguity back to Abraham and are thus seed of Abraham’.Footnote 27
Turning to Thiessen, there are three ways in which he also extends the work of Johnson Hodge.Footnote 28 First, Thiessen finds the aforementioned Stoic notion of κρᾶσις helpful for explaining how gentiles remain gentiles but also become seed of Abraham:
The theory of krasis helps account for the way in which the pneuma provides a new genealogy for gentiles-in-Christ. Since krasis permits the perfect mixture of two substances, while allowing those two substances to retain their own distinctive aspects … Paul's gentile believers do not become a new essence; rather … their fleshly gentile identity is thoroughly mixed with, but distinct from, their identity as pneumatic sons of Abraham. The gentile-in-Christ now consists of two natures in one person, not one new composite nature in one person.Footnote 29
Second, Thiessen appeals to Stoic cosmology to explain Gal 3.14, where, as Thiessen sees it, Paul equates the blessing of Abraham with the gift of πνɛῦμα. Since πνɛῦμα is not mentioned in the Genesis narrative, how could Paul have claimed this?Footnote 30 Thiessen's answer is that given a purported widespread belief in the ancient world that stars were comprised of πνɛῦμα, the promise to Abraham that his seed would be like the stars was interpreted not only quantitatively but also qualitatively.Footnote 31 That is, Abraham's seed would not only be as numerous as stars, they would also be ‘exalted like stars’ by being comprised of πνɛῦμα.Footnote 32 Third, whereas Johnson Hodge and Stowers do not distinguish clearly between Abrahamic descent and divine descent nor discuss how one relates to the other, Thiessen does offer such an account. Given associations in ancient literature between stars and semi-divine beings and given the astral quality of the πνɛῦμα as understood by the ancients, the reception of the blessing of Abraham – the πνɛῦμα which makes his heirs star-like – also ‘divinises’ Christ-followers, that is, makes them ‘sons of God’.Footnote 33 In sum, ‘genealogical descent from Abraham results in divine descent’.Footnote 34
3. Assessment
There are other peripheral, though no less interesting, details and implications of the hypothesis with which Johnson Hodge, Stowers and Thiessen are working, and there are certainly insights worth affirming. However, this theory of πνɛῦμα and descent also involves several difficulties: a linguistic issue of whether the uses of words in ancient genealogical discourse have been precisely described; an analogical issue of whether the comparison between Christ and ancestors in genealogical discourse is valid; and a logical issue of whether Paul's own lines of reasoning have been accurately represented.Footnote 35
First, the linguistic issue specifically concerns Johnson Hodge's description of how prepositions are used in ancient discourses of patrilineal descent. I leave aside her account of how the phrase ἐκ πίστɛως and its contrast term ἐκ νόμου operate in Paul's letters. Johnson Hodge's proposal about these expressions is ingenious – namely, that they are wordplays intended to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate means of inheritance – but it is not directly relevant to her account of how πνɛῦμα ostensibly forges new ancestry for gentiles.Footnote 36 Instead, my query concerns the claim being made about the preposition ἐν: is the idiom consisting of ἐν with a personal object (which is Paul's usage in the relevant phrases such as ‘in Christ’) truly a typical expression of patrilineal descent? Upon closer examination, it appears not. In all of the examples of this purported usage adduced by Johnson Hodge (see above), the object of the preposition ἐν is not precisely the ancestor his- or herself, but rather a gonadic noun such as ‘womb’, ‘loins’ or ‘seed’. The one exception to this is Aristotle's expression ‘in the generator’ (ἐν τῷ γɛννῶντι) (Gen. an. 716a22). In this case, while it is true that the object of ἐν, the participle γɛννῶντι, denotes the male parent (cf. 716a19–20), Aristotle's discussion pertains strictly to progenitors and next-generation progeny, not multi-generational pedigrees. Moreover, within the broader context of De generatione animalium the phrase ἐν τῷ γɛννῶντι (which, significantly, is used only once in the entire treatise) appears to function as a technical expression of Aristotle's conception of the relation between the substance of the male parent and that of the offspring. Thus, later in the treatise he defines ‘the generator’ (τοῦ γɛννήσαντος) as that ‘which is in actuality what the material out of which the offspring is formed is potentially’ (734b35).Footnote 37 The phrase ἐν τῷ γɛννῶντι is not therefore a typical expression of patrilineal descent even for Aristotle, and its appearance in the example adduced by Johnson Hodge cannot support a theory of a widespread discourse of generation and ancestry in which descendants are commonly said to be ‘in’ their ancestors as such. In turn, this lack of evidence seriously erodes the plausibility of Paul using the phrases ‘in Christ’ and ‘in Abraham’ as expressions of ancestry.
This brings us to the second, analogical, issue. In Paul's thought, is Christ really comparable to an ancestor? The analogy Johnson Hodge draws between the phrases ‘in Abraham’ and ‘in Christ’ entails the notion that both Abraham and Christ function as ancestors in Paul's discourse, but Christ is not portrayed by Paul as the ancestor of those who are ‘in’ him. Johnson Hodge acknowledges this, admitting that ‘the relationship between Christ and gentiles … is not expressed in terms of ancestor and descendants. Instead, Christ and the gentiles seem to be same-generation offspring of common ancestors’.Footnote 38 Stowers grants the same.Footnote 39 Neither, however, account for this problem in their schemata, and thus the linguistic analogy drawn between a purported discourse in which progeny are said to be ‘in’ their ancestors and Paul's ‘in Christ’ language fatally breaks down. Its viability would depend on the introduction of a second type of genealogical discourse in which siblings or same-generation cousins may be said to be ‘in’ one another because of shared ancestry. No evidence whatsoever is adduced for such a manner of speaking, however, and at this point the complexity of the hypothesis eclipses its explanatory power.
Finally, we come to the most crucial problem with the theory under review – inaccuracies in the representation of Paul's own logic. Specifically, the problem concerns the logical relationship between adoption and the reception of πνɛῦμα as articulated by Paul in Gal 3.14 and 4.6. In Gal 3.14, Paul describes the purposes or results of Christ having ‘becoming a curse’, and he does so with two ἵνα-clauses. The first clause describes the granting of Abraham's blessing to gentiles, and the second describes the reception of πνɛῦμα. These two clauses may be read as sequential or parallel, but in neither case is it tenable to claim that the second logically precedes the first, that the reception of πνɛῦμα effects access to Abraham's blessing, access presumably reserved for his heirs. This, however, is just what is asserted by Johnson Hodge: namely, that the reception of πνɛῦμα creates in gentiles the requisite status for enjoying the blessing of Abraham.
The logical issue I am raising is even more pronounced in Johnson Hodge's reference to Gal 4.6. There, Paul writes, ‘and because (ὅτι) you are sons, God sent forth the πνɛῦμα of his son into our hearts’.Footnote 40 Johnson Hodge, in her aforementioned paraphrase of the verse, ignores the subordinating conjunction ὅτι and directly inverts the logical relationship between the clauses, writing, ‘Once God sends “the spirit of his son” into their hearts, the gentiles are now sons, and therefore heirs.’Footnote 41 Engberg-Pedersen attempts to defend this construal of Gal 4.6. He, like Johnson Hodge, contends that ‘sonship proper was achieved through reception of the pneuma’, and therefore he proposes a ‘special interpretation’ of the conjunction ὅτι in Gal 4.6 such that the sentence may be read, ‘And that you are sons, God sent [πνɛῦμα], etc.’Footnote 42 It remains unclear, though, how this construal of ὅτι would alter the logical relationship between the status as sons and the sending of πνɛῦμα. Engberg-Pedersen paraphrases his translation, ‘And proof that you are sons is the fact that God sent his pneuma’, but this rendering is still premised on the status of sonship logically preceding the sending of πνɛῦμα since the notion of proving something assumes an already established, and hence provable, state of affairs.Footnote 43
Taken together, the linguistic, analogical and logical problems identified here suggest that the hypothesis of πνɛῦμα and genealogical descent proposed by Johnson Hodge, Stowers and Thiessen does not accurately depict the way Paul conceived of the matter. Far from an exercise in pedantry, attending to details such as the precise objects of prepositions, the specifics of generational classification and the discursive functions of conjunctions is one of the primary ways of testing the explanatory power of a hypothesis about Paul's thought, for Paul's writings are the only immediate evidence for his thought that we have. In this case, that evidence is inadequately explained.
4. Alternative Proposal
Having offered this predominately deconstructive assessment, I would now like to construct an alternative picture of genealogical descent according to Paul. Thiessen, considering Romans 4, which is a major text for understanding Paul's view of Abrahamic descent, avers that ‘in Romans 4 Paul does not elucidate the way in which … faith forges this genealogical connection between gentiles and Abraham’.Footnote 44 Similarly, Stowers finds the depiction in Romans 4 of how gentiles ‘come to share in a principle of kinship’ to be ‘notoriously fuzzy’.Footnote 45 While it may be that Romans 4 will not satisfy a demand for ‘biological’, ‘realistic’ or ‘material’ accounts of genealogical descent, that does not mean Paul has offered no explanation at all. Indeed, Romans 4 appears to be precisely the place where we find Paul explaining how it is that gentiles are made to be children of Abraham.
In Rom 4.17, Paul specifies Abraham's faith in God as faith in ‘the one who makes alive the dead and calls the things that do not exist into existence’ (τοῦ ζῳοποιοῦντος τοὺς νɛκροὺς καὶ καλοῦντος τὰ μὴ ὄντα ὡς ὄντα).Footnote 46 This characterisation of God pertains clearly to the conception and birth of Isaac, and this is reflected in Paul's description in Rom 4.19–20 of the strengthening of Abraham's faith in God's promise of posterity despite the veritable death of his own body and Sarah's womb due to their age (Rom 4.19–20).Footnote 47 It is also clear that this same characterisation of God articulated in Rom 4.17 further pertains to Abraham's fatherhood of the gentiles. Thus, Paul also describes Abraham's faith in Rom 4.18 as his belief that ‘he would be made the father of many gentiles according to what had been spoken’. And it is equally clear yet again that the characterisation of God in Rom 4.17 pertains also to God's raising of Jesus from the dead, for in Rom 4.24 Paul draws a comparison between Abraham's faith and believers’ faith in ‘the one who raised from the dead Jesus our Lord’. Paul's likening of believers’ faith to Abraham's faith is evident in his use of the expression οἷς μɛ́λλɛι λογίζɛσθαι, ‘[us] to whom it will be reckoned’, in Rom 4.24. This expression is patterned on the LXX Gen 15.6 expression ἐλογίσθη αὐτῷ, ‘it was reckoned to him’, which is quoted in Rom 4.22. In LXX Gen 15.6 the implied subject of the passive verb ἐλογίσθη is Abraham's act of believing God (ἐπίστɛυσɛν Αβραμ τῷ θɛῷ), and the same implied subject is in view in Rom 4.22. Paul, then, in Rom 4.23–4, explicitly avers that LXX Gen 15.6 was not written solely on account of Abraham (οὐκ … δι’ αὐτὸν μόνον), but also on account of ‘us’ (ἀλλὰ καὶ δι’ ἡμᾶς), namely, those ‘who believe upon the one who raised Jesus the Lord from among the dead’. By appropriating the language of LXX Gen 15.6 to describe the ‘us’ of Rom 4.24, Paul has explicitly likened faith in the one ‘who gives life to the dead and calls into existence things that do not exist’ to faith in the one who resurrected Jesus.Footnote 48
In Romans 4, then, and despite Thiessen's and Stowers's opinions to the contrary, Paul has signalled quite clearly how a ‘genealogical connection between gentiles and Abraham’ is ‘forged’.Footnote 49 It is forged by resurrection, by an act of creation from nothing. This is why Paul indicates that Abraham's belief that he should be the father of gentiles (Rom 4.18) is part and parcel of his belief in the God ‘who makes alive the dead and calls the things that do not exist into existence’. Thus, gentiles are made heirs of Abraham when they pass through death into new life. It is therefore not surprising to find that Paul two chapters later, in Rom 6.1–11, expounds dying and rising with Christ. There, Paul articulates an expectation of future bodily resurrection akin to the messiah's (Rom 6.5) as well as what he regards as believers’ present status of having already died and risen in solidarity with the messiah (Rom 6.11, 13). It is this latter notion – present inclusion in the messiah's death and resurrection – that is the creating and resurrecting God's act by which Abrahamic and divine descent are made realities. One might object by noting that Paul says nothing in Romans 6 of filial status. That is true. However, in Rom 6.6, 9 Paul characterises the result of dying and rising with the messiah as emancipation from slavery,Footnote 50 and in Rom 8.15 and Gal 4.7 Paul likens the status of having been emancipated to that of having been adopted. Moreover, Rom 8.18–23 confirms that Paul understands there to be a correspondence between resurrection and filial status. He envisions there an ‘apocalypse of God's children’ (Rom 8.19) at the final resurrection, a revelation curiously characterised as adoption, which is itself defined as ‘the redemption of our bodies’ (Rom 8.23).
Given the correspondence in Romans 4 between God's raising of the dead and the creation of Abrahamic heirs, and in light of Paul's description in Romans 6 of baptism as an entrance into the death and rising of Christ resulting in emancipation characterised elsewhere as obtaining filial status, Johnson Hodge is correct to describe baptism in Galatians as a ‘ritual of adoption’. However, she and Thiessen are both incorrect to assume that the reason baptism is a ritual of adoption is because Paul understands it to entail the reception of πνɛῦμα.Footnote 51 While it may be the case that reception of πνɛῦμα upon baptism is depicted elsewhere in the New Testament, a concomitance of these two events does not feature in Paul's descriptions of baptism.Footnote 52 In Rom 6.3–4, Paul likens baptism to burial in the sense that it is a ritual of dying with Christ to rise with Christ, and there is nothing in the image of burial to suggest the infusion of πνɛῦμα. In Gal 3.27, Paul pictures baptism as an enrobing, an image that could perhaps suggest the donning of πνɛῦμα. But it is χριστός with which believers are enrobed so as to share in the messiah's identity as ‘seed of Abraham’. There is no justification for glossing the image of being enrobed with χριστός with the notion of being filled with πνɛῦμα.Footnote 53 The language of enrobing and its specifically messianological emphasis must be allowed to stand.
As for Paul's expositions of baptism, this leaves only 1 Cor 12.13. There Paul writes, ‘For in the one πνɛῦμα we were all baptised into one body.’ This would appear to support Johnson Hodge's and Thiessen's contentions that baptism consists of, or symbolises, the reception of πνɛῦμα. An argument in favour of their view could perhaps be strengthened by Paul's subsequent statement in the same verse, ‘and we were all made to drink of one πνɛῦμα’. The problem with this reading of 1 Cor 12.13, however, concerns the meaning of Paul's idiom of being baptised ‘in’ (ἐν) something ‘into’ (ɛἰς) something. Paul uses this idiom of baptism only once more, in 1 Cor 10.2, where he writes of Israel that they were ‘all baptised into (ɛἰς) Moses in (ἐν) the cloud and in (ἐν) the sea’. This is an enigmatic statement, but our concern is simply to observe the language Paul is using. The use of the prepositions in 1 Cor 10.2 matches the idiom in 1 Cor 12.13 of baptism ἐν ἑνὶ πνɛύματι and ɛἰς ἓν σῶμα, that is, the messiah's body. Linguistically, in 1 Cor 12.13 and 10.2 baptism ɛἰς ἓν σῶμα corresponds to baptism ɛἰς τὸν Μωϋσῆν and baptism ἐν ἑνὶ πνɛύματι corresponds to baptism ἐν τῇ νɛφɛ́λῃ καὶ ἐν τῇ θαλάσσῃ, respectively. This latter linguistic correspondence between πνɛῦμα on the one hand and ‘cloud’ and ‘sea’ on the other prevents us from too easily reading Paul's qualification of baptism with the phrase ἐν ἑνὶ πνɛύματι as meaning that baptism amounts to the indwelling of πνɛῦμα, that is unless we are prepared to understand Paul as imagining the Israelites being indwelt or infused by the cloud and sea. Moreover, Paul's uses of the preposition ἐν in these contexts describing baptisms would also explain why, when Paul does describe the reception of πνɛῦμα in the latter half 1 Cor 12.13, he finds it necessary to switch from language of baptism ἐν … πνɛύματι to that of ‘drinking’ πνɛῦμα.Footnote 54 Baptism and drinking in 1 Cor 12.13 are not therefore two descriptions of one thing, but rather two different things. This distinction between baptism and drinking is confirmed by Paul's movement in 1 Cor 10.4 from the Israelites’ baptism into Moses to their drinking the same spiritual drink. These are two different events. Rhetorically, both images support Paul's point about unity (hence the repeated adjective ‘one’ and the invocation of the traditional formula regarding Jews, Greeks, slaves and freepersons). But the referent of the images is not identical.Footnote 55
An instructive point of comparison for Paul's association of baptism ἐν … πνɛύματι with the Israelites’ crossing of the sea is the evocation of this same pentateuchal narrative in Isa 63.11: ‘he remembered the days of old, Moses and his people [asking], “Where is the one who brought them up from the sea with the shepherd of his flock? Where is the one who put in their midst (בקרבו, ἐν αὐτοῖς) his spirit of holiness?”’Footnote 56 It appears that here in Isaiah the cloud which accompanied the Israelites is interpreted to be God's holy רוח, πνɛῦμα (cf. Isa 63.14). Such an interpretative tradition may have sanctioned the analogy Paul draws between πνɛῦμα and νɛφɛ́λῃ when he uses the parallel phrases ἐν τῇ νɛφɛ́λῃ and ἐν ἑνὶ πνɛύματι to qualify the verb βαπτίζω.Footnote 57 Despite this similarity, there is also an important difference between 1 Cor 10.2, 12.3 and Isa 63.11. While Isa 63.11 explicitly describes the placement of πνɛῦμα amongst the community of the Exodus (not, notably, within individual Israelites) using the prepositional phrase ἐν αὐτοῖς, Paul's diction is different, with πνɛῦμα itself being the object of ἐν. Though this syntactical distinction is rather obvious, the difference between Isa 63.11 and 1 Cor 12.3 on this point serves to highlight the fact that, despite insistence that baptism amounts to putting πνɛῦμα in gentiles, phrases such ἐν αὐτοῖς are conspicuously lacking in Paul's baptismal discourse.
What then does baptism ἐν … πνɛύματι mean for Paul? It is admittedly difficult to understand the analogy between πνɛῦμα and ‘the sea and the cloud’ that is implied by the corresponding phraseologies of 1 Cor 10.2 and 12.13. However, a possible explanation (corroborated by Isa 63.11) is that just as ‘the cloud’, that is, the manifestation of the divine presence, functions as a witness to Israel of God's judgement of death, which befell the Egyptians, and God's granting of safe passage for the Israelites through that judgement,Footnote 58 so comparably πνɛῦμα functions as a witness to believers’ passage through death in the messiah into the messiah's new life. Accordingly, in Rom 8.15–16 and Gal 4.6 Paul depicts πνɛῦμα as witnessing to believers’ divine familial status. Regardless of whether this interpretation is accepted, it is clear on the basis of the analogy between Paul's language in 1 Cor 10.2 and 12.3 that baptism ἐν … πνɛύματι does not refer to the infusion of πνɛῦμα into believers.Footnote 59
There is an important final observation to be made about Paul's three descriptions of baptism in Romans 6, Galatians 3 and 1 Corinthians 12. While the imagery in each case differs, there is a constant across the three depictions in that baptism is always ‘into’ (ɛἰς) the messiah.Footnote 60 Thus, the significance Paul places on baptism is its embodiment of the incorporation of believers into the messiah. As integral as πνɛῦμα is to Paul's thought, his emphasis lies on χριστός when discussing baptism, and πνɛῦμα and χριστός are not to be conflated if we aim to understand Paul clearly.Footnote 61 Therefore, while I concur with Johnson Hodge that for Paul baptism is ‘a ritual of adoption’, I dissent from the notion that this is so because baptism depicts the infusion of πνɛῦμα. Rather, the ritual consists of a unification with the messiah, especially in his dying and rising, with the effect of creating something new – namely, children of Abraham among the nations. This constellation of ideas corresponds to what Paul indicates in Romans 4 about how gentiles receive new lineage. It is not by infusion of πνɛῦμα, but by being brought through death to life, by being brought out of non-existence into existence – precisely the sort of thing Abraham is said to have believed that God was able to do.
None of this is to imply that for Paul πνɛῦμα is irrelevant to Abrahamic and divine descent. As argued by Thiessen, πνɛῦμα is the blessing which is made available to Abraham's heirs.Footnote 62 Thus, the reception of πνɛῦμα is the result of gaining an Abrahamic pedigree and therefore access to his blessing (Gal 3.14). The reception of πνɛῦμα is also the result of gaining a divine pedigree. It is the gift that God gives his children (Gal 4.6). Further, πνɛῦμα vehemently witnesses to believers to confirm this divine familial status (Gal 4.7; Rom 8.15). Additionally, possession of πνɛῦμα is a guarantee of bodily resurrection (2 Cor 5.5) and thus indeed, as Thiessen proposes, a solution to bodily mortality.Footnote 63 According to Paul, on the one hand believers have died and risen in Christ, thus being created God's children, children of Abraham, and therefore recipients of πνɛῦμα; but on the other hand believers await the future redemption of their bodies, the apocalypse of their divine familial status, and the same πνɛῦμα that currently testifies to that status is also a first fruit of future bodily redemption (Rom 8.23).
Finally, I, in unison with my interlocutors, have thus far been speaking mostly indiscriminately of divine descent and Abrahamic descent as if they were interchangeable. They are not, however, and distinguishing between Abrahamic and divine descent is a matter of describing the logical relationship between the two in Paul's thought and the respective emphases he places on them. Concerning the logical relationship, I do not think it is correct to say, as Thiessen does, that one type of descent results in the other. He contends, ‘For Paul, genealogical descent from Abraham results in divine descent. Since Paul understands the promises to Abraham and to his seed to mean that they would become like the stars in a qualitative sense, then this promise requires that they become divine or semi-divine beings like the angels.’Footnote 64 In other words, as Thiessen understands it, divine descent is a component of the Abrahamic blessing, which is only available to Abraham's heirs, and therefore Abrahamic descent is logically prior to divine descent. Thiessen may be correct in his proposal that Paul has correlated the gift of πνɛῦμα with the promise to Abraham of star-like seed because Paul, along with some of his contemporaries, understands that promise as a quantitative and qualitative statement.Footnote 65 However, this conception of πνɛῦμα does not actually appear to be the basis of divine descent in Paul's thought. Paul is rather clear on why he thinks believers are sons and daughters of God, and his rationale for this has nothing to do with astral πνɛῦμα. Instead, Paul's rationale has to do with the messiah, whom Paul regards as the seed of Abraham (Gal 3.16) and the son of God (passim). Because the messiah enjoys these statuses, those in solidarity with him do also.Footnote 66 Paul is not explicit as to why this dynamic of solidarity is a feature of his messianology, but it is evident that it is.Footnote 67 For instance, an emphasis on shared pedigree with the messiah is evinced by Paul's appropriation of a democratised reading of the oracle of 2 Samuel 7 in 2 Cor 6.18.Footnote 68 While in Rom 1.3–4 Paul uses a messianic interpretation of 2 Sam 7.12, 14 in his description of the messiah as God's ‘son’ born from the ‘seed of David’ and ‘raised up’ from among the dead,Footnote 69 in 2 Cor 6.18 we encounter a retrieval of 2 Sam 7.8, 14 not to describe the filial status of the messiah, but that of the messiah's people: ‘I will be your father, and you shall be my sons and daughters, says the Lord Almighty.’ The logical relationship, then, between Abrahamic descent and divine descent in Paul's thought is that they are both statuses of the messiah, and therefore they are both statuses enjoyed by those in the messiah. One does not lead to or result in the other, rather they are concomitant aspects of solidarity with the messiah.
This concomitance does not mean, however, that Paul emphasises Abrahamic descent and divine descent equally. On this matter, there is a middle ground between positions such as that of Thiessen and, say, J. L. Martyn. Martyn contends that in Gal 3.26 Paul, by claiming that all believers are sons of God, is ‘shifting the ground abruptly and fundamentally by speaking of descent from God through Christ’ and thereby laying ‘the foundation for putting descent from Abraham into second place, indeed for eventually eclipsing it in favour of descent from God’.Footnote 70 In reaction to this, Thiessen argues that Abrahamic descent is actually primary and results in the by-product of divine descent. Martyn and Thiessen are both mistaken to postulate that one kind of descent is the result of the other, and Martyn is mistaken to assume that Paul wishes to displace the importance of Abrahamic descent. It is more accurate, as I see it, to say that Paul affirms both types of descent as integral to his gospel for the gentiles, but places more emphasis on divine descent because of its particular future significance. Hence, in Paul's eschatological vision in Rom 8.18–25, what creation awaits is not the apocalypse of the seed of Abraham, but rather that of the children of God. But by no means is this to suggest that Abrahamic descent for Paul is nothing but a misguided obsession of his opponents in need of relegation to the shadows (per Martyn), for, according to Paul in Rom 4.13, God promises Abraham and his descendants that they will inherit the cosmos. Yet, the flow of Paul's thought from Romans 4 to Romans 8 suggests that, in the end, it is the revelation of divine sonship which will be the ultimate occasion of rejoicing for Paul.
5. Conclusion
This article began by noting the impulse among some scholars to give an account of Paul's thought that is less abstract and more concrete, even quasi-biological. For Arthur Peacocke, this was a theological concern to provide a conception of solidarity with Christ that was not ‘vacuous’. For Johnson Hodge, Stowers and Thiessen, this same impulse arises from a historical interest aimed at undoing what they perceive to be the ill effects of popular theological parlance on our understanding of Paul in his own context. Thus, Thiessen contends that a ‘spiritual/physical or spiritual/material distinction implies an unreal/real distinction – one that wrongly believes that Paul opposes biological descent … to a fictive descent’, and so he instead attempts to describe Paul's understanding of gentiles’ Abrahamic and divine descent as entailing ‘a substantive, real change’, a connection that ‘is no less material or real than being sarkically connected to Abraham’.Footnote 71 Similarly, Stowers avers that ‘the intelligibility for the language of participation’ is at stake in his work, and Johnson Hodge aims to establish a rationale of what she considers to be ‘a tangible, organic connection between Christ and the gentiles’.Footnote 72 Despite such claims, the theory under review, by simply moving πνɛῦμα over to the material side of the dichotomy, has actually perpetuated the problem it is meant to address by implying that only that which is material, tangible and organic is substantive, intelligible and real. But must this be so? What if, as this article has aimed to demonstrate, Paul thinks of genealogical descent and the role of πνɛῦμα (material or not) within a wholly different paradigm?
The alternative account of genealogical descent according to Paul proposed here is based on things Paul apparently considered to be quite real: creation and resurrection. And while Paul expected a bodily manifestation of resurrection for God's children at a later point in time, his belief in the inception of the resurrection of the dead in the raising of the messiah would have served as a concrete and embodied reference point for his understanding of how Abrahamic and divine descent was forged. Therefore, if our concern is to preserve a materialist realism of Paul's conceptions, I contend that nothing is lost in the proposal articulated here. The greater concern of historians and exegetes, though, should be to give an account of Paul's thought according to Paul, whether his ideas strike us as sufficiently real, substantive and intelligible, or not.