HTS Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies
ISSN: (Online) 2072-8050, (Print) 0259-9422
Page 1 of 13
Original Research
The social construction of Paul’s apostolic
leadership in Corinth
Author:
Jack Barentsen1,2
Affiliations:
1
Department of Practical
Theology, Evangelische
Theologische Faculteit,
Leuven, Belgium
Unit for Reformed Theology
and Development of the
South African Society,
North-West University,
South Africa
2
Corresponding author:
Jack Barentsen,
[email protected]
Dates:
Received: 20 July 2018
Accepted: 10 Aug. 2018
Published: 12 Sept. 2018
How to cite this article:
Barentsen, J., 2018, ‘The
social construction of Paul’s
apostolic leadership in
Corinth’, HTS Teologiese
Studies/Theological Studies
74(4), a5191. https://doi.
org/10.4102/hts.v74i4.5191
Copyright:
© 2018. The Authors.
Licensee: AOSIS. This work
is licensed under the
Creative Commons
Attribution License.
In a climate of institutional change and loss of authority, it is urgently needed to rethink the
legitimacy of religious authority. This article offers a case study of Paul’s authority claims in
Corinth, using French & Raven’s theory of social power, to offer new insights into the
construction of religious leadership. Paul negotiated renewed acceptance as Corinth’s founder
and apostle by appealing to legitimate power that he was a better leader than Moses, even
Christ’s ambassador, and by undermining the legitimate power of his opponents who claimed
Jewish descent and apostolic miracles as key leadership markers. Similarly, Paul appealed to
referent power by portraying his suffering as a mark of Christ-embodying leadership and
undermined the referent power of his opponents by denouncing status, patronage support
and rhetoric as legitimation for leadership. Paul did not appeal to other power bases
(informational, expert, reward and coercion), because he could not be sure to outrank his
opponents on those counts. This analysis suggests that religious authority in the form of Paul’s
founding apostleship was difficult to comprehend and embed in the social and cultural
structures of Corinth at that time. Paul needed to engage in intense contention and negotiation
to construct a socially and culturally viable model of leadership that would do justice to his
vision of Christian identity. As a corollary, the evidence of the intensity of this conflict at
various levels throughout the epistle can be interpreted as supporting the literary unity of
the epistle.
Introduction and approach
The current climate of deinstitutionalisation and church decline significantly affects church
leadership. Church leadership hierarchies seem antiquated compared to modern styles of
leadership – at least in Western societies – and crumbling institutional structures become the
backdrop for a loss of respect for and authority in church leadership. It is urgently needed to
rethink the structure and legitimacy of pastoral leadership.
It is not sufficient to simply focus on the character or skills of the pastoral leader, or to identify a
few key tasks that effective leaders should perform. Many books do just that (Herrington, Bonem
& Furr 2000; Hybels 2012; Maxwell 1999), but they do not address these pressing issues.
Alternatively, awareness is rising that leaders are part of dynamic and complex group processes
in interaction with the social context. For instance, some social scientific leadership research
applies complexity theory and social constructivist models to the study of leadership (Uhl-Bien,
Marion & McKelvey 2007).
A constructivist portrayal of pastoral leadership starts with the observation that individuals
participating in the faith community are by their very participation co-creating the organisational
reality of the community (Tierney 1996:372). This reality is often multi-vocal and unstable, so that
‘the idea of leadership becomes contested, and the assumption about what constitutes good
leadership is open for interpretation and redefinition’. Tension within the community exists over
who gains privilege and who is silenced, who is ‘in’ and who is ‘out’ (Tierney 1996:374–75). This
construction and the contests of pastoral leadership are often shaped by discourses and social
representations that frame the interaction between community members. ‘Communicative practices –
talk, discourse, and other symbolic media – occasioned by the context are integral to the processes by
which the social construction of leadership is brought about’ (Fairhurst & Grant 2010:174–175).
Read online:
Scan this QR
code with your
smart phone or
mobile device
to read online.
Studies like those of Holifield (2007) and Heitink (2001) demonstrate how pastoral leadership
structures developed with a degree of fluidity through various historical periods and within
Note: This article was originally presented under the title, ‘Paul’s Authority Claims and Their Reception in 2 Corinthians,’ at the SBL
Seminar on ‘Authority and Influence in Biblical Texts’ at St. Andrews University, Scotland, on 09 July 2013, by the invitation of Prof. Dr Jan
van der Watt.
http://www.hts.org.za
Open Access
Page 2 of 13
various denominational contexts. One might agree that this
fluidity demonstrates the constructivist nature of these
leadership structures as they adapted to their times and
cultures. However, the difficult ecumenical debates on
church authority demonstrate that a constructivist
understanding of church leadership is hardly a common
occurrence. Often, appeals are made to the biblical language
of πρεσβύτερος [elder], διάκονος [deacon] and ἐπίσκοπος
[overseer] as if they denoted clear, essentialist categories of
leadership in support of particular modern structures of
church leadership.
In this article, I offer a study of Paul’s leadership language in 2
Corinthians which reveals the ways in which Paul, his
addressees and his opponents constructed competing visions
of what counts as good leadership. In this letter,1 the typical
labels of leadership offices, such as πρεσβύτερος, διάκονος and
ἐπίσκοπος, are absent,2 so that the interpreter is forced to find
another entrance into the leadership discourse of the letter.
Based on recent scholarship that sees leadership as a social
construction by means of social and communicative interaction,
I propose to investigate the interactive processes evident in 2
Corinthians that define leadership at a specific place and time.
This study will thus consider how Paul’s discourse in 2
Corinthians (de)constructs the vision and roles of leadership
prevalent within the Corinthian community, as he shapes the
identity and boundaries of the faith community in relation to
the surrounding Greco-Roman culture. Paul offers an
alternative vision for leadership as part of a normative
leadership contest with Corinthian believers and their local
or itinerant leaders over what was to count as faithful
Christian leadership in the community. This leadership
construction is both social and theological, both cultural and
religious, and concerns the socioreligious identity of the
community (Barentsen 2011, 2016). I will gratefully use the
knowledge now available about the sociocultural setting of
the Corinthian community (Chow 1992; Clarke 2000; Theissen
1982), while my main analytical tools will derive from
theoretical models based on contemporary leadership and
social scientific research. This study blends New Testament
approaches with approaches more familiar in Practical
Theology.
Paul’s leadership career in Corinth
A brief description of Paul’s leadership career in Corinth is my
starting point. After an initial 18 months of founding activity
in Corinth (50–51 AD, Ac 18:1–17), Paul left to continue his
work elsewhere. In his absence, Apollos advanced the work in
Corinth for several months or years (Ac 18:27–19:1a, 1 Cor
1.Or letters: Talbert assumes that the literary unity of 2 Corinthians has generally been
abandoned (2002:6–12), while Stegman (2005) and others argue for its rhetorical
and theological unity.
2.It would be an argument from silence to now conclude that such offices must not
yet have been ordered in Corinth at this time. Hanges (2011) argues to the contrary
that Paul as a founder or a transplanter of a religious cult would have been expected
to set guidelines for ritual, membership and leadership from the very start, based
on his comparative study of other ancient Greek texts about founders of religious
cults. Thus, it is better to argue that, as the letter is mostly issue-driven, the absence
of these labels implies that the structures of leadership that are denoted by these
labels were not themselves an issue to be addressed.
http://www.hts.org.za
Original Research
3:5–9).3 When Paul wrote our 1 Corinthians (ca. 55 AD),
Apollos was no longer there, and the church had developed
subgroups identifying with their key Jewish leaders Paul and
Apollos, and also with Peter and perhaps even Christ.4 These
subgroups resulted from the church’s expansion, and they
engaged in rivalry as the Corinthian way of maintaining
subgroup connections (Barentsen 2011:78–86). This means that
during his absence, Paul’s leadership status had shifted from
community-wide respect to leadership of only a subgroup;
he can no longer assume that he has the authority to address
the entire community. This at least partially explains the
cautious argumentation in 1 Corinthians 1–4, where he needed
to tread carefully to re-establish his own leadership position
for the whole church.
Unfortunately, Paul’s letter seems to have been ineffective
(Barentsen 2011:114–15; Mitchell 1991:303), because intense
conflict erupted with the church after the letter’s arrival.
Although the events between our 1 and 2 Corinthians are
difficult to reconstruct, 2 Corinthians speaks about a painful
visit (1:23–2:3) and a tearful letter (2:3; 7:12) before Titus was
able to bring about reconciliation (7:6, 13). Whatever the causes
of this conflict, it appears that Paul’s leadership came under
intense criticism, so that he was almost completely marginalised
as a community leader (Barentsen 2011:115–125). He then
engaged in a painful negotiation process that enabled him to
regain the trust of most of the congregation, as evidenced by
the conciliatory tone of 2 Corinthians 1–7 and his renewed
efforts at completing the collection in 2 Corinthians 8–9. I will
argue that the change of tone of 2 Corinthians 10–13 provides
further evidence of nearly complete reconciliation – a
reconstruction that is intensely debated (Horrell 1996:296–312;
Martin 1986:298ff.). In this section, Paul rhetorically
marginalises the few remaining opponents who were as yet
unconvinced by his negotiations, a rhetorical strategy that – as
we will see – can only be successful when the majority of the
community is in harmony with the speaker.
In brief, Paul started off winning allegiance as the founder of
a new religious community but soon found himself relegated
to the status of a subgroup leader of the growing congregation
and was caught in a spiral of conflict, nearly losing his entire
leadership footing in Corinth. Surprisingly, he was able to
regain his position as the founder and apostle of the entire
community, with a few marginalised exceptions. Note
that Paul was not in a position to enforce loyalty or to
coerce the believers into following his leadership. He was
disenfranchised in Corinth, had no personal local power base
and needed to negotiate and persuade in absentia to relegitimate his leadership. His earlier preaching and
demonstrations of divine power had lost their persuasive
powers.
3.The historical importance and value of the book of Acts is an issue of considerable
debate, but there is a general consensus about the period of Paul’s ministry in
Corinth, and the dating of the Corinthian correspondence (DeSilva 2004:560ff.).
4.The exact identification of the subgroups and its leaders remains an issue of debate.
It is doubtful whether Peter visited Corinth before the writing of 1 Corinthians. Paul
lists ‘Christ’ as possible leader that people identified with, perhaps as some resisted
identifying with merely human leaders and claimed a more spiritual lineage (see
Barentsen 2011:78–80).
Open Access
Page 3 of 13
This raises the question: ‘How did Paul succeed in convincing
the Corinthians of the legitimacy of his leadership and
winning their allegiance in competition with colleagues and
rival leaders?’ This question can be subdivided in a number
of subsidiary questions: (1) What authority claims does Paul
make? (2) How were these authority claims received by the
Corinthian believers? (3) How does this explain Paul’s
eventual success?
The lenses of social identity theory
and social constructivism
Traditional studies on Paul’s leadership located the fluidity
in his leadership status in Corinth in an alleged charismatic
phase of congregational life, which was eventually
overtaken by institutionalising tendencies (Blasi 1991; Von
Campenhausen 1997). However, this Weberian dialectic
between charisma and institution has not been able to
adequately account for the phenomena under investigation
(MacDonald 1988:60). Further application of social science
models resulted in more refined studies on Paul’s use of
power and authority as expressed in the corpus Paulinum
(Ehrensperger 2007; Holmberg 1978; Schütz 1975), while the
practice of (local) leadership in Corinth has also been studied
in detail (Chow 1992; Clarke 2006). But Paul’s leadership
career in Corinth has not yet been investigated as such.
Horrell comes closest in studying the ethos of the Corinthian
correspondence as a formulation, reformulation and
transformation of the symbolic world that Paul constructs
(Horrell 1996:55–59), but his focus is more on the community
than on Paul and his exercise of leadership and power.
A study of Paul’s leadership career in Corinth provides a
window of insight into how he constructed his leadership
position as part of his vision of the Christian identity of his
communities. In a dialectical manner, his view on the identity
of the community legitimised his own leadership role and
vice versa. Thus, 2 Corinthians is not merely the plea of a
solitary leader before a community, but represents a dynamic
communication process where both the group around Paul
and the communities in Corinth have an interest in
maintaining their relationship (Ehrensperger 2007:56). Paul’s
leadership is shaped and transformed through various
processes of social negotiation and his authority in Corinth is
socially constructed. This is not to say that his authority
rested only on social construction, but that – whatever we
might believe about the religious sources of his authority – at
least it took a process of social interaction and construction to
allow his view and practice of authority to take social root. In
the investigation of Paul’s leadership negotiations, this article
will thus utilise theories of social identity and leadership
from a social constructivist stance.
Paul’s authority claims (leader
self-presentation)
In order to answer the question: ‘How did Paul succeed in
convincing the Corinthians of the legitimacy of his leadership
and winning their allegiance in competition with colleague
http://www.hts.org.za
Original Research
and rival leaders?,’ Paul’s central authority claims need to be
investigated.
In some ways, discussing Paul’s authority claims in 2
Corinthians is to discuss the entire letter. In the opening of the
letter, Paul mentions his suffering for and comfort from Christ
which benefit the Corinthians (1:3–11), defends his integrity
and pastoral care in cancelling an intended visit (1:12–2:4) and
provides instruction for the restoration of a repentant believer
(2:5–11) – all of which Paul interprets as Christ’s victory, even
if at his own expense (2:12–17). This victory then introduces
Paul defence of his apostolic ministry, which takes up and
expands the issues of suffering, integrity and restoration, and
adds a comparison of Paul’s and Moses’ ministry (3:1–7:4). As
an ambassador of Christ (not from Jerusalem), Paul pleads for
renewed loyalty to his message, ministry and leadership (5:11–
7:4). His instructions for the Jerusalem collection (2 Cor 8–9)
affirm his role in the network of churches of which Corinth
was a part, as well as his respect and concern for the Jerusalem
church. Most of these themes return again in chapters 10–13,
but now sharper as he defends himself explicitly against
certain charges from Jewish-Christian teachers from Israel that
had gained influence in Corinth. This article will focus on the
central authority claims of the letter in order to trace Paul’s
construction of his apostolic leadership.
A more glorious ministry than that of Moses
An audacious authority claim is Paul’s contention that the
ministry of the Spirit – which he purports to exercise – has
greater glory than the ministry of Moses. He pictures the latter
as a ministry of death and condemnation and the former as a
ministry of life and righteousness (3:7–11). This claim surprises
because Moses is referred to only twice in 1 Corinthians (9:9;
10:2), both times with positive connotation, suggesting that
Moses’ person and the Mosaic Law were not an issue of debate
at that time. How could this have become an issue in 2
Corinthians? Just prior to this claim, Paul referred to opponents
as ‘peddlers of God’s word’ (2 Cor 2:17) who carried letters of
recommendation (3:1), and contrasted this with the positive
effects of his own ministry as bringing about Spirit-filled
change in Corinth (3:2–3). Paul amplifies the contrast by
discussing the positive effects of his own glorious ministry of
the Spirit, compared to the negative effects of veiled
understanding and hardened minds through the ministry of
Moses (3:7–18). This comparison indirectly associates his
Corinthian opponents with his negative evaluation of the
ministry of Moses (Martin 1986:46), raising the question
whether the opponents, at least some of whom were itinerant
Jewish-Christian teachers from Israel (cf. 11:22–23), had
introduced a different perspective on Moses’ ministry in
Corinth during Paul’s absence. The answer can only be
speculative, for we know too little about the identity and
teaching of these opponents (Burtchaell 1992). But at least this
much can be said, that Paul’s theological comparison of the
ministries of Moses and the Spirit served to delegitimise the
status and influence of his opponents as those who were still
ministering like Moses, and to legitimise his own ministry as
operative through the Spirit of Christ (Martin 1986:55).
Open Access
Page 4 of 13
This authority claim is counterintuitive, for written letters of
recommendation from Jerusalem authorities would be a
better cultural fit and more impressive to the Corinthian
church, most of whom were of lowly social status; by contrast,
the changes in their own lives as evidence of Spiritempowered ministry must have appeared unimportant in
matters of authority. Moreover, the ministry of Moses had a
long and venerated tradition that conferred an air of antiquity
and legitimacy on the Christian message, compared with
which Paul was a recent upstart. Thus, Paul’s argument to
represent a more glorious ministry than Moses stakes out a
theological authority claim validated by the religious
transformations of the majority of the Corinthian believers,
who were of lower social status, but that would be easily
contestable on social and religious grounds by the few
Corinthian believers of higher social status.
Suffering like Christ
Paul’s discourse on self-sacrifice and suffering represents
another significant authority claim. These themes run
throughout 2 Corinthians (1:3–11; 4:7–18; 6:4–10; 11:23–28;
12:7), and do more than simply plead for loyalty on the basis of
Paul’s suffering for Christ. In essence, Paul5 presents himself as
suffering like Christ, not simply for Christ, as the primary basis
for the legitimacy of his leadership in Corinth. His suffering
enables him to minister Christ’s comfort to the church (1:5–6).
Could one minister such comfort without such suffering
(Barrett 1973:62)? Through suffering, the death and life of
Christ are physically manifested in Paul, enabling him to bring
life to the community (4:10–12). Could one model the life of
Christ to the community without also participating in his
death? Through suffering, Paul commends himself and his
team as ‘servants of God’ (6:4), thereby demonstrating their
affections for the Corinthians (6:11–12). How could one
demonstrate affection without self-sacrifice on behalf of
others? Through suffering, Paul’s weakness becomes evident
(11:29–30), so that his influence in leadership evidently derives
from the power of Christ and not from personal power
(12:9–10). What better way to avoid confusing social leadership
status and divine influence? In all these passages, Paul frames
his suffering as a key component of his calling and ministry,
aligning his own ministry with the suffering servant of Isaiah
and the ministry of Christ, thereby legitimising his spiritual
leadership among the Corinthians.6 Interestingly, modern
psychological research in social identity and leadership has
pointed out that leader self-sacrifice portrays the leader as
prototypical for the community, and thus enhances leader
effectiveness (Van Knippenberg & Van Knippenberg 2005).
This authority claim, too, would be contested. Greek models
of leadership depended on status and patronage, which also
5.The text is written in the first person plural, suggesting that Paul speaks for himself
as well as his team members. To avoid cumbersome references to ‘Paul and his
team’, I refer to ‘Paul’ in order to highlight the effect of the argumentation on Paul’s
leadership status.
6.Martin suggests that for Paul’s opponents, Jesus was more like a second Moses
rather than a suffering servant (Martin 1986:340), which, in turn, suggests that
Paul’s portrayal of himself as suffering servant not only legitimised his own suffering
because of its connection to Christ, but also positioned Christ as suffering servant
rather than a second Moses.
http://www.hts.org.za
Original Research
influenced leadership structures in Corinth (Clarke 2006).
Such severe suffering as Paul describes would vouch against
one’s leadership status, and would not be expounded upon
so publicly and unashamedly as in his letter. Moreover, this
suffering may well have been interpreted as a lack of divine
approval for Paul’s apostolic ministry (Long 2004:119). This
extended description and defence of his suffering, a theme
absent from 1 Corinthians, probably implies that he was
publicly criticised for this as a disqualifier of his apostolic
leadership. This forced him to defend his suffering more
openly than he would otherwise have done, but as he does so
he frames his openness as a demonstration of his sincerity,
integrity and lack of deceptive motive (4:1–3). However,
Paul’s most important defence is his portrayal of his suffering
as an image of the death and life of Christ in his own physical
body (4:10–11), thus embedding his own suffering as a
leadership model in their corporate understanding of what it
meant to be a believer and member of the Christian
community. That is, Paul turns accusations that his suffering
disqualifies him from leadership on their head, arguing that
faithful leadership must embody the sufferings of Christ in
self-sacrificial forms of leadership rather than relying on
status, patronage and privilege.
Ambassador of reconciliation
After distinguishing himself as a minister of Spirit-filled
transformation as contrasted with Moses’ ministry of death,
and after pointing out the Christological value of his suffering
for faithful leadership in the community, Paul claims to serve
as Christ’s envoy or ambassador. The clause Ὑπὲρ Χριστοῦ οὖν
πρεσβεύομεν (‘we are ambassadors for Christ,’ 5:20, English
Standard Version) refers to the performing of ambassadorial
services, implying that Paul claims to bring a divinely
authorised message of reconciliation to the Corinthian church
(‘God making his appeal through us’) (eds. Balz & Schneider
1990 [vol 3]:147). This is more than simply being Christ’s
messenger, as an envoy exercised the authority of the sender,
and ‘to disregard or insult the envoy was to disregard or insult
the sender’ (Harris 2005:445–46). Thus, if the Corinthians were
to turn their back on Paul, they would also turn their back on
the divine message of reconciliation (Garland 1999:298)! Paul,
then, is not proclaiming the gospel to unbelievers, but he
pleads with his audience to be reconciled with himself and
thus also with God in order to remain connected with Christ’s
work of reconciliation (Gloer 1989:403). This is undoubtedly
one of the strongest authority claims that Paul puts forward in
his letter.
Yet, this authority claim is not simply based on the hierarchical
leadership structures of the ancient world that are part of this
image of ambassadorship. Paul’s emphasis on suffering like
Christ just preceding this imagery (see the section above),
and his later defence of his suffering (11:23–29), moderate any
hierarchical tendencies that usually accompany the image of
ambassador. Moreover, Paul’s self-sacrifice on behalf of the
community vividly demonstrates his self-less commitment to
serve the community with little or no personal profit motive
involved, in spite of criticism to the contrary.
Open Access
Page 5 of 13
Paul’s claim to be Christ’s ambassador is at the centre of his
plea for reconciliation between the Corinthian community
and himself. It is significant that he pens these words after
hearing the good news from Titus that the Corinthians
repented and are once again eager to receive him (7:6). When
Paul cites the Psalms that ‘now is the favourable time’ (6:2; Ps
32:6; 69:13; cf. Isa 55:6), this is more than a figure of speech,
for he knows that this favourable time has indeed come. He
knows that his plea for reconciliation has already been taken
to heart even before he pens these words.
Counting on the positive reception of this authority claim,
Paul adds a charge to dissociate from yet unrepentant
troublemakers. The much disputed passage, 6:14–7:1, has
its difficulties in language and setting, for which reasons it
has been considered as a non-Pauline interpretation by
many scholars (Bieringer 1994:551–570). It admittedly
appears as a digression, for instance, as an appeal to
Christians to refrain from worldliness and idolatry (Talbert
2002:209). Yet, considering the traditional nature of this
passage and its language, Paul may well have used it to
press home his plea for loyalty by encouraging the
Corinthians to prove their loyalty to Paul by showing
disloyalty to his opponents. For instance, the exhortation to
turn back from idolatry couched in the language of covenant
faithfulness (Long 2004:169–170) may well be an oblique
reference to the inappropriate appreciation among the
Corinthians for social status and rhetoric as markers of
authority. Paul’s charge to repent of these things then
becomes a charge to disengage from those who still hold to
these inappropriate cultural values. That is, this passage
makes excellent ‘political’ sense at this precise location in a
letter dedicated to re-establishing Paul’s apostolic authority
in competition with rival leaders.
The value of Jewish descent
In the section in 2 Corinthians 2:14–7:4, Paul presents his own
defence of his credentials and the legitimacy of his apostolic
role in Corinth. After the chapters on the Jerusalem collection
(2 Cor 8–9) that demonstrate his respect for and allegiance to
the Jerusalem church (Barentsen 2011:129–130; Stenschke
2015), Paul engages directly with the authority claims of his
opponents in 2 Corinthians 10–13.
One such authority claim depends on Jewish descent. Paul
readily conceded that his opponents were of reputable Jewish
descent, but he claimed equality on the basis of his own
Jewish heritage (11:22–23). This authority claim probably had
a track record in Corinth, because the subgroups that had
developed before even the writing of 1 Corinthians all
identified with Jewish leaders (1 Cor 1:12). Perhaps, Paul was
despised for his Diaspora origins rather than being of ‘pure’
Jewish descent from Israel (Harris 2005:794), but his defence
makes no reference to this. To counter this claim, Paul does
not claim superiority to his opponents, as he did in the first
half of 2 Corinthians, and as he well might have, considering
his former elite status as Pharisee. Although he uses his
Pharisee status to demonstrate his (former) commitment to
http://www.hts.org.za
Original Research
the Mosaic law in another context (see Phil 3:5), he refrains
from doing so now. In the current Corinthian context, with
Jewish-Christian teachers emphasising adherence to the
Mosaic Law in some form, Paul’s status as Pharisee would at
best be a point of identification with his Jewish-Christian
opponents and not a point of distinction. More likely, the
gospel Paul proclaimed was constantly under suspicion for
being critical of adherence to the Mosaic Law, so that a former
status as Pharisee would likely be framed as betrayal to
Moses and count against Paul’s authority, instead of in favour
of it. Paul thus has to opt for an alternative rhetorical strategy.
In order to identify with the Corinthian congregation of
mixed Jewish and gentile descent, he has to minimise the
importance of Jewish heritage as a factor in legitimising
authority. Thus, he frames this authority claim as foolish
boasting according to the flesh (11:18–21). This foolishness is
evident in the physical markings of his suffering, as ‘tracings
of whips and magistrates’ rods’ on his scarred body did not
mark ‘martial valor’ but of ‘a servile body, insignia of
humiliation and submission’ (Glancy 2004; Joubert 2015). No
Corinthian leader of the right social and cultural mind would
boast of such humiliating markings; this was foolish indeed.
This rhetorical strategy reinforced the previous normative
image of the suffering servant as self-sacrificial leader and
presents unexpected physical evidence for Paul’s status as
primordial servant of Christ in Corinth (11:23ff). Paul thereby
neutralises Jewish heritage as basis for any authority claim,
voiding any legitimacy that might have been derived from it
in Corinth. Moreover, once again, he sides with the majority
of the Corinthian believers, of gentile descent of low social
status, over against the Corinthian and Jewish elites in his
social construction of authority.
A true apostle
Another authority claim relates to apostolic status and
leadership. Paul defends his own status as true apostle of
Christ against charges that he is inferior to ‘these superapostles’ (2 Cor 12:11–12). Although the identity of the ‘superapostles’ is debated (see Harris 2005:73–77), Paul’s argument
that he is on a par with these apostles suggests that this label
refers to the manner in which his rivals compared the
Jerusalem Twelve with himself before the Corinthian
community (Harris 2005:746–748). That is, Paul’s rivals
claimed support for their teaching from the Jerusalem
apostles, whom they portrayed to the Corinthians as the
most excellent apostles, while they depicted Paul as a much
inferior apostle, continually humiliated by physical
misfortune, in order to discredit Paul’s teaching and status
within the community.
Paul responds that he is equal to the Twelve as demonstrated
by the visions and revelations he had received (12:1) and by
his miraculous powers (12:12). These features were well
known in Corinth, because they had personally witnessed
Paul’s miracles during his initial ministry in the city and had
received teaching from him that originated in revelations
from the Lord (see also 1 Cor 11:23, 15:3) (Garland 2003:683–687;
Thiselton 2000:1186–1187). Paul thus argues that his apostolic
Open Access
Page 6 of 13
Original Research
status is independent from the acknowledgement or approval
of the Jerusalem apostles.
The reception of Paul’s authority
claims (follower response)
However, he is unwilling to make much of such supernatural
claims. Apparently, the Corinthians venerated revelations and
miracles as marks of divine approval (Martin 1991), and had
begun to view them as leadership status markers, along with
such features as eloquent speech and patronage sponsorship.
Even though Paul claims equal authority in Corinth with the
Twelve, based, in part, on his own revelations and miracles,
Paul appears to consider the Corinthian veneration for such
supernatural authority claims to be deficient (Garland
1999:529), and sets about to correct their perception of apostolic
status. He speaks with great hesitation about his visions
(12:2–5), at first attributing them to ‘a man in Christ’. When it
becomes clear that Paul himself was the man receiving the
visions, he immediately speaks about a ‘thorn in the flesh’ that
the Lord did not remove in spite of his prayers to keep him
from being conceited (12:7–9). He would rather boast in
weaknesses and suffering than in glorious visions. Next, when
he refers to his miracles in Corinth, he immediately excuses
himself for not charging a fee or accepting patronage (12:12–
13). He is clearly aware of the qualifications of a true apostle in
terms of revelations and miraculous powers, but he refuses to
turn these qualifications into markers of spiritual status and
leadership in the community.
After surveying Paul’s most significant authority claims in 2
Corinthians, I now turn to the second question, ‘How were
these authority claims received by the Corinthian believers?’
This may appear speculative, until we realise that Paul wrote
this letter as part of an elaborate communication process. The
letter reflects the latest news from Corinth which he received
through the mediating efforts of Titus, which indicated the
readiness of the Corinthians, at least the majority, to be
reconciled to Paul as their founder and apostle (7:5–16). And
yet, some opposition apparently remained. This implies that
the reception of Paul’s authority claims was mixed at best.
In essence, Paul refuses to claim authority on the basis of
revelations and miracles, while his opponents insisted on such
qualifications and may have criticised him for a lack of them.
Paul is then forced to claim equality with the Twelve in order
to be seen as superior to his opponents in Corinth (12:11–13)
(Martin 1986:427–28), but he does not push this equality as a
claim for his own apostolic authority in Corinth. Instead, he
downplays the marks of ‘true apostleship’ as basis for
authority, and focuses instead on the presence of Christ’s
power in his weaknesses and suffering, once again reiterating
suffering and self-sacrificial leadership as primary legitimation
of his apostolic leadership in Corinth, thus implicitly
empowering lower social class Corinthian believers to play
significant or even leadership roles within the community.
Summary
Paul’s authority claims are worked out positively in 2
Corinthians 1–7. He presented his ministry as more glorious
than that of Moses, while his suffering made him a leader like
Christ. Also, his role as an ambassador made him an
authoritative spokesman for Christ, affording him the status
of exhorting the Corinthians to be reconciled with God and
himself and to dissociate themselves from his unrepentant
opponents. Paul’s authority claims are worked out as
corrective in 2 Corinthians 10–13, where he compares
favourably with the Jewish descent of his opponents, but this
turns out to be irrelevant as leadership marker, and where
revelations and miraculous powers demonstrate his equality
with the ‘super-apostles’, which turn out to be less important
for Paul’s self-presentation as an apostolic leader than his
weakness and suffering on behalf of the community.
http://www.hts.org.za
This mixed acceptance is reflected in the self-presentation of
Paul’s leadership style. Firstly, he adopts a strategy of
persuasion towards the majority: he has authority for building
up, not tearing down (10:8; 13:10). He does not domineer, but
helps them to stand firm in their faith (1:24). Thus, he spared
them by cancelling his intended visit (1:23) and by writing
them out of much affliction and anguish (2:4). He expresses his
love and affection for them (6:11–13; 7:2; 11:11), which is
demonstrated through self-sacrifice (6:4). He does not burden
them with financial concerns (11:9; 12:13–16) but commits
them to Christ as if it concerned a betrothal (11:1). That is, Paul
wants to serve them in their Christian living.
Secondly, Paul adopts a strategy of empowerment to assist the
majority in answering those who accuse him. He gives them
‘cause to boast about us, so that you may be able to answer
those who boast about outward appearance and not about
what is in the heart’ (5:12). Assuming that they are ready to
support him, he gives them an ἀφορμή, an ‘occasion’ or
‘opportunity,’ a word often occurring within a polemical
context, to rally to his defence (Danker et al. 2000:s.v). It is not
so much his personal example as it is his embodiment of the
gospel (5:13–15) that he puts forward as his defence. In doing
so, he provides images or arguments for his Corinthian
supporters to defend him and resist his opponents. Similarly,
Paul’s discussion of his Jewish descent and his apostolic
credentials (discussed above) enabled the Corinthians to resist
authority claims on that basis. His denouncement of the
practice of depending on patronage and eloquent speech as
markers of spiritual authority (12:16–18; 10:10) enabled the
Corinthian believers to resist elitist forms of dominance. Thus,
in countering such comparisons and accusations, he addresses
the congregation perhaps more so than his critics in a strategy
of empowerment, enabling the Corinthians to follow through
in their loyalty to himself and to dismantle their loyalty to his
opponents in order to disengage from them.
Thirdly, Paul adopts a very directive and authoritative style
when addressing his remaining opponents. Some of this is
still indirect; for instance, when he appeals to the Corinthians
to repent so that he will not be humbled to the point of
repentance when he comes (12:20–21), or when he hopes that
he will not have to be severe in the use of his authority (13:10).
The military metaphors – the victorious triumph of Christ in
Open Access
Page 7 of 13
which he participates (2:14–16), defensive and offensive
weapons (6:7), offensive weapons for divine warfare
(10:4–5) – sound increasingly severe as a warning to his
opponents. Occasionally, he directly warns his critics that he
will do what he writes in his letters (10:11) and that he will
not spare them if they do not repent (13:2).
In sum, Paul acts mostly according to persuasive and
empowering leadership styles. Even when he speaks
authoritatively, his appeals and warnings are often indirect.
It indicates his awareness that the reception of his authority
claims in Corinth was mixed at best, even if the balance was
strongly in favour of acceptance.
Bases of power
We can advance the study of Paul’s authority claims and
their reception by analysing them with the aid of the concept
of bases of social power, as developed by French and Raven
(1959:150–167; see also Raven 2008:2–3). They studied social
power as the potential to influence others to bring about
change, depending on the resources someone has available.
They identified six bases of power:
• Informational power operates when a leader shares
information with a follower, resulting in cognitive change,
which then leads to behavioural change of the subordinate
independently from the leader.
• Reward and coercive power relate to the ability of the
leader to provide positive or negative incentives to secure
the cooperation of the followers, which requires
continuing surveillance to be effective.
• Legitimate power relates to the follower accepting the
right of the leader to require compliance, so that he feels
obliged to comply.
• Expert power involves trusting that the leader has
superior knowledge or experience about what is best in
the circumstances, and willingness to follow on that basis
alone. This is somewhat different from informational
power, which includes cognitive change, meaning that
the follower understands the reasons for the change in
behaviour.
• Referent power means the follower identifies with the
leader as a model to emulate.
The last three bases of power lead to behavioural change that
is dependent on the leader’s continuing direction, but does
not necessarily require surveillance.
In the typical fashion of social science research, these social
bases of power can be utilised as sensitising concepts that
allow a researcher to analyse and code research texts
accordingly (Van den Hoonaard 2008). Typically, research texts
include numerous transcriptions of interviews, speeches or
sermons, relevant organisational documents or extended case
study descriptions. In this study, the focus is on just one
research text, namely, 2 Corinthians, but the process of coding
and collecting relevant information for each sensitising concept
http://www.hts.org.za
Original Research
from various parts of the text can be carried out in similar
fashion (Bryman 2012:465–489). I worked through the letter in
this fashion, collecting and tabulating, Paul’s leadership claims
as well as the possible (often implicit) counterclaims of his
opponents. My results are presented in Table 1.
Discussion
Although the categorisation of specific elements of the letter
as this or that social basis of power could be debated, overall,
the results provide some valuable insights into Paul’s
understanding of leadership and authority.
It appears that Paul’s central authority claims (as discussed
above) relate primarily to legitimate and referent power. Four
of his central authority claims fit in the category of legitimate
power. His ministry is superior to that of Moses, so those
falling back on Mosaic patterns of ministry have less
legitimacy as leaders than Paul – which presumably would
apply to his opponents. Paul is also Christ’s envoy, compared
to the opponents who can claim to be envoys from Jerusalem,
perhaps even from the Twelve, but not directly from Christ.
Paul’s Jewish descent plays a role only to show his equality
with his opponents with similar claims. And Paul’s ministry
as an apostle makes him the equal of the Jerusalem apostles.
His opponents, on the other hand, boast of letters of
recommendation, which Paul could not produce; instead, he
creatively changed the terms of the debate by arguing that he
had no need of such letters, because as the founding father he
could claim the religious transformations of the Corinthian
believers as his letter of recommendation. Paul thus claims
legitimacy on account of the visible work of the Spirit through
his ministry to the Corinthians, while his opponents rely on
organisational arrangements such as letters of recommendation
and patronage structures as well as on ancient synagogue
traditions to preach in the tradition of Moses.
What could account for this different perspective on
legitimate power? Perhaps, it reflects different stages of
community formation in Jerusalem and in Corinth, the latter
faith community being only 6 years old, the former around 25
years at the time of writing. Such an argument would
presuppose that the age difference would account for certain
features of structuring or institutionalising. This is possible,
and would need to be investigated by studying such
structuration processes in the ancient world. Horrell offered
a sociological perspective along traditional developmental
lines (Horrell 1995; 1997), but a recent study by Hanges of
ancient Greek narratives about the founders of religious cults
provides a new perspective. He demonstrates that Greek
founder traditions always present the cult founder as selected
by a deity, commissioned to found (or transfer) the cult in a
new location, as well as to structure the community’s rituals,
membership and lifestyle, thereby instituting certain formal
structures and leadership practices from the start (Hanges
2011). Thus, it is difficult to substantiate that the time
differential between Jerusalem and Corinth communities –
each of which claimed continuity with earlier Jewish
communities – adequately accounts for this difference in
Open Access
Page 8 of 13
Original Research
TABLE 1: Authority claims and their social bases of power in Corinth.
Power basis
Paul’s authority claims
Most likely opponent claims
Informational power
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
• Personal knowledge of Christ’s ministry and teaching, based on
their Jewish origins?
Reward power
• ‘We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ’ (5:10)
• Good standing with the elite in Corinth?
• Honour within Paul’s network of churches (and with Jerusalem church) (8:1–9:15)
• Good standing with the Jerusalem church?
• ‘For it is not the one who commends himself who is approved, but the one whom the • Favoured with Jewish teachers from Jerusalem?
Lord commends’ (10:18)
• ‘The God and Father of the Lord Jesus … knows that I am not lying’ (11:31)
Coercive power
• ‘It was to spare you that I refrained from coming again’ (1:23)
‘If I come again I will not spare them’ (13:2)
News of Paul’s afflictions in Asia (1:8–11)
Explaining Paul’s absence from Corinth (1:15–22)
Paul’s intention to spare the Corinthians (1:23–2:4)
Paul’s response to Titus’ report (2:12–13; 7:5–16)
‘We all … are being transformed’ (3:18)
‘the open statement of the truth’ (4:2)
‘We are not commending ourselves … but giving you cause to boast about us,
so that you may be able to answer those …’ (5:12)
• ‘Even if I am unskilled in speaking, I am not so in knowledge’ (11:6)
• God will provide an escape, as he did in Damascus (11:31–33)
• ‘Visions and revelations of the Lord’ (12:1)
• Threat of becoming disconnected from Jerusalem?
• ‘Do not be unequally yoked’ (6:14–7:1)
• Through persuasion and accusation, manipulated to marginalise
• ‘We destroy arguments and every lofty opinion raised against the knowledge of God’
Paul (‘his bodily presence is weak, and his speech of no account’
(10:4–5)
– 10:10)
• ‘What we say by letter when absent, we do when present’ (10:11)
Legitimate power
• ‘Not that we lord it over your faith’ (1:24)
• Pride in proper patronage relationships, including sponsorship
• ‘We are not … peddlers of God’s word, but … commissioned by God … we speak in
Christ’ (2:17)
• ‘Did I commit a sin … because I preached God’s gospel to you free of charge? I robbed
other churches … to serve you … and will refrain from burdening you in any way’
(11:7–9)
• ‘You yourselves are our letter of recommendation’ (3:2)
• Letters of recommendation from Jerusalem
• ‘our sufficiency is from God, who has made us … ministers of a new covenant … of the
Spirit’
• (3:5–6)
• ‘We refuse to practice cunning … but by the open statement of the truth we would
commend ourselves’ (4:2)
• ‘commend ourselves in every way’ through suffering (6:3–13)
• Better than that of Moses (3:7–18)
• In line with tradition of Moses
• Ambassador of reconciliation (5:11–21)
‘We do not boast beyond limit in the labours of others’ (10:15; 12:12)
Expert power
Referent power
• Boasting in others’ labours, no respect for mission territory
Jewish descent (11:22–23)
• Jewish descent
• True apostle (12:11–13)
• Apostolic performance ‘with utmost patience, with signs and wonders and mighty
works’ (12:12)
• Apostolic authorisation
• ‘the daily pressure on me of my anxiety for all the churches’ (11:28)
• Rhetorical skill (cf. ‘For they say, His letters are weighty and
strong, but his bodily presence is weak, and his speech of no
account’ – 10:10)
• ‘visions and revelations of the Lord’ (12:1)
• ‘the surpassing greatness of the revelations’ (12:7)
• Experience from the ‘first hour’?
‘If we are afflicted, it is for your comfort and salvation’ (1:5–7)
• Jewish-Christian believers from Israel
• Suffering like Christ (4:7–5:10; 6:3–13, 11:24–30)
• Respecting Corinthian patronage (cf. ‘I myself did not burden
you’ –12:13)
• Ambassador of reconciliation (5:11–21)
-
Note: References in bold refer to the authority claims already discussed in Paul’s authority claims (leader self-presentation) section.
terms of institutionalisation or structuration. Hanges points
in another direction: Paul’s self-presentation as a founder
aligns well with Greek founder narratives in claiming
legitimacy as divine envoy for transplanting the Jesus cult to
Corinth, and instituting its structures and leadership. Such a
self-presentation may, however, have carried less weight
with the Jewish-Christian believers, who were used to the
structures of Diaspora Judaism with its allegiance to
Jerusalem and letters of recommendation. Did Paul frame his
task as cult founder purposely along the lines of Greek
founder narratives to win the allegiance of the Gentile
believers while at the same time putting some distance
between himself and his opponents?
Two of Paul’s central authority claims relate to referent
power. Instead of viewing his own misfortunes as telltale
signs of Gods’ disapproval, as undoubtedly they must have
appeared to some, or even viewing them as suffering for
Christ, he pictured them as carrying the suffering of Christ in
his own body, as it were with redemptive value for the
http://www.hts.org.za
Corinthian community for whom he had sacrificed so much.
Thus, Paul presented himself as the embodiment of Christ’s
death and life to the Corinthians. Alongside this self-sacrifice,
he placed Christ at the very centre of his message and thus at
the centre of the identity of his Christ-believing communities
(1 Cor 2:2; 2 Cor 3:18). This turned Paul into a powerful
embodiment of his own message, a role model that could not
be ignored. His opponents, on the other hand, could only
claim referent power by virtue of their Jewish heritage, or
perhaps by virtue of their adoption of patronage sponsorship,
emulating the kind of reception and status that many
Corinthians would have been envious of. Clearly, it was
easier for most of the Corinthians to identify with Paul in his
manual labour and his suffering than with the itinerant
Jewish-Christian teachers whose heritage they could never
match, and whose social status would remain beyond the
grasp of most local believers. Paul’s use of referent power
gave him a significant social advantage over his opponents
by his continuing identification with the majority of the
Corinthian believers instead of with the leading elites.
Open Access
Page 9 of 13
Paul differed significantly from his opponents in his use of
expert power. Although he could claim expertise on account of
his visions and his experience in his churches, he downplayed
their value as accreditation for leadership. The opponents, on
the other hand, seemed to have great respect for eloquence
and presumably were well versed in rhetoric. They also
enjoyed the support of Corinth’s believing patrons, a further
testimony to their abilities as traveling teachers (Winter 2002).
It appears, then, that his opponents put great stock in their
expertise as qualification for their leadership, while Paul not
only downplayed it but also discredited it as a basis of for
leadership in Corinth. This parallels the emphasis on referent
power, which Paul used effectively to portray himself as
someone that every community member could identify with
in their desire to imitate Christ, even if leaders and the elite
might have frowned at his lack of status and expertise.
Paul used informational power to inform the Corinthians of
his intentions and motives as well as of his sufferings, trusting
that this information would produce a more positive response
to his leadership. He also used informational power to
remind the Corinthians of the gospel that he had proclaimed
and how it had transformed them. With this information,
Paul empowered the Corinthians to answer and resist his
opponents and their claims to power. He might have claimed
informational power based on his direct access to divine
revelation, as he does in other letters (cf. Rm 11:25; 16:25–26;
Gl 1:16ff.; 1 Cor 15:51).7 Even though he mentions his
revelations in 2 Corinthians (12:1, 7, 12), he does not
emphasise them in the same way, perhaps, because if his
opponents were indeed Jewish-Christian teachers from
Jerusalem, they might well have personal knowledge of
Jesus’ earthly ministry, in which case their appeal to
informational power would be more effective than Paul’s.
Paul hardly appeals to reward power, except to state
repeatedly that the Lord will commend and evaluate each
one. And yet, his instructions for the Jerusalem collection (2
Cor 8–9) may implicitly function as an appeal to reward
power, for this passage encourages the Corinthians to
maintain their loyalty to Paul’s Aegean network of churches,
within which Paul and his team function as power brokers.8
This section also demonstrates the apostle’s loyalty to
Jerusalem. Implicitly, then, Paul offers the Corinthian
community a significant place in his network of churches as
well as good relations with Jerusalem as a reward for
renewing their loyalty to him. This is, however, not framed in
terms of competition with his opponents, neither defensively
as if Paul had been critiqued on this count, nor offensively as
if Paul believed this to be a key factor in legitimising his
leadership. Given the tone of the arguments in 2 Corinthians
8–9, it is unlikely that Paul intended to reclaim the
Corinthian’s loyalty by promising such rewards as power
broker for his church network; he simply aims to renew their
7.Ephesians 3:4–10 and Colossians 1:27 also claim informational power by describing
Paul’s revelations as God making his mysteries known to Paul.
8.Interestingly, 2 Corinthians 8–9 feature various elements of patronage (exchange of
goods, the reciprocity of patron–client relationships, Paul as power broker in his
network of churches) in how Paul structures his relationship to Corinthians for the
purpose of the Jerusalem connection (Jennings 2009; Joubert 2000).
http://www.hts.org.za
Original Research
participation in the collection now that reconciliation is
almost complete, and thus reaffirms their place in his network
and their loyalty to Jerusalem. Paul then does not use his role
as power broker in his church network to enhance his reward
power in Corinth.
Finally, Paul appears to use coercive power in confronting his
opponents in 2 Corinthians 10–13, but mostly indirectly. The
initial military metaphor warns strongly of destroying
strongholds and punishing any remaining disobedience
(10:4–6), which affirms Paul’s commitment to boldly exercise
his authority upon his arrival (10:11). He fields numerous
accusations against his opponents (11:3–4, 13–15, 19–20), and
warns that ‘if I come again I will not spare them’ (13:2). Yet,
he does not address them directly, but addresses the
community, realising that he has no power to coerce anyone
in the Corinthian church into doing anything, other than by
rallying the majority of that community to his support. This
strategy parallels the strategy of his opponents, who had
rallied the community in support of their criticism of Paul,
almost succeeding in forcibly disconnecting Paul from the
Corinthian church. His opponents had access to cultural
bases of power, such as patronage sponsorship and letters of
recommendation, and thus had greater ability to enforce
their views even if some may not have been personally
convinced – such believers would have been of little social
importance and had no resources to resist. In this, Paul was
clearly at a disadvantage because he refused to identify with
the elite and their cultural resources, thus cutting himself off
from a power base that others willingly used to coerce where
persuasion might not reach the desired result.
In summary, Paul limited his bases of power because he
chose not to rely on informational, expert, reward or coercive
power as key legitimising factors for his apostolic status as a
community founder. Instead, he focused on legitimate and
referent power, trusting that his claim of a divinely
commissioned ministry of the Spirit as evidenced by the
religious experiences of ‘ordinary’ believers, and his role as
an ambassador of Christ’s message of reconciliation, as
personally embodied in his sacrificial suffering, would
ultimately prove more convincing to his audience, at least the
Gentiles among them, than what his opponents had to offer.
Significantly, he was able to present himself precisely in his
suffering as a key model for the entire community (and not
only to the elite), both in their Christian living generally and
in their leadership styles. Thus, Paul focused on enabling the
entire membership to identify with him, his lifestyle and his
message, which proved offensive perhaps most of all to the
elite in their disdain for manual labour and lowly status.9
Constructing Christian identity and Christian
leadership
In answering the question how Paul was able to convince the
Corinthian community of the legitimacy of his authority
claims, I have now compared how Paul and his opponents
9.In this, Paul practiced his own instructions about broad and respectful participation
of every member of the community in the community’s functions and rituals in 1
Corinthians 8–10 and 12–14.
Open Access
Page 10 of 13
used different sources of power to legitimise their authority
claims. I also described the likely response of the Corinthian
congregation and their leadership to the arguments of both
Paul and his opponents. This allows me to suggest that Paul’s
success in Corinth rested on his identification with the entire
membership. Paul was a visible object lesson of the message
that he preached, and provided leadership consistent with
that model. This was accessible to the entire community, and
thus had greater persuasive power in winning their allegiance
than what his opponents were able to muster. His opponents,
by contrast, appear to have been successful in the community
primarily by winning the allegiance of the Corinthian
leadership. Paul’s model of Christian living and leadership
was socially and culturally offensive to these Corinthian
leaders, while the opponents proved more ‘culturally
sensitive’: they conformed to elite expectations about
eloquence and patronage, most likely believing that such
practices made no essential difference in the message being
proclaimed. Their criticism of Paul may or may not have
been shared by most of the congregation, but given the
patronage-type leadership structures, the membership had
little choice but to follow.
Underlying these different authority claims and the different
responses to them is a vision for the social identity of the
Christian community in Corinth. Power and leadership flow
along the lines of social identity (Haslam 2004; Haslam,
Reicher & Platow 2011; Turner 2005). ‘Social identity’ is the
sense that people have about belonging to a certain social
group. This is a cognitive and affective process that is highly
sensitive to the social context (Haslam 2004:19ff.). Generally,
some group members embody the values, beliefs and
behaviours of the group more than others; they are perceived
by other group members to be more prototypical. Such
prototypical group members are socially more appealing,
they gain in influence, and often rising to leadership status
over time – as long as the group’s identity and social context
remains stable (Hogg 2001). This suggests that shifts in
leadership models and structures interact with shifts in the
community’s identity. For instance, an established leader
may lose ground in a changing social context, or a new leader
may embody different ideals and seek to adapt the
community’s view of identity (Barentsen 2015).
How might this apply to the leadership conflict in Corinth? I
would suggest that this conflict is not simply or primarily
about a different gospel, even though Paul indirectly accuses
his opponents of proclaiming a different Jesus and of being
false apostles (2 Cor 11:4, 13). A point of departure is the
realisation that the social identity of the Corinthian
community was relatively unstable. The community had
been in existence for only 6 years, its founding father had left
it after 18 months and another key leader, Apollos, had also
left, while the community had continued to grow. Thus, it
faced significant leadership challenges in terms of social
cohesion and stability. Paul’s opponents offered a serious
proposal for highly improved cohesion and stability, because
they adjusted the community model to fit in better with
cultural standards of patronage, leadership status and
http://www.hts.org.za
Original Research
community formation (Harland 2003; 2009). It is no surprise,
really, that the Corinthian church accepted their leadership in
this period of social instability, for their proposal must have
seemed neutral with respect to the message of the gospel and
the identity of the community. Paul, too, was highly
concerned about social cohesion and stability, as is evidenced
in his letters (Rm 14:18–19; 1 Cor 1:10, Phlp 2:1–2), but his
proposal for achieving social cohesion was more egalitarian
(although that term is anachronistic in its application to Paul)
and was most likely culturally offensive to the elite among
the Christians. As Paul saw it, these different proposals were
not simply different styles of leadership that led to the same
goal, but each style of leadership implied a different
conception of the gospel and of the social identity of the
community.
The opponents, whatever their theology and personal
motivations, not only provided a different type of leadership,
but thereby also created a different vision of social identity,
which replicated the usual social hierarchy and status
distinctions within the church. It is precisely this change to
which Paul so strenuously objects. Such a change in social
orientation is not indifferent for his vision of identity, but it
essentially presents a different model of what it means to be
a leader, of what it means to be a community member. That
is, Paul claims that his opponents are preaching a false Christ,
because even if they communicate the same information
about Christ, they act and model him differently, which
implies – at least in Paul’s opinion – a portrayal of Christ that
identifies him with elite leaders. This Christ is unlike the
Christ of Paul’s own preaching and leadership style
(Barentsen 2011:112–140).
Paul then presents his own ministry among the Corinthians,
and his own suffering as a fitting model of Christ, not simply
because his information is more accurate, but because his life
and ministry embody what he teaches more faithfully. His
vision for the Christian identity of the community is built on
this embodiment of Christ, and implies participation of and
respect for all members in a way that does not replicate the
social inequalities and injustices. Of course, Paul is aware
that church members still live and participate in this unequal
society, which will unavoidably continue to create stress for
his vision of Christian social identity. In Paul’s perspective,
leadership, social identity and theological content are
intimately interwoven, and leadership styles are not
indifferent to identity and gospel content.
Conclusion and implications
This article began by raising the question: ‘How did Paul
succeed in convincing the Corinthians of the legitimacy of his
leadership and winning their allegiance in competition with
colleague and rival leaders?’ This has now been answered
through a study of Paul’s authority claims in 2 Corinthians,
tabulated and analysed with the help of the theory of the
social bases of power, with implications already drawn out
on the basis of leadership and social identity theory. I would
like to discuss two further implications of this study: one for
Open Access
Page 11 of 13
the literary unity of 2 Corinthians and the other for today’s
social context of increasing leadership fluidity in many
Western churches.
Perception of power and the unity of
argumentation in 2 Corinthians
A social identity perspective on power emphasises the
perspectival nature of how power is experienced (Simon &
Oakes 2006). For those who identify with the group and its
leader, a proposal or directive from the in-group leadership
tends to be received as beneficial; for those at the margins or
even outside of the group, the same leadership proposals
may be experienced as manipulative or coercive. This has
important implications for how to evaluate Paul’s strong
denunciation of his remaining opponents in 2 Corinthians
10–13. Generally, a leader can only engage in such strong
denunciations if he is convinced of the support of the majority
of the community. If a community does not identify strongly
with a particular leader, such leadership support is lacking.
Consequently, the community would likely regard any
proposals from this leader with a degree of suspicion, while
very directive or even derogatory proposals are almost
certain to be rejected as manipulative and coercive, motivating
the community to close ranks and exclude this leader.
This implies that if Paul had engaged in such strong
denunciations of his opponents while his leadership in
Corinth was still severely contested, he would probably have
been perceived as manipulative and would have succeeded
only in undermining the legitimacy of his leadership even
further, leading to further exclusion. That is, Paul would
likely not have engaged in such denunciations in order to
regain leadership status, because this strategy would have
backfired. Instead, it is likely that Paul would have engaged
in these denunciations only if he knew his leadership status
had already been restored. And this is, of course, precisely
the situation that we find in 1 Corinthians 1–7, where Paul
expresses his relief and joy over the report from Titus that all
is ready for reconciliation. Paul is still underway to Corinth,
so that reconciliation is still only a promise, awaiting
fulfilment upon Paul’s arrival. Paul thus writes from the dual
perspective of knowing that reconciliation is close at hand,
and of exhorting them to stay true to their promise. When
Paul finally engages in a more direct confrontation with his
remaining opponents, he does so with the confidence that the
majority will support his judgement in the matter, as, indeed,
Titus had already reported to him. Thus, it is likely that the
majority in Corinth had more or less expected such warnings
against those who continued to resist and criticise Paul. Even
if they might have found Paul’s language rather strong, they
would have regarded it as beneficial for the community
because they now identified more strongly with Paul,
believing that as suffering apostle for Corinth, he undoubtedly
had their best interests in mind.
This implies that the conciliatory tone of 2 Corinthians 1–7
and the hostile tone of 2 Corinthians 10–13 are not mutually
exclusive or contradictory, but rather that they are
http://www.hts.org.za
Original Research
complementary and even reinforce one another.10 What is
more, the hostile tone of the later chapters serves as proof
that the reconciliation of the earlier chapters is broadly
supported in Corinth and with a sufficiently deep
commitment to stomach the denunciations as beneficial. The
few reflections above on the role of the Jerusalem collection
in Paul’s argument with the Corinthians would underline
this perspective. Altogether this contributes an important
argument for the unity of the entire epistle.11
Social construction and leadership models
This study has used the perspective that leadership is not
primarily a position to be secured, retained or protected, but a
process of social influence in a particular group at a particular
time and place, which is subject to regular interaction and
debate. That is, leadership, including Paul’s apostolic
leadership in Corinth, is subject to social construction.
This article argued that Paul’s behaviours in Corinth (not
accepting money, being vulnerable, etc.) created a category of
leadership that was culturally unavailable and unacceptable,
while his opponents built their proposals on available
and acceptable cultural models of leadership. Paul’s
communication strategy aims to reframe the perception of
his actions in order to not only create a different cognitive
framework for (the perception of) social reality, but also to
create a different model of leadership that would result in his
own restoration to leadership and the ousting of his
competitors. Paul’s reframing of leadership connects his
personal and bodily experiences with the death and life of
Christ, in an effort to provide strong theological anchors for a
model of leadership that is otherwise unsustainable. Thus,
Paul’s social construction of leadership is not only framed
theologically with reference to Christ, nor only socially and
culturally with reference to general cultural patterns of
leadership (adapting or resisting them, whatever the case
may be), but also on forms of leadership practice that embody
or incarnate the story of Christ afresh for the community.12
This adds an important insight to sociological perspectives
that leadership at Corinth was fluid, ‘charismatic’ and
10.Jones, among others, points to various sections in 2 Corinthians that could function
as epilogue, thereby suggesting that the letter is composed from two or more
original letters (Jones 2008). However, an alternative way of interpreting this
evidence is by considering whether Paul differentiated between different
subgroups in his audience. Did he shift from a focus on finalizing reconciliation with
those who now supported him in Corinth to addressing those, even if indirectly,
that still resisted his leadership, as the above analysis might suggest? Differentiating
between various subgroups in the audiences, along with the appropriate shift in
content, ethos and a distinct closing section, is at least one possible explanation for
different epilogues, which simply draw a particular line of argumentation before a
certain audience to a close, then proceeding to the next subgroup in the audience,
all of which could be accomplished within one discourse or letter.
11.Evidently, this observation does not close the discussion, but it contributes a new
and important psychological perspective to the debate. A number of voices already
speak for the literary unity of the letter (Bieringer 1994; Hall 2003; Long 2004;
Schmeller 2013; Stegman 2005), and I join this chorus with a new argument.
12.‘Social construction’ here is used to indicate that particular social structures of
community and leadership, and their associated meanings, are not simply given as
essential or ontological categories, but are arrived at by social interaction and
negotiation. In other words, Paul could not simply appeal to a particular preexisting, ontological category of ‘apostolic leader’, not even by pointing to his
divinely revealed and initiated apostolic role. He had to explain the social and
psychological implications of his apostolic claims, convince the Corinthians of the
legitimacy of this claim, and then demonstrate by principle and personal example
how to effect this claim in actual social practice. For this interesting but rather
complex concept, see Gergen (2009).
Open Access
Page 12 of 13
structurally undetermined (MacDonald 1988), and that it
generally follows cultural patterns and structures (Clarke
2006). The leadership structures in Corinth were the subject
of intense debate, with different theological, sociological and
cultural proposals competing for allegiance and dominance.
Leadership was not a structural and fixed aspect of the
situation in Corinth, but a process and positions that needed
to be socially and theologically constructed, as no doubt
continued to take place in the generations after Paul and the
Twelve. This is, of course, not to imply that Paul intentionally
followed a social constructivist approach in defending his
leadership position in Corinth, but he appears to have fully
realised that leadership needed to be grounded culturally
and socially, as well as theologically, in order to provide the
stability and cohesion that the community needed for longterm survival. Thus, a constructivist approach to leadership
in biblical studies seems to align with the rhetoric and social
engagement of the early Christians, as demonstrated by
Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians.
The above argument thus offers a case study of one
congregation of only one of their congregational leaders –
although a very important one – at a very particular stage of
community and thus of leadership formation. We cannot
easily predict which arguments Paul or other apostolic
leaders would use in different cities and different contexts.
After all, leadership is a highly contextualised practice at the
frontier of cultural creativity where community formation,
intergroup relationships and influence processes intersect.
Therefore, it would be inappropriate to use Paul’s model of
leadership in 2 Corinthians to correct centuries of church
leadership practice that appears to have developed precisely
along the lines that Paul so carefully avoided, namely the
lines of hierarchy, status and expertise. However, if we
observe that institutional ecclesial leadership is being
challenged today for its reliance on hierarchy, status and
expertise, at least we know we have a very interesting
dialogue partner in Paul to consider how to respond to these
challenges, realising that 2 Corinthians is only part of what
Paul has to offer on leadership.
Original Research
Acknowledgements
Competing interests
The author declares that he has no financial or personal
relationships which may have inappropriately influenced
him in writing this article.
References
Balz, H.R. & Schneider, G. (eds.), 1990, Exegetical dictionary of the New Testament,
Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, MI.
Barentsen, J., 2011, Emerging leadership in the Pauline mission: A social identity
perspective on local leadership development in Corinth and Ephesus, Wipf &
Stock, Eugene, OR.
Barentsen, J., 2015, ‘Church leadership as adaptive identity construction in a changing
social context’, Journal of Religious Leadership 15(2), 49–80.
Barentsen, J., 2016, ‘Practising religious leadership’, in J. Storey, J. Hartley, J.-L. Denis,
P. ‘t Hart & D. Ulrich (eds.), Routledge companion to leadership, pp. 260–277,
Routledge, London.
Barrett, C.K., 1973, The second epistle to the Corinthians, Hendrikson, Peabody, MA.
Bieringer, R., 1994a, ‘2 Korinther 6,14–7,1 im Kontext des 2. Korintherbriefes.
Forschungsüberblick und Versuch eines eigenen Zugangs’, in R. Bieringer & J.
Lambrecht (eds.), Studies on 2 Corinthians, pp. 551–570, Peeters, Leuven.
Bieringer, R., 1994b, ‘Der 2. Korintherbrief als ursprüngliche Einheit. Ein
Forschungüberblick’, in R. Bieringer & J. Lambrecht (eds.), Studies on 2 Corinthians,
pp. 107–130, Peeters, Leuven.
Blasi, A.J., 1991, Making charisma: The social construction of Paul’s public image,
Transaction Publishers, New Brunswick, NJ.
Bryman, A., 2012, Social research methods, 4th edn., Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Burtchaell, J.T., 1992, From synagogue to church: Public services and offices in the
earliest Christian communities, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Chow, J.K., 1992, Patronage and power: A study of social networks in Corinth, Sheffield
Academic Press, Sheffield.
Clarke, A.D., 2000, Serve the community of the church: Christians as leaders and
ministers, Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, MI.
Clarke, A.D., 2006, Secular and Christian leadership in Corinth: A socio-historical and
exegetical study of 1 Corinthians 1–6, 2nd edn., Paternoster, Milton Keynes.
Danker, F.W., Bauer, W., Arndt, W. & Gingrich, F.W., 2000, A Greek-English lexicon of the
New Testament and other early Christian literature, 3rd edn., University of
Chicago Press, Chicago, IL.
DeSilva, D.A., 2004, An Introduction to the New Testament: Contexts, methods and
ministry formation, InterVarsity, Downers Grove, IL.
Ehrensperger, K., 2007, Paul and the dynamics of power: Communication and
interaction in the early Christ-movement, T & T Clark, London.
Fairhurst, G.T. & Grant, D., 2010, ‘The social construction of leadership: A sailing
guide’, Management Communication Quarterly 24(2), 171–210. https://doi.
org/10.1177/0893318909359697
French, J.R.P. & Raven, B.H., 1959, ‘The bases of social power’, in D. Cartwright (ed.),
Studies in social power, pp. 150–167, Institute of Social Research, Ann Arbor, MI.
Garland, D.E., 1999, 2 Corinthians, Broadman & Holman, Nashville, TN.
Garland, D.E., 2003, 1 Corinthians, Baker Academic, Grand Rapids, MI.
Gergen, K.J., 2009, An invitation to social construction, 2nd edn., Sage, Los Angeles, CA.
This reservation about a potential ‘Pauline leadership model’
also applies to the study of leadership in the early church.
Paul cannot be played off against deutero- or trito-Paul
merely on the basis of different authority claims or different
leadership structures, even if Paul’s leadership model in
Corinth is different from the leadership structures that New
Testament sources reveal for the church in Ephesus or
elsewhere. As any good leader, Paul has more than one trick
up his sleeve, and although we may expect a certain
consistency in his leadership practice, the highly contextual
nature of leadership and group identity guides us to expect a
significant degree of flexibility and adaptability in Paul’s
leadership. Thus, different authority claims and leadership
structures in the deutero- or trito-Pauline letters are no
argument in themselves for differences in institutionalisation,
for the development of different varieties of Christianity or
for proposing different authors besides Paul.
http://www.hts.org.za
Glancy, J.A., 2004, ‘Boasting of beatings (2 Corinthians 11:23–25)’, Journal of Biblical
Literature 123(1), 99–135. https://doi.org/10.2307/3268552
Gloer, W.H., 1989, ‘2 Corinthians 5:14–21’, Review and Expositor 86(3), 397–405.
https://doi.org/10.1177/003463738908600308
Hall, D.R., 2003, The unity of the Corinthian correspondence, T & T Clark, London.
Hanges, J.C., 2011, Paul, founder of churches. A study in light of the evidence for the
role of ‘founder-figures’ in the Hellenistic-Roman period, Mohr-Siebeck, Tübingen.
Harland, P.A., 2003, Associations, synagogues, and congregations: Claiming a place in
ancient Mediterranean society, Fortress, Minneapolis, MN.
Harland, P.A., 2009, Dynamics of identity in the world of the early Christians:
Associations, Judeans, and cultural minorities, T & T Clark, New York.
Harris, M.J., 2005, The second epistle to the Corinthians: A commentary on the Greek
text, Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, MI.
Haslam, S.A., 2004, Psychology in organizations: The social identity approach, 2nd
edn., Sage, London.
Haslam, S.A., Reicher, S. & Platow, M.J., 2011, The new psychology of leadership:
Identity, influence and power, Psychology Press, New York.
Heitink, G., 2001, Biografie van de dominee, Ten Have, Baarn.
Herrington, J., Bonem, M. & Furr, J.H., 2000, Leading Congregational change: A
practical guide for the transformational journey, Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA.
Hogg, M.A., 2001, ‘A social identity theory of leadership’, Personality and Social
Psychology Review 5(3), 184–200. https://doi.org/10.1207/S15327957PSPR0503_1
Open Access
Page 13 of 13
Holifield, E.B., 2007, God’s ambassadors: A history of the Christian clergy in America,
Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, MI.
Holmberg, B., 1978, Paul and power: The structure of authority in the primitive church
as reflected in the Pauline epistles, CWK Gleerup, Lund.
Horrell, D.G., 1995, ‘The development of theological ideology in Pauline Christianity:
A structuration theory perspective’, in P.F. Esler (ed.), Modelling early Christianity:
Social-scientific studies of the New Testament in its context, pp. 224–236,
Routledge, London.
Horrell, D.G., 1996, The social ethos of the Corinthian correspondence interests and
ideology from 1 Corinthians to 1 Clement, T & T Clark, Edinburgh.
Horrell, D.G., 1997, ‘Leadership patterns and the development of ideology in early
Christianity’, Sociology of Religion 58, 323–341. https://doi.org/10.2307/3711919
Hybels, B., 2012, Courageous leadership: Field-tested strategy for the 360° leader,
exp. edn., Zondervan, Grand Rapids, MI.
Jennings, M.A., 2009, ‘Patronage and rebuke in Paul’s persuasion in 2 Corinthians 8–9’,
Journal of Greco-Roman Christianity and Judaism 6, 107–127.
Jones, I.H., 2008, ‘Rhetorical criticism and the unity of 2 Corinthians: One “epilogue”,
or more?’ New Testament Studies 54(4), 496–524.
Joubert, S.J., 2000, Paul as benefactor: Reciprocity, strategy and theological reflection
in Paul’s collection, Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen.
Joubert, S.J., 2015, ‘“Walking the talk”: Paul’s authority in motion in 2 Corinthians
10–13 / “Om jou praat te loop”: Paulus se outoriteit aan die beweeg in 2 Korintiërs
10–13’, In die Skriflig 49(2), 1–7.
Knippenberg, B.V. & Knippenberg, D.V., 2005, ‘Leader self-sacrifice and leadership
effectiveness: The moderating role of leader prototypicality’, Journal of Applied
Psychology 90(1), 25–37. https://doi.org/10.1037/0021-9010.90.1.25
Long, F.J., 2004, Ancient rhetoric and Paul’s apology: The compositional unity of 2
Corinthians, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
MacDonald, M.Y., 1988, The Pauline churches: A socio-historical study of
institutionalization in the Pauline and deutero-Pauline writings, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge.
Martin, D.B., 1991, ‘Tongues of angels and other status indicators’, Journal of the
American Academy of Religion 59, 563–569. https://doi.org/10.1093/jaarel/
LIX.3.547
Martin, R.P., 1986, 2 Corinthians, Word, Waco, TX.
Original Research
Raven, B.H., 2008, ‘The bases of power and the power/interaction model of
interpersonal influence’, Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy 8(1), 1–22.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1530-2415.2008.00159.x
Schmeller, T., 2013, ‘No bridge over troubled water? The gap between 2 Corinthians
1–9 and 10–13 revisited’, Journal for the Study of the New Testament 36(1), 73–
84. https://doi.org/10.1177/0142064X13495136
Schütz, J.H., 1975, Paul and the anatomy of apostolic authority, Cambridge University
Press, London.
Simon, B. & Oakes, P.J., 2006, ‘Beyond dependence: An identity approach to social
power and domination’, Human Relations 59(1), 105–139. https://doi.
org/10.1177/0018726706062760
Stegman, T., 2005, The character of Jesus: The linchpin to Paul’s argument in 2
Corinthians, Editrice Pontificio Istituto Biblico, Rome.
Stenschke, C.W., 2015, ‘The leadership challenges of Paul’s collection for the saints in
Jerusalem, Part I: Overcoming the obstacles on the side of the gentile Christian
donors’, Verbum et Ecclesia 36(1), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.4102/ve.v36i1.1406
Talbert, C.H., 2002, Reading Corinthians: A literary and theological commentary on 1
and 2 Corinthians, rev. edn., Smyth & Helwys, Macon, GA.
Theissen, G., 1982, The social setting of Pauline Christianity: Essays on Corinth, transl.
J.H. Schütz, Fortress, Philadelphia, PA.
Thiselton, A.C., 2000, The first epistle to the Corinthians: A commentary on the Greek
text, Paternoster, Carlisle.
Tierney, W.G., 1996, ‘Leadership and postmodernism: On voice and the qualitative
method’, The Leadership Quarterly 7(3), 371–383. https://doi.org/10.1016/
S1048-9843(96)90026-0
Turner, J.C., 2005, ‘Explaining the nature of power: A three-process theory’, European
Journal of Social Psychology 35(1), 1–22. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.244
Uhl-Bien, M., Marion, R. & McKelvey, B., 2007, ‘Complexity leadership theory: Shifting
leadership from the industrial age to the knowledge era’, The Leadership Quarterly
18(4), 298–318. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.leaqua.2007.04.002
Uhl-Bien, M. & Ospina, S. (eds.), 2012, Advancing relational leadership research: A
dialogue among perspectives, Information Age, Charlotte, NC.
van den Hoonaard, W.C., 2008, ‘Sensitizing concepts’, in L.M. Given (ed.), The Sage
encyclopedia of qualitative research methods, pp. 813–816, Sage, Thousand Oaks, CA.
Maxwell, J.C., 1999, The 21 indispensable qualities of a leader: Becoming the person
that people will want to follow, Nelson, Nashville, TN.
von Campenhausen, H.F., 1997, Ecclesiastical authority and spiritual power in the
church of the first three centuries, transl. J.A. Baker, reprint of 1969 ed.,
Hendrickson, Peabody, MA.
Mitchell, M.M., 1991, Paul and the Rhetoric of Reconciliation: An exegetical investigation
of the language and composition of 1 Corinthians, Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen.
Winter, B.W., 2002, Philo and Paul among the sophists: Alexandrian and Corinthian
responses to a Julio-Claudian movement, 2nd edn., Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, MI.
http://www.hts.org.za
Open Access