Old Men and New Men

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THE OLD MAN AND THE NEW MAN

A STUDY IN PAULINE THEOLOGY

A DISSERTATION
SUBMITTED TO
THE DEPARTMENT OF THEOLOGY
AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES
UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW

IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF


DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY

BY
--A
,
JOHN I?."VaRASSMICK

JANVAIl

60

THESIS ABSTRACT
The Old Man and the New Man
A Study in Pauline Theology

The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the meaning and function of the
"old man / new man" metaphor in the theology of the Apostle Paul. The method
four
in
for
is
investigation
the
this
chosen
passages the corpus
an exegetical study of
Paulinum of the New Testament where one or both of these designations occur.
Chapter one sets the context for this study by addressing five issues: 1) the
facets
Colossians
2)
Ephesians
of
relevant
authenticity of
and
as primary sources;
Pauline theology as the setting for the study; 3) the origin and background of this
dual metaphor; 4) various views of the meaning of this metaphor; and 5) the key
Chapter
be
that
to
in
interpretation
this
the
questions
need
metaphor.
resolved
of
two investigates the crucifixion of "our old man" with Christ in Romans 6: 1-14.
Chapter three discusses the creation of the "one new man" in Ephesians 2: 14-18.
Chapters four and five deal with the formulations "put off the old man" and "put on
the new man" in Colossians 3:5-11 and Ephesians 4: 17-24 respectively. Chapter six
draws conclusions on the meaning and function of this dual metaphor in Paul's
theology and relates it to his use of the "outer / inner man, " the "natural / spiritual
his
"flesh,
in
"
"
indicative
imperative
the
the
the
ethics.
and
man,
and
role of

We conclude that Paul himself formulated the "old man / new man"
terminology by drawing on the Adam / Christ typology within his own redemptivehistorical, eschatological perspective. This metaphor fits his "once / now" motif and
functions at two levels. On the corporate level, the "old man" is the world of
"old
Adam,
"
humanity
in
the
man, and the
solidarity with
prototypical
unredeemed

"new man" is the Church, the world-wide community of redeemedhumanity in


/
level
"old
"new
"
At
Christ,
the
this
the
man.
man new
prototypical
solidarity with
history.
On
individual
level,
"old
is
in
the
the
the
man"
man" coeidst redemptive
belongs
"the
Adam
"new
"
is
identified
to
the
and
with
present age, and
person who
Christ
is
identified
is
Christian
belongs
"the
to
the
with
man"
and
age to come"
who
that, "in Christ, " has now begun. At conversion7initiation, the Christian "put off the
*mVv,
/
being
he
is
"put
the
-as`d"i'new
and
old man" and
man"
on
new
she
man"
Gd
knowledge
his
in
the
progressively renewed
of
and
ways.

fi

Author's Declaration
I affirm that this thesis is entirely my own work and that all significant
quotations have been properly acknowledged in the footnotes. No part of this thesis
has been submitted previously for consideration for any degree.
Signei
Date:

iii

CONTENTS
ABBREVIATIONS

.........................................................

Vi

INTRODUCTION: THE CONTEXT OF THIS STUDY

Chapter
1.

1.1 Authenticity

2.

Sources
New
Testament
of

.................

.....................

1.2 Relevant Aspects of Pauline Theology


......................

22

1.3 Background of the "Old Man / New Man ......................

42

1.4 Views on the Meaning of the "Old Man / New Man ............

52

1.5 Key Questions and Method of Approach


....................

60

ROMANS 6:6-OUR OLD MAN CRUCIFIED

.......................

64

2.1 Historical Setting of Romans


..............................

64

2.2 Literary Context of Romans 6


............................

65

2.3 Structural Form of Romans 6:1-14


........................

73

2.4 Exegesisof Romans6:1-14


...............................

76

2.5 Concluding Observationson "Our Old Man ..................


3.

EPHESIANS 2:15-ONE NEW MAN CREATED

..................

140
145

3.1 Historical Setting of Ephesians


..........................

145

3.2 Literary Context of Ephesians 2


.........................

146

3.3 Structural Form of Ephesians 2:11-22


....................

148

3.4 Background and Form of Ephesians 2:14-18


...............

152

3.5 Exegesisof Ephesians 2:14-18


...........................

160

3.6 Concluding Observations on the "One New Man .............

190

iv

4.

5.

6.

COLOSSIANS 3:9-11 - THE OLD MAN PUT OFF


THE NEW MAN PUT ON
.................

193

4.1 Historical Setting of Colossians


...........................

193

4.2 Literary Context of Colossians 3


..........................

196

4.3 Structural Form of Colossians3:1-11


.....................

198

4.4 Exegesis of Colossians 3:5-11


............................

200

4.5 Concluding Observations on the "Old Man / New Man ........

243

EPHESIANS 4:22-24 - THE OLD MAN PUT OFF


THE NEW MAN PUT ON
.................
5.1 Literary Context of Ephesians 4
.........................
5.2 Structural Form of Ephesians 4:17-24
....................
5.3 Exegesisof Ephesians 4:20-24
...........................
5.4 Concluding Observations on the "Old Man / New Man ........
CONCLUSION: THE OLD MAN / NEW MAN IN PAUL
6.1 Setting in Paul's Theology

............

..............

6.3 Relationship to Other Pauline "Ax*wros-Themes

247
248
256
286
289
289

...............................

6.2 The "Old Man / New Man" in Paul's Theology

247

..........

293
301

6.4 Indicative and Imperative in Paul's Theology


..............

316

6.5 Summary of the Argument


..............................

324

BEBLIOGRAPHY
....................................................

325

TABLE OF ABBREVIATIONS
Journals, Reference Works, Series, and Others
AB
ABD
ABR
ABRL

Anchor Bible
D. N. Freedman, ed., Anchor Bible Dictionary,
Australian Biblical Review
Anchor Bible Reference Library

AC

Acta Classica

ACNT

Augsburg Commentary on the New Testament

AGJU
AnBib
ANF

6 vols.

Arbeiten zur Geschichte des Antiken Judentums und des Urchristentums

Analecta Biblica
A. Roberts and J. Donaldson, eds., Ante-Nicene Fathers, 10 vols.

ANRW
ANS
ARSHLL
AsbSera

H. Temporini and W. Haase, eds.,Aufstieg und Niedergang der r6mischen Welt


Auslegung Neutestamentlicher Schriften
Acta Reg. Societatis Humanorum Litterarum, Lundensis
Asbury Seminarian

ASNU
AsSeign

Acta seminarii neotestamentici


upsaliensis
Assembl4es du Seigneur

ASV
ATANT
AThJ
AThR
AUSS
AV
BAGD

American Standard Version of the Bible


Abhandlungen zur Theologie des Alten
und Neuen Testaments
Ashland Theological Journal
Anglican Theological Review
Andrews University Seminary Studies
Authorized Version = KJV
W. Bauer, W. F. Arndt, F. W. Gingrich,
and F. Danker, A Greek-English
Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, 2nd
rev. ed.
Banner of Truth
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research
W. E. Mills, ed., Bibliographies for Biblical Research, 7
vols. to date
Before the Christian era
F. Brown, S. R. Driver, and C. A. Briggs, A Hebrew and English Lexicon of
the Old Testament
F. Blass, A. Debrunner, and R. W. Funk, A Greek Grammar of the New
Testament
Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament
Bulletin of the Evangelical Theological Society
Beitrge zur evangelischen Theologie
Beitrge zur Geschichte der biblischen Exegese
Berlin Gnostic Codex
Beitrge zur historischen Theologie
Biblica
Bibliotheca Sacra
Bible Translator
Bulletin of the John Rylands Universit y Library of Manchester (also BJRULM)
J. F. Walvoord and R. B. Zuck, eds., Bible Knowledge Commentary, 2 vols.
Blacles New Testament Commentaries
Biblical Research

BanT
BASOR
BBR
BCE
BDB
BDF
BECNT
BETS
BEvT
BGBE
BGC
BHT
Bib
BibSac
BiTr
BJRL
BKC
BNTC
BR

vi

BulBR
BWANT
BZ
BZAW
BZNW

Bulletin for Biblical Research


Beitrge zur Wissenschaft vom Alten und Neuen Testament
Biblische Zeitschrift (Paderborn)
Beihefte zur Zeitschrift ffir die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft
Beiliefte zur Zeitschrift fUr die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft

ca.
CAH
CBC
CBQ
CE
CDSSE

circa, about, approximately


J. B. Bury, S. A. Cook et al., eds., Cambridge Ancient History, 12 vols.
Cambridge Bible Commentary
Catholic Biblical Quarterly
Christian era
G. Vermes, The Complete Dead Sea Scrolls in English
confer, compare
Cambridge Greek Testament for Schools and Colleges
(plural,
chapter
chs. )
A. D. Nock and A.
Festugiere,
Corpus
Hermeticum,
trans.
4
and
eds.,
vols.
-J.
Commentaire du Nouveau Testament
column
Christian Origins Library
Cardinal O'Hara Series
S. Safrai et al., eds., Compendia Rerum Iudaicarum
ad Novum Testamentum,
5 vols.
Currents in Theology and Mission
Criswell Theological Review
Calvin Theological Journal
Concordia Theological Quarterly
Communio Viatorum
D. Barth6lemy, J. T. Milik et al., eds., Discoveries in the Judean Desert, 5 vols.
G. F. Hawthorne et al., eds., Dictionary of Paul and His Letters
Dead Sea Scrolls
F. Garcia Martfnez, The Dead Sea Scrolls Translated, 2nd. ed.
Dansk Teologisk Tidsskrift

CE
CGTSC
ch.
CH
CNT
Col.
COL
Cos
CRINT
CThM
CThR
CTJ
CTQ
CV
DJD
DPL
DSS
DSST
DTT

EB
EBNT
ed.
EDNT
EDT
e.g.
EGT
EKKNT
ENT
esp.
ET

Echter Bibel Mirzburg)


G. Wagner, ed., An Exegetical Bibliography of the New Testament, 4 vols.
editor, edited by, edition (plural, eds.)
H. Balz and G. Schneider, eds., Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament,
3 vols.
W. A. Elwell, ed., Evangelical Dictionary of Theology
exempli gratia, for example
W. R. Nicoll, ed., Expositor's Greek Testament, 5 vols.
Evangelische-katholischer Kommentar zum Neuen Testament
Erlduterungen zum Neuen Testament

et al.
etc.
EThL
EuroJTh
EvQ

especially, specifically
English translation
et alii, and others
etcetera, and so forth
Ephemerides theologicae lovanienses
European Journal of Theology
Evangelical Quarterly

EvTh

Evangelische Theologie

vii

ExAu
ExpTim
f
FBBS
fig.
FRLANT
FS
FZPhTh
GBS
GTJ
hap. leg.
HBT
HE
Herm
HeyJ
HKNT
HNT
HNTC
HR
HRel

HTKNT
HTR
HUCA
HUTh
IB
ibid.
IBSt
ICC
id.
IDB
IDBSup
i. e.
Interp
ISBE
IThQ
IVPNTCS
JAAR
JB
JBC
JBL
JBI2VIS
JCBRF
JETS
JPT
JR
JRelSt
JSNT
JSNTSup
JSP

Ex Auditu
Expository Times
ff)
(plural,
following
line,
the
section
and
verse, page,
Facet Books Biblical Series
figure, figurative (use)
Forschungen zur Religion und Literatur des Alten und Neuen Testaments
Festschrift, volume written in honor of
Freiburger Zeitschrift fdr Philosophie und Theologie
Guides to Biblical Scholarship
Grace Theological Journal
hapax legomenon, only occurrence
Horizons in Biblical Theology
Eusebius, Historia Ecclesiastica
Hermeneia
Heythrop Joumal
Handkommentar zum Neuen Testament
Handbuch zum Neuen Testament
Harper's New Testament Commentaries
E. Hatch and H. A. Redpath, A Concordance to the Septuagint, 3 vols.
History of Religions

Herders theologischer Kommentar zum Neuen Testament


Harvard Theological Review
Hebrew Union CollegeAnnual
Hermeneutische Untersuchungen zur Theologie
G. A. Buttrick, ed., The Interpreter's Bible
ibidem, in the same place [book]
Irish Biblical Studies
International Critical Commentary
idem, by the same [author]
G. A. Buttrick, ed., Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, 4 vols.
K. Crim, ed., Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible Supplementary Volume
id est, that is
Interpretation
G. W. Bromiley, ed., Intemational Standard Bible Encyclopedia, rev. ed., 4 vols.
Irish Theological Quarterly
InterVarsity Press New Testament Commentary Series
Journal of the American Academy of Religion
Jerusalem Bible (1966)
R. E. Brown et al., eds., The Jerome Biblical Commentary
Journal of Biblical Literature
Journal of Biblical Literature Monograph Series
Journal of the Christian Brethren Research Fellowship
Joumal of the Evangelical Theological Society
Joumal of Psychology and Theology
Journal of Religion
Joumal of Religious Studies
Joumal for the Study of the New Testament
Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series
Joumal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha

viii

JSPSUP
JTC
JTS
KB
KEKNT

KGS
KJV
KNT

Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha Supplement Series


Journal for Theology and the Church
Journal of Theological Studies
L. Kbhler and W. Baumgartner, Lexicon in Veteris Testamenti Libros
Kritisch-exegetischer

Kommentar Uber das Neue Testament (Meyer)

J. R. Kohlenberger III, E. W. Goodrick, J. A. Swanson, eds., The Exhaustive


Concordance to the Greek New Testament
King James Version (=AV) of the Bible
Kommentar zum Neuen Testament

MS.
MT

Kregel Popular Commentary Series


Library of Christian Classics
Loeb Classical Library (London: W. Heinemann, Ltd.; Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press)
Lectio Divina
literally
Louvain Studies
London Quarterly and Holbom Review
H. G. Liddell, R. Scott, H. S. Jones, A Greek-English Lexicon, 9th ed. with Supplement
Louvain Theological and Pastoral Monographs
Laval Thjologique et Philosophique
Lutheran Quarterly
Lutheran World
Septuagint version of the Old Testament
W. F. Moulton, A. S. Geden, H. K. Moulton, eds., A Concordance to the Greek
Testament, 5th ed. with Supplement
J. H. Moulton, W. F. Howard and N. Turner, A Grammar of New Testament
Greek, 4 vols.
J. H. Moulton and G. Milligan, The Vocabulary of the Greek New Testament
Illustrated from the Papyri and Other Non-Literary Sources
Moffatt New Testament Commentary
J. -P. Migne, ed., Patrologia graeca
J. -P. Migne, ed., Patrologia latina
manuscript (plural, mss. )
Masoretic Text of the Old Testament

MThSt
MThZ
n
NA27
NAS
NB1
NCB
NCBC
NDIEC
NEB
Neotest
NHL
NIBC
NICNT

Marburger Theologische Studien


Miinchener theologische Zeitschrift
footnote (plural nn)
E. Nestle, K. Aland et al., eds., Novum Testamentum Graece,27th ed.
New American Standard version of the Bible
New Black/riars
New Clarendon Bible
New Century Bible Commentary, new edition
G. H. R. Horsley, ed., New Documents Illustrating Early Christianity, 5 vols.
New English Bible
Neotestamentica
J. M. Robinson, gen. ed., Nag Hammadi Library
New International Biblical Commentary
New International Commentary on the New Testament

1KPCS
LCC
LCL
LD
lit.
LouvSt
LQHR
LSJ
LThPM
LTP
LuthQ
LW
LXX
MGM
MHT
MM
MNTC
APG
MPL

ix

NIDNTT
NIGTC
NIV
NIVAC
NJB
NKJV
NOT
NovT
NovTSup
NPNF
NRSV
NRT
NS
NSBT
NT
NTA
NTAbh
NTC
NTD
NTG
NTL
NTOA
NTS
NTSR
NTT
NTTS
OCD
OJRS
OT
OTKNT
OTL
OTM
OTP
P.
pace
par.
passim
PC
PGM
plu.
PTMS
PTR
PVTG
QD
q.v.
RB

C. Brown, gen. ed., New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology,


3 vols.
New International Greek Testament Commentary
New International Version of the Bible
New International Version Application Commentary
New Jerusalem Bible (1985)
New King James Version of the Bible
Notes on Tianslation
Novum Testamentum
Novum. Testamentum. Supplements
P. Schaff and H. Wace, eds., Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, 14 vols.
New Revised Standard Version of the Bible
Nouvelle revue th6ologique
New Series of a periodical
New Studies in Biblical Theology
New Testament
E. Hennecke, W. Schneemelcher, R. McL. Wilson, eds., New Testament
Apocrypha, 2nd ed. 2 vols.
Neutestamentliche Abhandlungen
New Testament Commentary
Neue Testament Deutsch
New Testament Guides
New Testament Library
Novum. Testamentum et Orbis Antiquus
New Testament Studies
New Testament for Spiritual Reading
New Testament Theology
New Testament Tools and Studies
N. G. L. Hammond and H. H. Scullard, eds., Oxford Classical Dictionary,
2nd ed.
Ohio Journal of Religious Studies
Old Testament
Oekumenischer Taschenbuch Kommentar zum Neuen Testament
Old Testament Library
Oxford Theological Monographs
J. H. Charlesworth, ed., The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 2 vols.
(plural,
page
pp. )
with due respect but differing from or contrary to
(plural,
)
parallel
pars.
here and there throughout
Proclamation Commentaries
K. Preisendanz, ed., Papyri graecae magicae
plural
Pittsburgh Theological Monograph Series
Princeton Theological Review
Pseudepigrapha Veteris Testamenti Graece
Quaestiones disputatae
quod vide, which see
Revue biblique
x

RefJ
RefR
rev.
RevQ
RExp
RGG
RHPR
RivBib
RNT

RSPR
RSR
RSV
RTR
SANT
SBG
SBibSt
SBLDS
SUMS
SBLSBS
SBLSP
SBS
SBT
ScEc
ScEs
SD
see.
S9.
SH
SHR
sic
SJLA
SJT
SL
SNT
SNTSMS
SNTW
SPCIC
SR
StTh
StBibT

Str-B

Reformed Journal
Reformed Review
revised, revised by, revision
Revue de Qumran
Review and Expositor

Y, Galling et al., eds., Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart, 3rd ed., 7 vols.
Revue d' 1'histoire et de philosophie religieuses
Rivista Biblica
Regensburger Neues Testament

Revue des sciencesphilosophiques et religieuses


Recherchesde sciencereligieuse (Paris)
Revised Standard Version of the Bible
Reformed Theological Review
Studien zum Alten und Neuen Testament
Studies in Biblical Greek
Sources for Biblical Study
Society of Biblical Literature Dissertation Series
Society of Biblical Literature Monograph Series
Society of Biblical Literature Sources for Biblical Study
Society of Biblical Literature Seminar Papers
Stuttgarter Bibelstudien
Studies in Biblical Theology
Sciencesecclisiastiques
Scienceet esprit
Studies and Documents
section
singular
Scripta Hierosolymitana,
Studies in the History of Religion
so, thus [in the original]
Studies in Judaism in Late Antiquity
Scottish Journal of Theology
Schweich Lectures (1946)
Studien zum Neuen Testament
Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series
Studies in the New Testament and Its World
Studiorum Paulinorum CongressusInternationalis Catholicus 1961
Studies in Religion
Studia theologica (Lund)
Studia Biblica et Theologica

H. L. Strack and P. Billerbeck, Kommentarzum Neuen Testamentaus

SUNT

Talmud und Midrasch, 4 vols., with Index vols. 5-6.


Studien zur Umwelt des Neuen Testaments

sup
S.V.
SymBU
Tarb
TBC

supplement
)
(plural,
the
voce,
under
word
s.vv.
sub verbo, sub
Symbolae biblicae upsalienses
Tarbiz
Torch Bible Commentary

Id

TC
TD
TDNT

ThCol
Theol
ThEv

Traditio Christiana
Theological Digest
G. Fdttel and G. Friedrich, eds., Theological Dictionary of the New Testament,
10 vols.
G. J. Botterweck and H. Ringgren, eds., Theological Dictionary of the Old
Testament, 8 vols. to date
Theological Collections
Theology (London)
Theologia Evangelica

THKNT
ThLZ
ThR
TNTC
trans.
TrinJ
TS
TSFBull

Theologischer Handkommentar zum Neuen Testament


Theologische Literaturzeitung
Theologische Rundschau
Tyndale New Testament Commentaries
translator, translated by, translation
Trinity Journal
Theological Studies
Theological Students Fellowship Bulletin

TSK
t. t.
TTS
TU
TynB
TZ
UBS4

Theologische Studien und Kritiken


technical term
Trierer theologische Studien
Texte und Untersuchungen
Tyndale Bulletin
Theologische Zeitschrift
B. Aland, M Aland et al., eds., The Greek New Testament, United Bible
Societies, 4th ed.
Union Seminary Quarterly Review
(plural,
)
verse
vv.
Utrechtse Theologische Reeks
Vigiliae christianae
varia lectio, alternate / variant reading
videlicet, namely
volume
Vox Evangelica
versus, against
Vetus Testamentum
Word Biblical Commentary
Wissenschaftliche Monographien zum Alten und Neuen Testament
Westminster Pelican Commentaries
Weltgespriich der Religionen
Wesleyan Theological Joumal
Westminster Theological Journal
Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament
Yale Judaica Series
Zeitschrift fr die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft
ZUrcher Bibelkommentare
Zeitschrift fr katholische Theologie
Zeitschrift fr die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft
M. C. Tenney, gen. ed., Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible, 5 vols.
Zeitschrift fiir Theologie und Kirche

TDOT

USQR
V.
UTR
VC
V.I.
viz.
Vol.
VoxEv
VS.
VT
WBC
VTMANT
WPC
WR
WThJ
WTJ
WUNT
YJS
ZAW
ZBK
ZKTh
ZNW
ZPEB
ZThK

xii

CEUPTER 1
INTRODUCTION:

THE CONTEXT OF THIS STUDY

The Apostle Paul is one of the most fascinating and influential

figures in the

history of Christian thought. Anyone who attempts a historical-critical


understanding of his writings in the New Testament, whether sympathetic to
Christianity

There
there
are several
or not, soon realizes
are no easy approaches.

letters
did
Paul
for
his
is
fact
in
this,
the
that
one
of
which
nowhere
extant
reasons
in
his
theological
thinking
systematic
an
explanatory
preface
write
or arrange
headings.
1
"occasion-specific"
because
topical
This
is
the
categories with
of
mainly
his
letters.
2
bear
In
Christian
Paul
brought
to
them,
the
on
character of
gospel
particular situations and events in each Christian community he addressed and drew
out applications for specific problems in the life of the church there. 3 In a nutshell,
one could argue that Paul's letters brought the "constant elements of the Christian
into
dynamic
interaction
"variable
the
gospel"
with
elements of the particular
Christian communities" he addressed. 4
Worna Hooker discussesseven reasonswhy it is difficult to understand Paul's thought
in chapter one of her book, A Preface to Paul (New York: Oxford University Press, 1980). The fact
that Paul has been understood in a variety of ways is a patent indication of the difficulties involved.
SeeW. W. Gasque, "Images of Paul in the History of Biblical Interpretation, " Crux 16 (1980) 7-16.
2R. W. Funk, "The Apostolic Parousia: Form and Significance," in Christian History and
Interpretation: Studies Presentedto John Knox, eds. W. R. Farmer, C. F. D. Moule, and R. R.
Niebuhr (Cambridge: The University Press, 1967) 249-68, has shown that Paul's letters served as a
substitute for his personal presence,represented his apostolic authority, and conveyedhis gospel
messageand pastoral concerns. See also R. N. Longenecker, "On the Form, Function, and Authority
of the New Testament Letters, " in Scripture and Truth, ed. D. A. Carson and J. D. Woodbridge
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1983) 101-14.
31t is debated whether or not Romans and Ephesians (if accepted as Pauline) are
exceptions to this general statement. For arguments on both sides of the issue for Romans, seethe
essaysin K P. Donfried, ed., The Romans Debate:Revised and Expanded Edition (Peabody,MA:
Hendrickson, 1991); for Ephesians, seeM. Barth, Ephesians, AB 34 (Garden City, NY. Doubleday,
1974) 37-59; and E. Best, Ephesians, ICC (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1998) 1-6,63-75.
4j. C. Beker formulates the hermeneutical issue in this manner in his article,
"Contingency and Coherencein the Letters of Paul, " USQR 33 (1978) 141-51; and in his book, Paul
the Apostle: The Triumph of God in Life and Thought (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1980) 11-36.
One may not agree with Beker's apocalyptic interpretation of Paul or the interpretive fluidity that he
Paul's
in
that
the
the
to
the
Pauline
"core,
"
he
assigns
point
above article
makes
nevertheless,
1

2
Just what constitutes the "constant elements of the gospel" and the

'

"variable elements of the particular situations" as well as the relationship between


the two (i. e., the coherent core and the contingent circumstances) raises many interrelated literary, historical, hermeneutical, and theological questions in the critical
familiar
Pauline
issues
involved
The
Paulinum.
to
the
scholars,
are
corpus
study of
be
found
these
wide-ranging questions can
and a variety of proposals and positions on
in the history of Pauline investigation. 5
Within the broad scope of Paul's theology, his anthropology is one of the

for
difficult
his
There
thought
to
aspects of
most
are several reasons
understand.
this. First, his views on what it means to be human are based on presuppositions or
inherited convictions that he did not mention or explain in his letters. Second,his
anthropology is relational and practical rather than philosophical and systemic. He is
mostly concernedabout human beings in terms of their relationship to God, evil, the
world, and each other. Consequently,his anthropology is intertwined with various
his
theology as a whole.6 Third, we encounter Paul's anthropology
other elements of
through a variety of anthropological terms, some with antecedents in Jewish tradition
in
Hellenistic
However,
he
treatment
tradition.
systematic
no
presents
and others
letters are "occasional, but not casual
they are not private, but personal; authoritative and not
...
his
D.
G.
Dunn,
in
full-scale
(141,
his).
More
J.
the
moment"
emphasis
recently,
simply products of
(Grand
/
Cambridge:
Eerdmans,
Paul's
The
Theology
Paul
Apostle
Rapids
thought,
the
of
study of
1998), acknowledgesboth the flexibility and the salutary influence of Beker's coherencewithin
hermeneutical
(23).
Dunn
himself
hear
Paul's
dialogue
prefers
own
model
a
model-to
contingency
dialogue with himself and with those to whom and for whom he wrote and, at the same time, to
dialogue
him
(7-9,23-25).
in
critical
with
engage mutually
5A. Schweitzer, Paul and His Interpreters: A Critical History, trans. W. Montgomery
(London: Adam and Charles Black, 1912; reprint, New York: SchockenBooks, 1964), provides a
in
Germany
following
historical
the Reformation. More recently,
studies
masterful
survey of critical
seeW. G. Ktimmel, The New Testament: The History of the Investigation of Its Problems, trans.
S. McL. Gilmour and H. C. Kee (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1972); 0. Merk, "Paulus-Forschung
1936-1985," Theol Rund 53 (1988) 1-81; V. P. Furnish, "Pauline Studies," in The New Testament
and Its Modern Interpreters, ed. E. J. Epp and G. W. MacRae (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1989) 32150; S. Westerholm, Israel's Law and the Church's Faith. Paul and His RecentInterpreters (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988); and J. M Riches,A Century of New Testament Study (Valley Forge, PA:
Trinity Press International, 1993) 125-49.
6Dunn, Theology of Paul, 52-53, calls attention to this point.

3
that classifies a human being's nature, qualities, or constituent parts. As a result,
there is little definition of terms and sometimespuzzling diversity in their usage. He
different
can use
anthropological terms to mean the same thing and the same term to
designate different things. 7 Many of the key terms appear with varied frequency and
in variable settings throughout Paul's letters. This lack of terminological and
conceptual systematization contributes to the complexity of his anthropology. 8
Nevertheless, in light of these factors, scholars must still deal with Paul's
language
anthropological
as he used it in order to understand his anthropology and
facets
his
theology. This opens the way into our present study.
of
related
The chief concern of this thesis is to investigate two anthropological
formulations found in the Pauline corpus, namely, 6 va.AaL6-,
(the "old man")
dkIjM7TOS/ Plos-&qmTros-(the "new man"). These designations occur in the
and 6 Kau,6-,
following four passagesof this literature:
1) "Our old man" in Romans 6: 6:

Toom

yLvojo-KovTcs-,

o"TL

6 TraAat6s-4yeiv

dk, 6www

Eva Ka7apy77ffi76 o-c5paTg al-japriag,


cvv6'cTaVP&A7,
&vAcw'iv i7'1.
Ldg 7- al-LapT[(z2) "One new man"
7rou7ous- T-d apoftepa

in Ephesians

2: 14-15:

A&TT ydp joTtv

TOO 1177KETL

6
dp4k,
7lU6k,,
77'
77

Ft, Kal -r6 pe-o-6miXop To& opaypoV Atoag,

!
XOpav,
7V
ev 7fl

o-qpKI auroD, T6v v6pop TOP jpToUP lp 66yl-taotv KaTqp)7jo-as-, Fva Tot'T 66o KT[cq7
I'pa
dvOpcoirov
avTo
Kaiv6p
clsct,
votcOv elp 77npl ...

3) Both the "old man" and the "newman" in Colossians3:9-10: M 065cuOc6-Ig


dAA4Aovg,
dvOpcj7Tov
T6v TraAat6v
dTrcK8vudycvot
ubp Tafg 7Tpd&uivavroD,Kal

7For example, o0pa (body) and adp(flesh) occasionally


overlap in meaning, cf. 2 Cor.
4:10 with 4: 11 and 1 Cor. 7:34 with 2 Cor. 7:1; yet both terms have a rather broad spectrum of
meaning, cf. for o-61ja:Gal. 6: 17; Rom. 12:4-5; 1 Cor. 15:44; Col. 1:22; 2:17; and for udp- Rom.
3:20; 6: 19; 7:5; 8:7; 11:14.
8R. Jewett, Paul's Anthropological Terms. A Study Their Usein Conflict Settings, AGJU
of
10 (Leiden: Brill, 1971) 1-4. Jewett provides the most recent and best history of research into each
of Paul's anthropological terms. For a current discussion of the way Paul used these terms, see
Dunn, Theology of Paul, 51-78.

4
e9fI
v8vordlievotr6v Plov T6v dvaKatvovycvov
cig
KT[oravrosa&T6v,...

CiTtyv6uorw Ka7'

c-IK6va

ToV

&pds4) Both the "old man" and the "newman" in Ephesians4:22-24: diroOlorOat
KaTd

dPOPO)7TOP 76P 006-Lp61.Ic-vovKaTd


7raAaL6P

7-6y
7-virpo7pavdvao-7poov

b,
&
76 7wc6pa7t7oD m, - VPcOv, Kal
Tdy 6710vylas- 7f7g dird7s-, apapeoWaL
dpOpoj7Tov 76P Ka7d Oc6v KTtuOev7a cp &Katoo-vo Kal
jP86o-ao-Oat
7-6vKaLp6v
.7
9
dA770cias-.
6o-L677L7-g

These designations are part of a larger di,6wiros-category in the Pauline writings


/
involving four additional antitheses: 1) 6 OvXtK&,
&Opmms--the
natural
-, nvcvya-rtK6s(1
Cor.
in
Cor.
2:
1
14-15;
/
3:
1man
spiritual
note also capKivot o-apKtKot
Twevya-nKol
vs.
3); 2) 6 Mj

cooi dpOpoiTros-theouter / inner man (2 Cor. 4: 16; Rom. 7:22; Eph. 3: 16);

3) 6 Trp6ms- 8ev'repos-or caXaTos-dpOpoivos--the first / second or last man (1 Cor.


15:45-47; cf. 15:20-22; Rom. 5: 12-19); and 4) 0 XdWs- / 0Tovpdxos- [dPOpoxTod-th e
earthly/ heavenly man (1 Cor. 15:47-48). 10 The modifying words ?TaAat6sand VCOSI
KaLP6.,
- also occur together elsewhere in Paul in the antitheses "old leaven / new lump"
(I Cor. 5: 7-9) and "old / new covenant" (2 Cor. 3: 6-14).
The presence of the "old man / new man" formulation in the above passages

issues
in
These,
in
that
turn,
to
this
several
set the
we
wish
address
raises
chapter.
for
the content and contribution of this study. First, all of the passagesexcept
stage
one-Romans 6:6-appear in what many scholars consider to be the deutero-Pauline
letters. This requires a brief discussion of the authorship of Colossians and
Ephesians since these two documents are primary sources for our topic. We will
for
their authenticity
present a case

hypothesis
for
(1.1).
The
as a working
our study

9Thetext of theseversesis cited from The GreekNew Testament,ed. B. Aland, K Aland

et al., 4th rev. ed. (Stuttgart: Deutsche BibelgeselIschaft / New York: United Bible Societies, 1993).
1OInaddition, the following single designations occur in the Pauline corpus: 1) 00ap7-66'
dv0ponros-corruptible or mortal man (Rom. 1:23); 2) TaAat7mpos.
dvopw-ffos-wretchedman (Rom.
7:24); 3) TlAe-LosI dy4p-mature man (Col. 1:28; Eph. 4: 13); 4) 6 dvopoi7ros,
&OpomosTS' dvoptasthe man of lawlessness (2 Thess. 2:3); and 5) alpeTLK6.9
dpopw7mg-divisive man (Tit. 3: 10).

5
authenticity

Second,
disputed.
terms
Romans
the
is
appear relatively
of
not

infrequently in the Pauline corpus raising a question about their place and importance
in the wider scope of Pauline anthropology and related facets of Pauline theology. The
but
&Opmmsdiscussion
to
the modifiers 7TaAat6,
the
anthropology,
- and
word
relates
frame
In
/
it
in
theological
of
reference.
order to position these
Katvc- P&s-put
a wider
terms within this framework, we will sketch the main contours of Pauline
designations
features
in
(1.2).
Third,
the
anthropology and related
recent study
little
One
appear rather abruptly with
explanatory comment.
wonders whether or
in
discuss
Pauline
briefly
they
to
these
were
use
prior
not
matters
writings so we will
background
to
their
(1.3). Fourth, the contextual modifiers cited
origin
and
related
above along with several striking verbal ascriptions (o-vvcoTavpo)'ftRom. 6: 6; KT[o-0,
Eph. 2: 15; d1Tf'K&VUd1-16'V01,
Col. 3:9 / diroOlo&L, Eph. 4:22; and ev8VUd11Cvo1,
Col. 3: 10
ev8vuau0aL,Eph. 4:24) indicate that the author intended the "old man / new man"
designations to be understood as metaphors. What is not as clear are their referents
function.
thematic
and

We will survey current views of these metaphors in terms of

these items (1.4). This will lead to listing several programmatic questions that need to
be resolved in the interpretation

dual
this
of
metaphor and to stating the

(1.5).
in
take
this
the
study
approach
we will
methodological
remainder of

1.1 Authenticity

Sources
New
Testament
of

Two of the three uses of the designation "old man" and all three uses of the
"new man" in the Pauline corpus appear in Colossians and Ephesians. As is well
known, the authorship of these documents is disputed. With regard to our topic, if
Paul is not the author, then references to the "new man" and the "old man / new man"
from
directly
ideas
Paul
into
be
combination as
coming
could called
question even
though one could argue that they accurately reflect his theological thinking. If, on the
other hand, sufficient evidence can be presented supporting Pauline authorship, then

6
"old
is
Pauline
"new
the
the
term
that
one can more confidently claim
man" a
and
/
We
Paul's
in
has
theology.
turn our attention to a
man new man" motif
a place
consideration of this issue.
1.1.1 Authenticity

Colossians
of

The author of the New Testament letter bearing the title "To the
Colossians" claims to be the Apostle Paul (1: 1,23, "1, Paul"; 4: 18). He describes
himself as an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God (1: 1) and makes it known that
he is in prison for declaring "the mystery of Christ" (4:3; cf. 1:24; 4: 10,18). 11 He
letter
the
with the words: "I, Paul, write this greeting with my own hand" (4: 18,
closes
NIV; cf Gal. 6: 11; 1 Cor. 16:21; PhIm. 19, also 2 Thess. 3: 17). This suggests that up
to this point he may have been dictating to an amanuensis and so adds a concluding
note in his own handwriting

as a guarantee of genuineness. 12

A significant number of scholars think Colossians is authentic; 13but a


growing number, probably the majority (ca. 60 percent of critical scholarship),
11Theverb in the clause &'6
do,
literally
(Col.
if
618e-ym
4:
3),
taken
most
would
as
Kal
refer to the author being bound with chains and put in prison. This has linked Colossianswith
Philemon (vv. 9-10,13), Ephesians (3:1; 6:19-20), and Philippians (1:12-30). Traditionally, these
four letters have been ascribed to Paul and grouped together as the "captivity epistles." All four
may well have been written from the same prison at about the same time. However, this is
disputed and the place of imprisonment has been strongly contested. Several views have been
proposed-Ephesus, Caesarea, Rome. Each one has its own peculiar problems, but the balance of
probability lies with Rome, a view that still holds scholarly support. See P. T. O'Brien, Colossians,
Philemon, WBC 44 (Waco, TK- Word Books, 1982) xlix-liv, who surveys the various views and states
his own preference for a Roman imprisonment. If Pauline authorship and the Rome hypothesis are
accepted,most likely Paul wrote these letters while he was under house arrest in Rome ca. AD 6162. Those who reject Pauline authorship of Colossians and Ephesians usually date them between
AD 70-90.
12R.Longenecker, "Ancient Amanuenses and the Pauline Epistles, " in New Dimensions in
New Testament Study, ed. R. N. Longenecker and M. C. Tenney (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1974)
281-97, esp. 288-92. We know that Luke was with Paul in Rome (Acts 28:14; cf. Col. 4:14) as was
Aristarchus (Acts 27:2; cf. Col. 4: 10) and presumably Timothy also (cf Col. 1:1).
13W. G. Mimmel, Introduction to the New Testament, rev. ed., trans. H. C. Kee
(Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1975) 340-46, esp. 340 n12, lists a number of scholars, including
himself, who favor the Pauline authorship of Colossians. To this can be added the following:
O'Brien, Colossians,xli-xlix; F. F. Bruce, The Epistles to the Colossians,to Philemon, and to the
Ephesians, NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1984) 28-33; and N. T. Wright, The Epistles of Paul
to the Colossians and to Philemon, TNTC (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1986) 31-34.

7
its
14
doubt
Some
it
inauthentic
literary
theological
who
grounds.
consider
and
on
Pauline,
letter
is
the
but
the
theology
that
of
essentially
authenticity,
acknowledge
think that the language and style is the strongest indicator that someoneother than
Paul wrote it. 15 Others build their caseon theology, claiming that the language and
Pauline
to
letter
do
the
not provide adequate grounds on which question
style of
16
authorship.
1.1.1.1 Literary

Arguments.

Most interpreters acknowledge that

Colossians has some distinctive features in vocabulary and style. 17 Eduard Lohse
but
he
Pauline
to
to
the
also
epistles,
numerous similarities
undisputed
calls attention
lists differences in vocabulary and peculiarities of style. 18 After a detailed discussion,
he concludes that a final decision on the question of authenticity

be
based
on
cannot

these matters. 19 He acknowledges that differences of vocabulary with other Pauline


letters are balanced by many similarities and that divergences have parallels in other
letters. Hapax legomena and unusual expressions also appear in significant numbers
in the undisputed Paulines. 20 Thus, statistics alone cannot determine if the language

14Ktimmel, Introduction,
340 n13, lists a number of those who dispute Pauline
W.
R.
Philemon,
trans.
be
Colossians
To
following:
E.
Lohse,
this
the
and
can
added
authorship.
Fortress Press, 1971) 84-91,178-81;
Poehlmann and R. J. Karris, Hermeneia (Philadelphia:
Augsburg
E. Schweizer, The Letter to the Colossians: A Commentary, trans. A. Chester (Minneapolis:
Press, 1982) 15-24; and R. E. Brown, An Introduction
to the New Testament, ABRL (New York:
Doubleday, 1997) 610-19.
15E. g., Schweizer, Colossians, 18-19, suggests that the author was Timothy.
Dunn,
Theology of Paul, 13 n39, also believes that Colossians was "probably written by Timothy before
For most, the identity of the author is unknown.
Paul's death.
.. ."
16E.

g., Lohse, Colossians,

89-91.

17E. Percy, Die Probleme der Kolosser-und Epheserbriefe, ARSHLL


341-42; Lohse, Colossians, 84-91.
1946) 16-66; Kiimmel, Introduction,
18Lohse, Colossians,

therefore,

39 (Lund: Gleerup,

84-89.

191bid., 91. Kiimmel, Introduction,


342, concludes: "On the basis of language
there is no reason to doubt the Pauline authorship of the letter. "

20Percy, Probleme, 16-66,


linguistic
discussion
thorough
the
of
provides a
between Colossians and the undisputed Pauline epistles. He strongly
relationships

and style,

and stylistic
defends Pauline

8
21
the
fact,
be
Colossians
to
In
is
subject
considerationmust given
of
authentic or not.
In
letter
the
the
the
matter of
audience. matters of style, similar
and
needsof
features,though lessfrequent,can alsobe found in the undisputedPauline letters.22
The liturgical-poetic cadenceof Colossiansincorporatingtraditional material (cf. 1:1220; 2:9-15),and its confrontationwith a christologicalheresyhave influencedits
languageand style (seech. 4,194-96). In light of 4:18,it couldalsobe arguedthat an
23
formulating
direction.
letter
had
hand
in
Paul's
this
under
amanuensis a
1.1.1.2 Theological Arguments.

A more formidable line of argument has

been put forward on theological grounds. After examining the theological content of
the letter, Lohse concludesthat Paul's theology has undergone a profound change in
Colossiansproducing "new formulations in christology, ecclesiology,the concept of the
apostle, eschatology,and the understanding of baptism. Therefore, Paul cannot be
consideredto be the direct or indirect author of Col. Rather a theologian schooledin
Pauline thought composedthe letter with the intention of bringing the Apostle's word
to bear on the situation that had arisen in the Asia Nhnor communities becauseof the
'philosophers."124In this connection, Lohse makes reference to several distinctive

by
its
language
Colossians
that
the
conditioned
arguing
and
authorship,
style of
are entirely
(43).
On
hand,
letter
the
the
the
other
and
content
specific
situation
particular
necessitating
W. Bujard, Stilanalytische Untersuchungenzum Kolosserbriefals Beitrag zur Methodik von
Sprachvergleichen(G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1973), uses stylistic arguments to establish
differences between Colossians and the undisputed Paulines and concludesthat this letter could not
have been written by Paul.
21P.N. Harrison, The Problem of the Pastoral Epistles (London: Oxford University Press,
1921) 20-22, demonstrates that, with respect to hapax legomena, Colossians falls within the normal
range of Pauline usage.
22For example, the undisputed Pauline letters link synonyms together (cf. e.g., Rom.
1:18,21,25,29), pile up dependent genitives (cf. e.g., Rom. 2:5; 4:11; 1 Cor. 2:6), and contain long,
complex sentences (cf. e.g., Gal. 2:3-5,6-9; Rom. 1:1-7; 2:5-10,14-16; 3:23-26).
23SeePercy, Probleme, 10-14, for a critique of the "secretary" hypothesis. Also, Lohse,
Colossians,91.
24Lohse,Colossians, 180-81. According to Lohse, the deutero-Pauline writings
presupposea Pauline school tradition based in Ephesus, the center of the Pauline mission in Asia
Minor. Colossians was written before Ephesians with a composition date ca. AD 80 (182 n17).

9
theological features in Colossians: 1) it lacks many characteristic terms of Paul's
theology; 2) its cosmic christology is based on the Christ-hymn

its
3)
1:
15-20;
of

ecclesiology designates the Church as the universal "body" of Christ, which is


body"
(1:
its
has
4)
18);
Christ,
"head
the
to
the
eschatology
subordinate
receded
of
into the background so that the expectation that the Lord Jesus would come again
believers
has
disappeared;
baptism
is
5)
that
the
soon
and
understanding of
not only
have died with Christ and been buried with Him, but also that they have been raised
25
Christ
(2:
11-13,20;
3:
13).
already
with
In response, however, we may note the following. First, the absence of
Pauline
terms is not a strong argument because a similar observation
characteristic
can be made about some of the undisputed Paulines. 26 Second, what is said in
Coldssians about cosmic christology and Christ's headship over the church is indeed
an advance on what we fmd in the undisputed Pauline letters. However, these
advances are not separated from nor contradictory to their antecedents in those
(cf.
Cor.
1
2:8; 8: 6; 2 Cor. 4:4; Gal. 4: 3; Phil. 2: 9-11 for christology; and Rom.
writings
12:4-5; 1 Cor. 1: 13; Gal. 3: 28; 1 Cor. 12: 12-14,27 for ecclesiology). 27
Third, the eschatological emphasis of Colossians is clearly more "realized"

than "futuristic" (see ch. 4,197 n6). But both elements are present reflecting the
/
"already
not yet" eschatologicaltension present in the undisputed Paulines.
genuine
Although there is no direct mention of the expectation that the Lord would soon come,
there are traces of "futuristic" eschatology (1:22,28; 3:4,6,24; 4: 11). The now
revealed mystery (1:26) and the exaltation of Christ, which has already occurred
251bid., 178-180.
26D. A. Carson, D. J. Moo, L. Morris, An Introduction to the New Testament (Grand
Rapids: Zondervan, 1992) 333. For example, the noun &KaLoo-v',
vi7and the verb 8LKat6ware missing
in 1 Thessalonians, and the verb is absent from 2 Corinthians and Philippians also.
27Even Lohse, Colossians, 178-79,acknowledgesthis although he seesColossiansgoing
far beyond the undisputed Paulines. If 1:15-20 is the adaptation of a preformed hymn, it could just
as easily have been done by Paul as by a later disciple.

10

(2:12; 3:1; cf. 1 Cor. 2:7,10; Phil. 3:20), are balanced by the expectation of Christ at
the parousia (3:4; cf. 1 Thess. 4:16; Phil. 3:20). Similarly, the fact that in some sense
believers have already been raised with Christ (2:12; 3:1) is congruent with Paul
elsewhere (e.g., Rom. 6:4,11).
Fourth, in light of the statements in Colossians 1:21-2: 5, which lend
be
in
Pauline
there
to
to
the
ministry
no compelling reason to
era,
seems
validity
Epaphras
letter
(cf.
No
is
to
to
the
the
give
assign
post-apostolic age.
attempt
made
1:7-8; 4: 12) apostolic authorization through teaching that represents Paul's mind in
order to combat heresy. Also, to put the letter in the post-Pauline period makes the
28
To
it
four,
difficult
those
to
personal allusions, especially
make
of chapter
explain.
contemporary with Paul and yet assign it to a different person, such as Timothy,
creates a new problem since we know nothing of Timothy's literary capabilities.
additional points that lend support to authenticity

Two

are the close connection of

Colossians with Philemon, whose genuineness is not challenged, 29 and the strong
in
favor
evidence
external
of Pauline authorship. 30
It seems, then, that the arguments against Pauline authorship, while worth
decisive.
They
do
consideration,
are
careful
not
not give sufficient weight to the
concrete polemical situation of the letter and to the ability of Paul himself to address
a new situation and adopt new language and concepts to meet new needs. On the

280n the matter of pseudonymity, see the literature cited in footnote 51 and the
comments in footnote 56 below. For a critique of pseudonymity, especially in epistolary literature,
see D. Guthrie, New Testament Introduction, 4th rev. ed. (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press,
1990) 1011-28.
29See footnote 11 above. Colossians and Philemon have several specific features in
common (cf. Col. 1:1 with Phlm. 1; Col. 4: 3,10,18 with Phlm. 9-10,13; Col. 4: 17 with Phlm. 2; Col.
4: 9 with PhIm. 12; and Col. 4: 10-14 with Phlm. 23-24). If Paul authored Philemon, then it seems
most likely he also wrote Colossians (pace Lohse, Colossians, 175-76, who claims that a later
disciple of Paul used Philemon and expanded it to write the personal remarks in Colossians).
30Guthrie, Introduction, 576, states that Colossians
Pauline
the
corpus as
part
of
a
was
far back as can be traced and there is no evidence that Pauline
disputed
until
authorship was ever
the nineteenth century. Colossians is first attested with certainty in Irenaeus, Adv. Haer. 3.14.1
(ca. AD 175-195) and is listed among the Pauline epistles in the Muratorian Canon (ca. AD 200).

11

other hand, arguments for Pauline authorship are credible in light of these factors.
1.1.2 Authenticity

of Ephesians

The author of the New Testament letter bearing the title "To the
Ephesians" also claims to be the Apostle Paul (1:1; 3:1 "1, Paul"). He describes
himself as an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God (1:1) and a prisoner for Christ
Jesus on behalf of the Gentiles, specifically his Gentile Christian readers (3:1,13; 4:1;
6:20). He closesthe letter with a request for their prayers (6:19-20) and the promise
to send Tychicus (cf. Col. 4:7-8) so that they might know "how I am and what I am
doing" (6:21-22).
There is widespread agreement that Ephesians was written to Christian
communities in western Asia Nhnor, including Ephesus. Various elements of internal
evidenceand the textual uncertainty for the reading jP Ego-q)in 1:131make it likely
that the letter was intended for more than the Christian readers in Ephesus. If it was
intended as a general "circular letter, " as is likely, it may well have been sent first to
Ephesus and then copied and circulated from there to a wider group of churches (1:1516; 6:21-22).
Some scholars still argue for the authenticity of Ephesians.32 Nevertheless,
31For a discussion of various hypotheses regarding the original reading of 1:1, see
E. Best, "Ephesians i. 1," in Text and Interpretation, ed. E. Best and R. McL. Wilson (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1979) 29-41; and id., "Ephesians 1.1 Again, " in Paul and Paulinism,
ed. M. D. Hooker and S. G. Wilson (London: SPCK, 1982) 273-79. See footnote 58 below for further
comment.
32Kiimmel, Introduction, 357 n25, lists several scholars who defend authenticity,
including Percy, Probleme, 179-488,esp. 448, and the later H. Schlier, Der Brief an die Epheser.Ein
Kommentar, 7th ed. (Diisseldorf. Patmos, 1971) 22-28. More recently, see Barth, Ephesians, 1:3650,2: 207-09; G. B. Caird, Paul's Letters From Prison (Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians,Philemon)
in the Revised Standard Version, NCB (New York: Oxford University Press, 1976) 11-29; Bruce,
Epistles, 229-40; and Guthrie, Introduction, 496-528. The last major work devoted to this subject is
by A. van Roon, The Authenticity of Ephesians, NovTSup 39 (Leiden: Brill, 1975), who concludesthat
Paul, along with the influence of another person from his circle, was the author (cf. 438-39). Some
scholars believe that Paul appointed one of his associates(e.g., Timothy or Luke) to do the writing
and gave him a free hand. See Kammel, Introduction, 357 n28 for a listing of those who advocate
the use of an amanuensis; see also E. R. Richards, The Secretary in the Letters of Paul, WUNT 2.42
Udbingen: J. C. B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1991) 190-92. For arguments against the "secretary"
hypothesis, see Percy, Probleme, 10-14,421-22; C. L. Mitton, The Epistle to the Ephesians: Its

12
Pauline authorship has been strongly and widely contestedin scholarly discussion on
literary, historical, and theological grounds.33 The majority view at present (ca. 75-80
percent of critical scholarship) is that the letter is pseudonymous,written in Paul's
34
by
later
time.
name
an unknown author at a
1.1.2.1 Literary

Arguments.

Most interpreters acknowledge that

Ephesians has significant differences in language and style from the undisputed
Pauline letters. 35 Andrew Lincoln notes several statistics, but admits that they are
not that significant in comparison with similar figures for other New Testament
writings.

More important for him are the words that are unique to Ephesians that

in
literature
post-apostolic
appear
also
as well as the unique word combinations that
distinctive
its
language.
36
heavy,
He
the
to
pleonastic
reflect
also calls attention
Ephesians
instead
style of
of the more direct, incisive argumentation of the earlier
letters.
37
These features prompt Lincoln and others to conclude that the
undisputed
Authorship, Origin and Purpose (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1951) 249-50; Barth, Ephesians, 1:40-41;
Ephesians,
Best,
30-31.
and
33For a brief history of the discussion
listing
in
order
and a chart arranged chronological
have
last
during
Pauline
in
the
two
Ephesians
who
endorsed
or
rejected
scholars
print
authorship of
centuries, seeW. H. Harris III, The Descentof Christ. Ephesians 4: 7-11 and Traditional Hebrew
Imagery, AGJU 32 (Leiden: Brill, 1996) 198-204.
34Kiimmel, Introduction, 357-63, especially 357
including
lists
of
scholars,
number
a
n26,
himself, who reject authenticity; more recently, F. Mussner, Der Brief an die Epheser, OTKNT 10
(Wurzburg-.Echter Verlag, 1982); R. Schnackenburg,Ephesians.A Commentary, trans. H. Heron,
EKKNT 10 (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1991) 24-29; A. T. Lincoln, Ephesians, WBC 42 (Dallas:
Word Books, 1990) lix-lxxiii; Brown, Introduction, 626-33; and Best, Ephesians, 6-36, who states,
"Many of the objections to Pauline authorship are not individually capable of disproving it but it is
their cumulative effect which suggestsanother author" (36). SeeMimmel, Introduction, 357 n27, for
a listing of those who leave the question undecided.
35Percy,Probleme, 179-229;KU=el,
Best, Ephesians, 27-32.

Introduction, 358; Lincoln, Ephesians, lxv-lxvi;

36Lincoln, Ephesians, 1xv. He cites 9 words


unique to Ephesians that are found in post(1:3,
eirovpavlotsapostolic literature and 16 unique word combinations, including the phrase & ToFs20; 2:6; 3: 10; 6:12); also see Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 25-26.
371bid.,lxv-lxvi; also Schnackenburg,Ephesians, 26;
Lincoln
Ephesians,
29-30.
Best,
and
states: "The frequent piling up of synonyms, the genitival combinations, the long sentences,the
repetition of certain phrases, and the lack of conjunctions and particles are striking, even in
comparison to Colossians.
(1xvi).
. ."

13
by
Paul
heavily
influenced
than
a writing style more characteristic
author was more
of the Qumran hymns. 38
Though these literary distinctives make it very difficult for many to hold
that Paul wrote Ephesians in its extant form, they do not render Pauline authorship
impossible. Similarities in letter structure and language with other Pauline letters
have
in
fact
differences
the
be
the
the
that
parallels
as
well
as
must also considered
determine
if
39
letters.
As
Colossians,
the
cannot
statistics
with
word
undisputed
language of Ephesians is authentic or not.40 Other significant factors such as the
in
letter,
its
liturgical-sermonic
its
the
style
subject matter, and
general nature of
influential
also
play
an
places
role.
1.1.2.2 Historical

Arguments.

Lincoln argues that the point of view of

Ephesians is much later than that of the undisputed Paulines. In particular, the use
Paul's
later
be
to
to
the
of
name and various personal allusions
a
apostle appear
writer's reflections on Paul and his apostleship rather than Paul talking about
himself. He views Paul as a revered figure of the past. This suggeststhe writer is
Lincoln,
these
to
to
tradition
pass
on
genuine
apostolic
seeking
and, according
boost
"best
to
device
the
explained as
of someonewho wishes
personal allusions are
It
in
"41
is
for
later
for
this
time.
the
the
teachings
authority of
apostle's
a
claims

381bid., lxvi; also, see KWnmel, Introduction, 358; Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 26; and
Best, Ephesians, 8-9. M G. Kuhn, "The Epistle to the Ephesians in the Light of the Qumran Texts, "
in Paul and Qumran: Studies in New Testament Exegesis, ed. J. Murphy-O'Connor (Chicago: Priory
Press, 1968) 115-31, claims that "Semitic syntactical occurrences appear four times more frequently
in the Epistle to the Ephesians than in all the remaining letters of the corpus Paulinum" (116).
39The structure of Ephesians is like that of the undisputed Paulines and the letter
contains much Pauline language, including words unique to Ephesians and the undisputed letters
of Paul, but nowhere else in the NT (e.g., vlo&-ata, 1:5; Rom. 8: 15,23; 9: 4; Gal. 4: 5; dppapo3y,1: 14;
2 Cor. 1:22; 5: 5; 7rpoaayo)y4,2:18; 3: 12; Rom. 5: 2). See also footnote 22 above.
4011arrison, Pastoral Epistles, 20-22, demonstrates that, with respect to hapax legomena,
Ephesians falls well within the normal range of Pauline usage. In addition, some of the Church
Fathers (e.g., Clement of Rome, Polycarp, Ignatius) knew and used Ephesians so its vocabulary
probably influenced them.
4lLincoln,

Ephesians,

Ixiii.

14
3:
1-13,
the
the
Lincoln
that
apostolic self-portrait of
post-apostolic setting
reads
humility statement of 3:8, the settled Jew-Gentile situation portrayed in 2:11-22, the
Church's apostolic foundation in 2:20, and the emphasis on the universal Church,
including the key role assigned to its ministers in 4:11-16.
On the other hand, one should note that none of the above items is out of
Paul
lifetime
(i.
60s).
did
during
later
Paul's
to
the
could
and
e.,
early
mid
of
place
part
from
for
his
himself,
insights
recommending
own
without provocation
speak
fact,
In
(3:
4).
"mystery"
the
opponents
concept (3: 3-4) is a traditional

idea that was

He
Paul.
to
attributes to other apostles the reception of special revelation
not unique
(3:
it
It
5-6).
is difficult to see how the humility
concerning

is
8
3:
more
statement of

less
least
"the
himself
Paul's
than
to
and
exaggerated
spontaneous
of the
as
reference
(1
Cor.
15:9). Paul's reputation as the apostle to the Gentiles proclaiming a
apostles"
law-free gospel emerged early in his confrontation
Gal.
(cf.
2).
Antioch
in
Peter
with
The largely Gentile Christian audience in Asia Minor (cf. Acts 19: 17-41) likely alters
the emphases portrayed in Ephesians and gives Paul the opportunity not only to set
forth aspects of the Christian gospel he has already defended but also to present
instruction
on some matters in a form he had not articulated previously. In
needed
light of this and a natural, complementary development of thought, the portrait of
Jew-Gentile unity and the Church with its gifted leaders is not incompatible with
Paul's earlier letters. No suggested post-apostolic pseudepigraphical setting seems to
fit these matters any better. Furthermore, there is strong external evidence in favor
42
Pauline
of
authorship.
1.1.2.3 Theological

Arguments.

As with Colossians, a more formidable

line of argument has been put forward on theological grounds. Lincoln contends that
the theological differences between Ephesians and the undisputed Paulines cannot be

42Kiimmel, Introduction, 357, concedesthat Tph is extraordinarily well attested in the


early church." Seethe external data given in Guthrie, Introduction, 497.

15
letter
because
by
"the
the
the
explained
number of
circumstances surrounding
differences that have to be accounted for are too many for this to be a convincing
for
"43
the
explanation
whole phenomenon.
In this regard, Lincoln makes reference to several distinctive features in
Ephesians. The christology of the letter focuses attention on Christ's resurrection,
lordship
little
(only
16)
death
2:
the
the
and
stress
on
exaltation, and cosmic
with
cross
of Christ (only 1:7; 5: 2,25) compared to the undisputed letters. Its soteriology makes
no mention ofjustification

different
Galatians
is
in
Romans,
there
a
as
and
and

(2:
8-10)
law
(2:
15).
Realized
the
on
works
perspective
and
eschatology pervades the,
letter
with no explicit reference to the Parousia as in the undisputed Paulines. 44
whole
Finally, its ecclesiology is more advanced and comprehensive than in the earlier
Pauline letters. 45
These theological differences make it virtually

impossible for many to

Pauline
accept
authorship. However, though significant, they need not be pressed
into contradictions or conflicts with earlier Paulines. Neither is it necessaryto view
them as evidence of an entirely changed perspective at a later stage of composition
beyond Paul's lifetime. It seemsmore likely that these distinctives constitute the
logical extension of Paul's thought in new directions by Paul himself closer to the end
his
life.
of
Four references to the cross and the death of Christ (1:7; 2:16; 5:2,25) in a

431bid., Ixiii-lxv.

Also, see Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 26-28; and Best, Ephesians, 32-35.

44Salvation language appears in the past tense, depicting it as already completed for
believers (2:5-8, esp. IuTc uraqjqyevotin vv. 5,8). The emphasis is more on believers' present
relationship to the exalted Christ in the heavenly realm (e.g., 1:3,20-23; 2:6) and on growing up in
maturity as a "body" toward its "head" (4:15).
45Ephesians

235:
(cf.
10,21;
&KAquta
3:
the
Church
1:
22;
of
exclusively
universal
uses
25,27,29,32)
in
believers,
frequently
local
it
is
how
than
which
rather
assemblies of
appears most
the undisputed Paulines (although see 1 Cor. 12: 28; 15: 9 and Gal. 1: 13). Thus, Lincoln, Ephesians,
Ixiv, concludes that this
(1:
22-23),
Church
"as
(5:
(4:
26-27),
holy
the
4),
catholic
one
universal
view of
"
Paul.
beyond
and apostolic (2: 20) in all probability
that
the
ministry of
reflects a stage
of

16
the
brief,
insignificant,
the
letter
of
especially
relatively
central role
general
are not
(cf.
2:
15-16).
The
in
2:
for
Jew-Gentile
11-22
the
cross
unity
emphasis on
as
ground
Christ's exaltation fits with the traditional views of the Church as shown in Acts (cf.
Acts 2,3,13) and in Paul's defensespeechesregarding the hope of the resurrection
(cf. Acts 23:6; 24:14-16; 26:17-23; see also 1 Cor. 15:20-28).
The fact that justification is not mentioned, the law is said to be abolished
(2: 14-15), and "good works" are included as the product of saving grace (2: 10)
(cf.
large
2:
1-3,11-13;
Gentile
the
the
makeup of
probably reflects
author's audience
4: 17-24) and his more general reference to salvation by grace through faith unto good
One
(2:
8-10).
could argue that Paul has a functional view of the law that is
works
nuanced contextually thereby accommodating both negative (e.g., Gal. 3: 13,19-25)
and positive (e.g., Rom. 3: 31; 7: 7-12; 13:8-10) statements about it, a phenomenon
in
Ephesians (cf. 2: 15 with 5: 31 and 6: 2-3).46
also reflected
The emphasis on realized eschatology is clearly evident, but it is not in

the
with
undisputed Paulines (cf. e.g., Rom. 5:1-2a, 9a, 10a; 6:4; 8:1,24a) nor
conflict
(cf.
futuristic
1:
10,14;
itself
the
in
Ephesians
expense of
maintained at
eschatology
4:30; 5:5; 6:13). In line with the author's exaltation christology, the emphasis on the
believer's relationship to Christ shifts from dying with Him (Rom. 6:8a) and rising
future
(Rom.
in
being
Him
6:
8b)
the
to
that
raised and seated with
with
of already
Him in the heavenly places far above all authority and power (1:20-21; 2:5-6). With
different issues at stake, Paul can hold both emphaseswithout conflict.
The advanced ecclesiologyof Ephesians is also clearly evident, but this need
Paulines
be
inconsistent
later
the
not
undisputed
with
nor reflect a
viewed as
setting.
If the letter was intended to circulate among several churches, as is likely, then it
in a universal sense. The reference to Christ as
would be appropriate to use &KA77uta
46C. G. Kruse, Paul, the Law and Justification (Leicester: Apollos, 1996) 261-65,
discussesthe texts in Ephesians and argues convincingly that they are compatible with each other
and with Pauline usage in his earlier letters.

17
Head of the Church appears to be the logical development of the "body of Christ"
in
feature
the
Regarding
the
the
new
apostles and prophets,
metaphor.
role of
Ephesians is how the Church is pictured as a building, where Jesus Christ is the
form
its
Him
their
to
through
the
witness
cornerstone and
apostles and prophets
foundation.47 All this is a natural extension of an earlier idea (cf. 1 Cor. 3:10-11). As
for
the
Gentile
the
of
mention
accounts
no
also
mainly
audience
noted above,
denying
it.
(as
in
Church
Rom.
1-8;
9-11)
between
Israel
3:
the
without
and
continuity
The point for Gentile Christians to grasp is that they are part of God'speople on equal
footing with Jewish Christians through Jesus Christ who has made peace(2:11-22).
All this suggeststhat Paul himself could bring further development to his own ideas
by
his
his
and
as warranted
readers' circumstances.
1.1.2.4 Relationship

to Colossians.

All interpreters recognize that

Colossiansand Ephesians share closesimilarities in language and argument. Those


defend
the authenticity of Ephesians invariably argue for the authenticity of
who
Colossiansalso. Accordingly, the relationship between the two letters is accounted
for by the view that Paul wrote both of them. 48
However, Lincoln and many others argue that such a hypothesis is highly
because
differences
indicates
that
the
the
perspective
changed
nature
of
a
unlikely
have
been
"could
lapse
Consequently,
letters
time.
the
written at
of
not
requires a
the same time, which is what must be supposedif Pauline authorship of Ephesians is
later
"a
follower
Colossians
Paul
"49
Instead,
the
author
was
of
who
used
as
claimed.

47The apostles and prophets are viewed as foundational in a logical sense, not in a past,
temporal sensebecausethey have passed off the scene. The description of them as "holy" (3:5)
reflects Paul's typical designation of anyone "set apart for a sacred purpose" rather than an
indication of later veneration by others.
48SOPercy, Probleme, 360-433, who argues that the similarities and differences between
the letters are best explained in this way. See also footnote 11 above.
49Lincoln, Ephesians, 1xvii. Also, seeMitton, Ephesians, 254-55; and Schnackenburg,
Ephesians, 29.

18
the basis for his own reinterpretation of the Pauline gospel."50 To make this claim is
to maintain the view that this author used the literary device of pseudonymity-51
Many who view Ephesians as pseudonymous contend that it depends on
Colossians as its primary source.52 However, the evidence for direct literary
dependence is minimal, 53 so most scholars put more emphasis on overall structure
involving
key
terms and on
the
thematic
and content
same
material, on certain
theological concepts. It is argued that the author of Ephesians rearranged and gave
fresh expression to his source material to suit his own distinctive interests and

5OIbid., 1xviii. Also,


see Kiimmel, Introduction, 358-61; Mitton, Ephesians, 254-61; and
Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 29. On the other hand, Best, Ephesians, 20-25, argues that, while there
is a relationship with Colossians, "it cannot be proved that AE [the author of Ephesians] used that
letter" (35).
r)lPseudonymity
within the NT canon is a complex issue and continues to be debated,
especially as it relates to Colossians and Ephesians. Lincoln, Ephesians, 1xviii-lxxiii, gives a concise
but spirited defense of canonical pseudonymity drawing on the work of R. J. Bauckham, "PseudoApostolic Letters, " JBL 107 (1988) 469-94; L. R. Donelson, Pseudepigraphy and Ethical Argument
in the Pastoral Epistles, ed. H. D. Betz, G. Ebeling, and M. Mezger, HUTh 22 (Tiibingen: J. C. B.
Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1986) esp. 7-66; and D. G. Meade, Pseudonymity and Canon (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1987) esp. 103-57. Meade shows how pseudonymity may have functioned had it been
accepted in early Christianity, but he does not adequately demonstrate the plausibility of that
premise. See also Best, Ephesians, 10-13, and the literature cited there. Vigorous counterhave
been
forward
by Percy, Probleme, 443; Guthrie, Introduction, 1011-28; id., "The
put
arguments
Development of the Idea of Canonical Pseudepigrapha in New Testament Criticism, " in The
Authorship and Integrity of the New Testament, ThCol 4 (London: SPCK, 1965) 14-39; T. D. Lea,
"The Early Christian View of Pseudepigraphic Writings, " JETS 27 (1984) 65-75; and Carson, Moo,
and Morris, Introduction, 367-71. For a discussion of motives for the writers of pseudepigraphy, see
B. M. Metzger, "Literary Forgeries and Canonical Pseudepigrapha, " JBL 91 (1972) 5-12.
52E. Best, "Who Used Whom? The Relationship of Ephesians and Colossians, " NTS 43
(1997) 72-96, states: ".
it has become an accepted tenet of scholarship that Colossians was
..
written prior to Ephesians and the latter composed in its light" (73). Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 32,
holds that Ephesians is based on the author's memory of Colossians. There have been a few
attempts to argue for the priority of Ephesians; see J. Coutts, "The Relationship of Ephesians and
Colossians, " NTS 4 (1957-58) 201-07.
53The most extensive point of contact is the commendation
Tychicus
in
Col.
4: 7-8 and
of
Eph. 6:21-22. After a detailed study of possible literary parallels, Best, "Who Used Whom? ",
concludes that "in almost every case it is impossible to say with any certainty that A/Eph [the
author of Ephesians] used Colossians or that A/Col [the author of Colossians] used Ephesians" (92).
In light of his study, he states that three possible solutions to the question of authorship remain
open: "Paul wrote both letters, they had a common author who was not Paul, they did not have a
common author and Paul wrote neither of them" (96). Best favors the last option: "The similarities
and dissimilarities of the two letters can be explained most easily on the assumption of distinct
authors who were members of the same Pauline school and had discussed together the Pauline
theology they had inherited" (96). See further id., Ephesians, 20-25,35-40.

19
theological purposes.54 Even if Colossiansis authentic, many find it highly doubtful
that Paul could have written Ephesians becauseof differences in theology at certain
disciple
Paul.
later
The
been
have
of
points.
author must
a
While considerable weight is given to this argument, much of the

troublesome evidence can be viewed differently without resorting to pseudonymity.


Several observations are worthy of consideration. First, Paul's ability and versatility
as a writer and theologian should not be underestimated. He is quite capable of
developing,
facing
his
for
different
thoughts
and qualifying
audience
rephrasing,
own
a
different circumstances within a relatively short time (cf. e.g., 1 Thess. 4-5; 1 Cor. 15
likely
Cor.
It
is
2
5).
that themes he had thought about for a long time received
and
fresh expression. An expansion of the horizons of Paul's literary capability in this
way would accommodateboth the similarities and the differences between Ephesians
Colossians
and
and show how both letters fit comfortably with the theology of the
Paulines.
55
undisputed
Second,a change of audience, subject matter, or authorial purpose should
be
downplayed.
Church
The
from
Colossians
to
the
Christ
in
change of emphasis
not
in Ephesians and the occasionof each letter doesmuch to account for the different
describing
Christ
letters.
For
by
two
the
terms
the
as
example,
nuances of
shared
head of His body, the Church, is an extension of Paul's metaphor in both letters, but in
Colossians (1:18-20; 2:18-19) it is used christologically to combat heresy while in
Ephesians (1:22-23; 4: 15-16) it is used ecclesiologically to foster the unity of believers.

54For example, Uncoln, Ephesians, 170, claims that Eph. 3: 1-13 is a distinctive
reworking of Col. 1:23-29. Schnackenburg,Ephesians, 30-32, summarizes the uniqueness of the
relationship between Colossians and Ephesians but concludesthat differences in style, theology,
and literary objectives between them "are so great that we can only with difficulty conceiveof the
same author"(32). He believes the author of Ephesians was very familiar with Colossians,though
probably not as a written document.
55Wright, Colossians, 38, makes this point. See also C. E. Arnold, "Ephesians," in
Dictionary of Paul and His Letters, eds. G. F. Hawthorne et al. (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity
Press, 1993) 243 [hereafter DPLI.

20
Third, personal allusions, expressionsof intent, and requests for things ring
true as coming from Paul himself in both Colossians(more extensive) and Ephesians
(cf.-1:1; 3: 1-13; 4: 1; 6: 19-20).56 In addition, a plausible life-setting for the letters in
57
be
ignored.
60s
during
in
ia
Nlinor
Paul's
lifetime
the
not
should
early
.
A"

Again, it seems that the arguments against Pauline authorship, while


formidable, are not decisive. They do not give sufficient weight to the general pastoral
God's
in
Ephesians
Paul's
to
to
purposes
and
creative ability
reflect on
character of
Christ to meet the needs of a broader Christian readership. With these
in
view, the arguments supporting Pauline authorship are plausible.
considerations
1.1.3 Conclusion

In light of the above discussion, it can be argued persuasively that the


differences between Colossiansand Ephesians and the undisputed Pauline letters do
not constitute sufficient grounds for rejecting Pauline authorship. With due
difficulties,
Paul
the
hold
in
the
that
of
consideration
wrote
we
view
all probability
Colossiansto a local congregation in Colossaeto combat, in part, a christological
heresy. With the Colossianletter still fresh on his mind, he used similar language and
Ephesians
to
as a general, circular
concepts,with modifications and expansions, write
Ephesus
Asia
Minor,
letter
"open"
to
as either
with
several churches of western
or
56Those who favor pseudonymity explain the autobiographical material in various ways.
For example, Meade, Pseudonymity, 139-61, argues that such material in a pseudonymous writing
is primarily "an assertion of authoritative tradition, not of literary origins" (161), but this dichotomy
lacks convincing support. Lincoln, Ephesians, lxxxvii, claims that the later author of Ephesians
makes the letter "more personal, direct, and forceful by adopting the device of Paul himself
appealing to the churches. " But surely this would be unnecessary and even suspect within 30 years
of Paul's death (most who reject Pauline authorship date Ephesians ca. AD 80-90), and it is not
easy to reconcile the content of Ephesians (cf. 4: 15,25) with the idea that the first-person details
are simply well-meaning attempts to show respectful affmity with PauL
57Best, Ephesians, 63-75, discusses a variety of proposals for the occasion and purpose of
Ephesians. In light of the letter as a whole and its general nature, he suggests it was written for
Gentile Christians who formerly were members of one or more groups in the community (i. e., a trade
guild, a cult group). Now as Christians who have come into the Church from paganism, "they have
entered a new group and it is important that they should realise its nature and the conduct
required of them in it" (75). Though Best links this life-setting and purpose with a later author,
they are equally applicable in Paul's lifetime.

21
the first or most important destination. 58 Since Paul was a prisoner at the time of
writing both letters, it is reasonable to supposethat they originated from the same
imprisonment, which was most likely the one he experienced at Rome in the early AD
60s.59 While in prison he may have had secretarial assistance from Timothy (cf Col.
1:1; 4: 18) or someoneelse (see footnote 12 above). The repetition of Colossians 4:7-8
in Ephesians 6:21-22 reads naturally if both letters were dispatched at the same time
and were taken to their intended destinations in the province of Asia by I)rchicus.
It should be noted that even if Paul did not write Colossiansand Ephesians,
most scholars acknowledge that they stand in the Pauline tradition and reflect terms
and patterns of thought used by Paul. Consequently, with due regard for possible
adaptation and development, these letters can be consulted without fear of
misrepresenting Paul's own ideas. In fact, in some casesthey enhance our
understanding of certain ideas that are mentioned but not explained in the undisputed
Paulines, such as Paul's one reference to "our old man" in Romans 6:6.
In subsequent discussion we will refer to Paul as the author of Colossians
Ephesians
Romans.
We will consider both the "old man" and the "new
as well as
and
be
Pauline
to
terms and the "old man / new man" motif to be an integral part of
man"

58G.Zuntz, The Text of the Epistles; A Disquisition upon the Corpus Paulinum, SL
(London: Oxford University Press, 1953) 228n, cites some evidencefor circular letters in the ancient
world. Objections to the circular letter theory can be found in D. E. Nineham, "The CaseAgainst
Pauline Authorship, " in Studies in Ephesians, ed. F. L. Cross (London: A. R. Mowbray, 1956) 25.
However, the objections raised by Ninehain and others do not dispose of the circular letter theory in
general, although they do go against the "blank address" form of it. In our view the inclusion of &
Folaq) in 1:1 as attested in AD 33 81 et al. is preferred. The phrase is omitted in p46 N and B.
Apparently & FoloV was deliberately omitted in these early manuscripts to show that the letter
was of general rather than simply local reference. In later manuscripts the phrase was reinstated in
order to identify the letter and verify the title given to it in the secondcentury. The secondhalf of v. 1
could be translated: "to the saints who are in Ephesus, that is (Kat), believers in Christ Jesus." In
this view, the participial clause (ToFsobo-w... ) functions substantivally in apposition to dytots-and
provides a brief definition of this term. SeeA. T. Robertson,A Grammar of New Testament Greekin
the Light of Historical Research,4th ed. (Nashville, TN: Broadman Press, 1934) 1106-08for the
articular substantival participle. The word Kat is understood in an explanatory or ascensivesense
rather than an adjunctive or connective sense(cf. Robertson, Grammar, 1181, and ch. 3,167 n55).
59Seethe discussion in footnote 11 above

22
Paul's theological thought. In order to position the study of this theme within recent
discussion of his thought, we turn to a survey of key interpretations offered for
aspects of Paul's theology relevant to our topic.
Aspects of Pauline

1.2 Relevant

Theology

The presence of dv*mws- in the "old man / new man" formulation links this
facets
Paul's
At
the
the
time,
of
TraAat(:
motif with
anthropology.
same
modifiers
and
/
Katv(: Plos-relate it to facets of his eschatology. Thus it is necessary to give some
both
to
areas.
attention
1.2.1 Perspectives

Pauline
on

Many interpreters

Anthropology

from the days of the Church Fathers (2nd-3rd century)

through the time of the Reformation (16th century) into the Enlightenment

period

(18th century) viewed Paul as a systematic theologian whose teaching could be


understood as a compendium of theological statements. During this extended period
dichotomy
/
the
time
trichotomy question was the main focus of attention in
of
discussions of Paul's anthropology.

Does the human person consist of two parts

(body and soul) or three (body, soul, and spirit)? Through the influence of Augustine
Protestant
Reformers,
dichotomy
(material
the
and immaterial)
and

became the

dominant view in Western theology. 60 But the complexity of Paul's anthropology


debates.
issues
spawned additional
and
1.2.1.1 Background

Influence

Debate.

With the Enlightenment

of the

18th century came the rise of historical-critical exegesisand the investigation of


Paul's thought in its socio-historical setting. On one hand, there emerged a growing
awareness that Paul was not, after all, a systematic theologian and that his theology,
including his anthropology, neededto be interpreted in light of his own historical and

60G. C. Berkouwer, Man: The Image of God (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1962) 194-233.

23
his
became
hand,
On
thought
the
the
cultural milieu.
critical study of
other
day.
With
to
the
thinking
to
the
susceptible
of
respect
philosophical
religious and
Paul's anthropology, F. C. Baur (1792-1860) and the TUbingen school, heavily
influenced by the idealism of G. W. F. Hegel, taught, for example, that the conflict
(spirit) represented the conflict between
between the udg (flesh) and the 7mcPpa
"anything merely outward, sensuousand material" and the "principle of
61
forms
link
between
CTod.
In scholarly circles, this
that
the
consciousness"
man and
idealist tradition was largely dismantled by the "history of religions" schoolnear the
19th
the
century.
of
end
In 1872, Hermann Didemann set the agenda for succeedingdecadesof
discussion by his sharply defined antithesis between Paul's "Jewish" notion of O-dpe
as
man in his weakness, and his later, more dominant "Hellenistic" conceptionin which
udg as material substance was greatly devalued.62 In light of this, many subsequent
fundamental
distinction between Hellenistic (partitive and
assumed
a
studies
dualistic) and Hebraic (aspective and holistic) views of the human person and sought
to determine whether Paul was influenced more by one or the other. 63 Some scholars
Paul's
Hellenistic
by
influenced
that
philosophy
anthropology was strongly
contended
64
discussion
By
the
the
phase
of
and popular religion.
mid-20th century an additional

61F. C. Baur, Paul. The Apostle of Jesus Christ, trans. A. Menzies, 2 vols. (London:
Williams and Norgate, 1876) 2:126-28.
62H. Ldemann, Die Anthropologie desApostelsPaulus und ihre Stellung innerhalb seiner
Heilslehre (Kiel: Universitdts-Buchhandlung [P. Toechel, 1872). He divided Pauline anthropology
under the two headings of "outer man" and "inner man," with soul, flesh, and body belonging to the
former, and spirit, mind, and heart to the latter.
63For a review of the debate seeW. D. Stacey, The Pauline View of Man in Relation to its
Judaic and Hellenistic Background (London: Macmillan & Co., 1956) 40-55; for individual terms see
Jewett, Paul's Anthropological Terms, passim.
64E.g., 0. Pfleiderer, Paulinism. A Contribution to the History of Primitive Christian
Theology, trans. E. Peters, 2 vols. (London: Williams and Norgate, 1877); W. Wrede, Paul, trans.
E. Lummis (Lexington: American Library Association, 1962 [19041);W. Bousset, Kyrios Christos:
A History of the Belief in Christ from the Beginnings of Christianity to Irenaeus, trans. J. E. Steely
(Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1970 [19131);and R. Reitzenstein, The Hellenistic Mystery-Religions:

24
involved the possibility of Gnostic influence on Paul.65 Others contended that the
decisive influences on Paul, apart from Jesus and early Christianity, were the
Hebrew Scriptures and Palestinian JudaisM. 66 They argued that Paul antedated or
dependent.
he
teaching
the
supposedly
was
on which
opposedmuch of
non-Jewish
In recent decades scholars have generally agreed that one should not erect

between
between
"Jewish"
influences
distinctions
"Hellenistic"
or
and
rigid
"Hellenistic" and "Palestinian" Judaism. Differences must be acknowledgedbut not
Palestine
because
had
Hellenistic
ideas
the
to
of
penetrated
extent which
exaggerated
and Judaism in the first century. 67 Paul lived in both worlds so his anthropological
language owed something to both Hellenistic and Jewish thought and scholars have
continued to look for parallels from other writers of his day.68 In the end, however, we
are left with Paul himself and the need to find someexplanation for the distinctive
uses of various terms in his anthropology. The key factor in determining his meaning
is the way he used these terms in context augmented by relevant parallels, if any, in
Their Basic Ideas and Significance, trans. J. E. Steely from the 3rd German ed., PTMS 15
(Pittsburgh: Pickwick Press, 1978 [1910]). Seethe discussion and critique by Schweitzer, Paul and
His Interpreters, 66-77.
65E.g., R. Bultmann, Theologyof the New Testament, trans. M Grobel (London: SCM,
1956) 1:199,204. Bultmann acknowledged that Paul opposedsome Gnostic notions, but he
claimed that Paul's portrayal of a deep division in man and his use of some terms in a derogatory
sensebetrayed Gnostic influence.
66E.g., H. W. Robinson, The Christian Doctrine of Man, 3rd ed. (Edinburgh: T. and T.
Clark, 1926) 8, passim; J. A. T. Robinson, The Body. A Study in Pauline Theology, SBT 5 (London:
SCM, 1952) passim; and Stacey, Pauline View of Man, passim. Stacey's more general thesis is that
Paul's anthropology was fundamentally Christian and that he normally used Jewish language,
though occasionally Hellenism offered a more adequate term (39).
67M. Hengel, Judaism and Hellenism: Studies in Their Encounter in Palestine during the
Early Hellenistic Period, trans. J. Bowden, 2 vols. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1974); also I. H.
Marshall, "Palestinian and Hellenistic Christianity: Some Critical Comments," NTS 19 (1972-73)
271-87.
68For example: E. Brandenburger, Fleisch und Geist. Paulus und die dualistische Weisheit,
W14ANT 29 (Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag, 1968) 114-221,makes an extensive
comparison of Paul and Philo as a representative of Hellenistic Judaism. Substantive comparisons
in
between the Dead Sea Scrolls and elements of Pauline anthropology, especially iwe-Opa
and adpe
connection with sin, can be found in several places such as A. Sand, Der Begriff 'Fleisch'in den
paulinischen Hauptbriefen (Regensburg:Pustet, 1967) 253-73.

25
Greek.or Hebrew thought. 69 Many terms exhibit a range of meaning with some
Jewish
for
70
Based
that
this
overlap
approach, many acknowledge
certain pairs.
on
thought provides the greater background influence for most Pauline terms and ideas.
Related to the preceding discussion is the question about whether Paul's
anthropology

is monistic

monism, or basically
extraneous,

dualistic.
or

Most scholars today view it as some form of

so, such that any evidence of dualism is minimal

71
Greek
influence.
But this understanding
a vestige of

72
According
Robert
Gundry,
"anthropological
to
challenged.
best
"
describes
Paul's
unity,
anthropology.

and

has been

duality, " not "monatic

The whole person (di*mros-)

consists of a

corporeal side for which Paul uses the term a6pa (sometimes adp6, and an incorporeal
side whose various functions he describes by using nve0pa, OvX4, Kap6ta, voE-,1'76,
o)
dilOpo)Troset al.; thus there is "an ontological duality,
overarching
integrated

a functional

pluralism,

and an

"73
Paul's emphasis lies on unity, viewing a human being as a fully
unity.
whole person.

Along with the monism / dualism issue, scholars have sought to understand
69SeeJ. M. G. Barclay, Obeying the Truth. A Study of Paul's Ethics in Galatians, ed.
J. Riches (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1988) 185-92, for a perceptive discussion and evaluation of
from
Philo and Qumran in relation to 7we-Dpa
parallels
and adpeleading to this conclusion. Also,
see Dunn, Theology of Paul, 54-55.
70Dunn, Theology of Paul, 55-78, summarizes the spectrum of meaning for a6ya / adpe,
in
/
/
0vXj
voCy Kap6ta,and
iweVya, and points out where each pair overlaps meaning.
71Seethe discussion in Bultmann, Theology, 1:209, who concludes: "Man does not consist
of two parts much less of three; nor are psyche and pneuma special faculties or principles (within the
soma) of a mental life higher than his animal life. Rather, man is a living unity. " See also Stacey,
Pauline View of Man, 126; Jewett, Paul's Anthropological Terms, passim; and H. Ridderbos, Paul:
An Outline of His Theology, trans. J. R. DeWitt (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1975) 29-32.
72SeeR. H. Gundry, Soma in Biblical Theologywith Emphasis on Pauline Anthropology,
SNTSMS 29 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976), and J. W. Cooper,Body, Soul, and
Life Everlasting. Biblical Anthropology and the Monism-Dualism Debate (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1989), passim. See ch. 6,302-03.
73Gundry, Soma, 79,83-84,156, and 117-83 for supporting
Similarly,
arguments.
Cooper,Body, Soul, and Life Everlasting, 50,179, demonstrates that "functional holism" rather
than "ontological holism" and "holistic dualism" rather than "holistic monism" best describe Pauline
anthropology; see 36-103 and 147-95 for supporting arguments. Contra Bultmann, Theology, 1:19296 et al.

26
Paul's anthropology in relationship to other facets of his theology. Since the mid-20th
has
been
dominated
by
Rudolf
his
the
theological
century
anthropology
analysis of
Bultmann and Ernst Kasemann. We turn to a brief sketch of their contributions to
the subject.
1.2.1.2 Contribution

Bultmann.
Rudolf
of

For Bultmann, Pauline

theology is not a theoretical, speculative system. It deals with God only as He is


significant for man, and, correspondingly, it deals with the world and man not as they
are in themselves but in their relationship to God. On this premise Bultmann states:
"Every assertion about God is simultaneously an assertion about man and vice
versa. For this reason and in this sense Paul's theology is at the same time
anthropology. "74 Therefore, he links anthropology with soteriology-God's
his
demand of him-and
man and

deed for

treats Paul's theology as his doctrine of man: first,

faith,
to
prior
man
and second, man under faith.
The way in which Bultmann interprets the movement from unbelief to faith

is reflected in his discussion of Paul's anthropological terms. He states that acopais


the most comprehensive and most complex term that Paul uses. In Pauline usage it
human
body,
but
denotes
it
the
the
physical
may mean
more characteristically
he
is
"man
have
"75
does
that
a6lta
a oZpa;
person as a whole, such
we can say
not
... .
Consequently, man is able to experience himself as the subject to whom something
happens or as the object of his own action. In this way Paul denotes man in
relationship to himself; and becauseof this, a double possibility exists: he can be at
he
from
himself
be
himself. Man as u6pa, therefore, is
one with
or
can estranged
Aave
himself under control or lose this
responsible for his own existence. He can
control and come under the domination of outside powers.
74Bultmann, Theology, 1:191. Unfortunately, he overstates the importance of
anthropology in Paul leading to his own existentialist individualism and to further anthropological
reductionism in some of his followers.
75Ibid., 1:193-94; 195-96,203.

27
According to Bultmann, Paul uses the terms 7ve-01-ta
denote
to
man
and o-dg
at one with himself or estranged from himself respectively. Edpe,in addition to
denoting the concrete, fleshly body, refers to man estranged from himself as "fleshly, "
lost in the world, and existing in inauthenticity. Thus, the meaning of adg is extended
to include not only human nature at work in man himself, but also the environment
within which man lives, "the whole sphereof that which is earthly or 'natural. "' To take
o-dg as one's norm for living is what Bultmann defines as sin for it means to turn from
the creator to the creation, to trust in one's self as being able to obtain life through
one's own strength and accomplishment. But man has fallen victim to his own
attempt to secure life and thus has lost to the flesh and sin as personified powers his
capacity to determine his own actions. Bultmann goeson to show how this can apply
to both Gentile lawlessness and Jewish religious piety. 76
On the other hand, iTve-ua
is descriptive of the kind of existencein which a
is
God
to
oriented
person
and thus able to live authentically. Paul then uses the
terms PoE-,
cvPc[877o-ig,
Kap8la,and OvA to oscillate between nveDyaand o-dg and
describe different aspects of human existence with respect to its authenticity or
inauthenticity. They describe what belongs to human nature, which in itself is
for
but
deciding
the
neither goodnor evil,
goodor evil. In
which offers
possibility of
describing the Spirit, Bultmann stressesthe freedom the Spirit brings, namely,
"release from the compulsion of sin" and a newly openedpossibility of obtaining "life. "
At the same time he limits the sensein which the Spirit is viewed as "power" because
to be "led by the Spirit" presupposesa decision between two alternatives: "flesh" or
lispirit. "77 This reflects Bultmann's characteristic emphasis on human "decision" and
on faith as obedience. As John Barclay points out, it indicates that he seesthe Spirit

761bid., 1:234,239-45. Bultmann discusses


adpe along with sin and death as
personified powers to which man has fallen victim.
771bid., 1:330-40.

28
in Paul primarily "as the possibility of authentic obedience,a possibility previously
unavailable to man trapped in his own self-seeking (the flesh)."78
Bultmann's existential interpretation of Pauline anthropology has been
very influential. According to Robert Jewett, "the existential interpretation of the
udpe-m,,
e-DMa
categories has now becomecommon property for almost all exegetesin
contact with present-day discussion of the matter. "79 Prior to Bultmann, Pauline
anthropology was often discussedin "partitive terms" where each anthropological
term referred to a different part of the human constitution, and it was only a question
of whether such an analysis had a Greek or Jewish antecedent. One of Bultmann's
primary insights was to take Paul's anthropological terms as representing different
ways of looking at the whole human person in relationship to himself and the control
of opposing powers. As we shall see,this perspective has a bearing on how one views
the "old man" and the "new man."
Despite the compelling nature of much in Bultmann's interpretation, some
Two
issues
remain.
problems
are important for our consideration. First, as Barclay
Bultmann's
notes,
schematic presentation of Paul's use of terms can be misleading.
To avoid this, one must observe carefully the particular context in which an
anthropological term or expression occurs.80 Second,and more formidable,
Bultmann's analysis is grounded in existentialist philosophy. A major effect of this is
the almost exclusive attention he gives to the individual; but the range of Paul's
anthropological terminology cannot be restricted so narrowly. Another result of this
approach is Bultmann's "tendency to demythologize Paul's remarks about historical
78Barclay, Obeying the Truth, 195.

79Jewett, Paul's Anthropological Terms, 67,103. It


must be noted, however, that a
unitary view of Pauline anthropology is held by many who reject Bultmann's existential
interpretation. See Barclay's assessment,Obeying the Truth, 195,
along with additional references.
80Barclay, Obeying the Truth, 196, states that in this
Paul's
"Jewett's
of
analysis
respect
terms letter by letter is an important complement to the schematic
by
the
evidence
of
presentations
Bultmann, Sand and others" (196
n45). See also our approach on pp. 60-63 below.

29

eventsand their influenceon 'the world."181He interprets the crossas a revelatory


event that disclosesGod'sgraceand "freesman from himself." Similarly, the
eschatologicalgift of the Spirit becomes"the powerof futurity ... the new possibility
of genuine,human life which opensup to him who has surrenderedhis old
understandingof himself."82However,onecannoteliminate the historical and
dimensions
Paul's
thought so completely. This becomesoneof the
eschatological
of
main reactionsof Ernst KAsemannwho challengedBultmann's views on the role of
anthropologyin Paul'sthought as well as his interpretation of key anthropological
terms.
1.2.1.3 Contribution of Ernst Kfisemann. In his earliest work on
anthropological themes, Kdsemann emphasized the cosmic scope of Paul's thought
and compared it with Gnostic thought. 83 In his later essays and his commentary on
Romans, 84he dropped the comparison with Gnosticism in favor of an emphasis on
apocalyptic themes as determining factors in Pauline theology. 85 He repeatedly
Bultmann
for
criticizes
making anthropology the focal point of Paul's theology leading
to an exaggerated individualism. 86

81Ibid., 198.
82Bultmann, Theology 1:335-36; also id., "Christ the End of the Law, " in Essays
Philosophical and Theological, trans. J. C. G. Greig (London: SCM, 1955) 36-66, esp. 59-60.
83E. Y%Asemann,
Leib und Leib Christi: Eine Untersuchungzur paulinischen Begrifflichkeit,
BHT 9 (Tiibingen: J. C. B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1933).
84Many of Kasemann's essayshave been translated
and published in New Testament
Questionsof Today, trans. W. J. Montague (London: SCM, 1969) and in Perspectiveson Paul, trans.
M. Kohl (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1971); id., Commentary on Romans, trans. and ed. G. W.
Bromiley from the 4th German edition, HNT 8a (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1980).
85See,e.g., "The Beginnings of Christian Theology"
and "On the Subject of Primitive
Christian Apocalyptic" in New. Testament Questions of Today, 82-107 and 108-37
respectively. For a
discussion of the change in Kdsemann's view of the background
Paul's
he
interpreted
against which
theology as reflected in his pre-1950 and post-1960 publications
and his understanding of
apocalyptic, see D. V. Way, The Lordship of Christ. Ernst Kdsemann 's Interpretation of Paul's
Theology, OTM (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991) 122-32.
86Y%.
dsemann, "On Paul's Anthropology, " in Perspectiveson Paul, 1-31, esp. 1-14.

30
Instead of focusing on the anthropological terms themselves, as Bultmann
did, IMsemann puts the subject in a wider Pauline context of christology, cosmology,
and eschatology. He argues that Paul doesnot see a human being simply as an
individual in relationship with him or herself, but in relationship with others and with
his or her Lord. A human being is "a challengable and a continually challenged being,"
is
that
something
a constitutive element of one's existence. The challenge of the
gospel doesnot end with conversion becausesalvation is an "endless path" that
embodies"the challenge of being called to be a new creation and a new man.1187
Y%Asemann
agreeswith Bultmann's insight that Paul's anthropological
terms do not refer exclusively to the component parts of a human being but rather to
existence as a whole. However, he argues that Paul did not share the idealist notion
inherent
of an
continuity of existence. Such a notion, he claims, is alien to Paul's
thinking.

One way he makes this point is by arguing that Christian baptism marks

"the death of the old man and the miraculous beginning of a new life under the banner
"
Further,
Paul regards salvation history as divided into epochs,
the
resurrection.
of
his
is
"discontinuity
the
for
him
the
that
understanding
of
and
resurrection shows
mark of both existence and history. " Discontinuity

exists between the worlds of

[original] creation and the fall, and between the lordships of sin, Christ, and the
88
resurrection.
One important distinction from Bultmann emerges in K.Asemann's

interpretation of o,6ya. Bultmann minimized the importance of corporeality.


KAsemann argues that this concept is fundamental to Paul's theology becauseall of
God'sways with His creation begin and end in corporeality. As such, man in his
corporeality is never neutral in himself but is always "in the mode of belongingness

871bid., 5-6.
881bid., 8-9.

31
and participation. " This means that a man or woman as a whole person is always
89
belongs
to
part of a particular world and always
a structure of solidarity. According
to Misemann, Paul seeshuman beings as standing in solidarity with and thus in the
power-sphere of either Adam or Christ. As such, a human being is the object or at
fall,
Genesis
him
her.
Since
the
the
the
that
most
or
exponent of
rules
power
humanity is not free but enslaved to the power of evil forces from which it can only be
by
rescued an eschatological intervention. Thus Paul's hope was directed toward the
time when Christ would rule and place all His enemiesunder His feet, and God would
be all in all (cf. 1 Cor. 15:25-28). In this context the resurrection of believers means
participation in a world set free by the rule of God.
Within this framework of thought, Kiisemann discussesselected
the
anthropological terms. He insists that these terms "do not signify
...
individuation of the individual human being, but primarily that reality which, as the
heavenly
the
either
of
power
or the earthly, determines him from outside, takes
him
and thereby decidesinto which of the two dualistically opposed
possessionof
he
is
be
integrated.
"90 This means the whole person is involved in the
to
spheres
is
bound
between
God
forces
Anthropology,
then,
the
up
and
cosmic conflict
of evil.
faith.
in
the
with cosmologyeven
sphere of
As a result, Kasemann expresseshis interpretation of Paul's anthropology
in terms of lordship and connectsit to his idea that a human being is a participant in
a particular "world" (power-sphere). This understanding of human existence not only
stressesthe idea of "belonging to a lord" but also the notion that human beings are
able to respond to realities (worlds or lordships) that are already present. Becauseof
this, the change of existence spoken of by an existentialist interpretation is in reality
891bid., 18-22.
90Kdsemann, "Primitive Christian Apocalyptic, " in New Testament Questions
of Today,
131-37, specifically 136; also "On Paul's Anthropology, " 26, where he states that human existence
is " always fundamentally
"
belongs.
from
the
the
to
angle of
conceived
world
which one

32
They
"change
lord.
(or
beings
Human
"91
lordship.
a
are always under a
exchange)of
cannot escapefrom the power of sin to an autonomous state. But as a Christian, a
human being exchanges this lordship for the lordship of Christ.
115semann's interpretation

has
been
influential.
Paul's
also
of
anthropology

As Barclay points out, Ihis] emphasis on apocalyptic, on the physicality of oi0pa, and
on the Spirit and flesh as powers which determine human e)dstence 'from outside'
have all won increasing recognition in recent years. Many scholars now concur with
his point of view on the importance of apocalyptic in Paul-not

just in isolated motifs

but in the whole framework of his theology. "92 KAsemann's achievement in scholarly
discussion was to put Pauline anthropology into a broader cosmological and
apocalyptic context that others have developed in various ways. 93 Two of his insights
for
are useful
our consideration of the "old man / new man": 1) a person is part of a
particular world (power-sphere), set in a structure of solidarity; and 2) discontinuity
between the lordships of sin and grace, Adam and Christ, and the "old" and the "new"
is characteristic of human existence and requires divine intervention to bridge the gap
between them. This renewed emphasis on apocalyptic features leads us to consider
the eschatological structure of Paul's theology.

1.2.2 Eschatological

Structure

Paul's
Theology
of

In light of renewed emphasis on Jewish backgrounds there is growing


agreement that what lies at the "core" of Paul's theological thinking is the

God
Christ.
Jesus
Yet there
through
eschatologically-understood
saving activity of
are divergent views regarding this perspective.
91Kdsemann, "On Paul's Anthropology, " 27-28, and Romans, 179,282,363.
92Barclay, Obeying the Truth, 201.
93Jewett, Paul's Anthropological Terms, 93-95; Beker, Paul the Apostle, passim; J. L.
Martyn, "Apocalyptic Antinomies in Paul's Letter to the Galatians, " NTS 31 (1985) 410-24; M. C.
de Boer, The Defeat Death. Apocalyptic Eschatology in 1 Corinthians 15 and Romans 5, JSNTSup
of
22 (Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1988).

33
1.2.2.1 Divergent

Views. Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965) was a key

figure among others who examined the comparative religions approach to Paul at the
beginning of the 20th century. In an analysis of Pauline research in Germany at the
time, he criticized the religionsgeschichtlicheSchule for interpreting Paul in Hellenistic
rather than Jewish categories, especially those of apocalyptic Judaism. 94 Later, he
set forth his own view in which he argued that Paul shared Jesus' eschatologyand
drew on apocalyptic Judaism to explain that there is an "already" realized kingdom
begun at Christ's resurrection and a "not yet" full revelation of God's kingdom at the
95
history.
The presently realized aspect of the eschaton comesto expression in
end of
Paul's prominent tv XpLomP
According
to Schweitzer, this Christ-mysticism,
motif.
the Christian's mystical union with Christ as a "pneumatic corporeality" realized
through the sacraments, became the central core of Paul's theology, relegating
justification by faith to a subsidiary role.96 Though Schweitzer's reconstruction can
be criticized at several points, 97his interpretation of Paul helped recapture both the
redemptive-historical and eschatological character of Paul's overall theology.
94Schweitzer, Paul and His Interpreters (1911), 59-60. He
praised R. Kabisch, Die
Eschatologie des Paulus in ihren Zusammenhdngen mit dem Gesamtbegriff des Paulinismus
(G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1893), as the first to understand fully "the great paradoxes of
Paulinism" and to describe clearly "their real eschatological essence." For others opposed to the
religionsgeschichtliche interpretation of Paul, see H. A. A. Kennedy, St. Paul and the Mystery
Religions (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1913); more recently, G. Wagner, Pauline Baptism and the
Pagan Mysteries, ATANT 39 (Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd, 1967 [19621; and C. Colpe, Die
religionsgeschichtliche Schule. Darstellung und Kritik ihres Bildes vom gnostischen Erl6sennythus,
FRLANT 78 (G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1961).

95A. Schweitzer, The Mysticism of Paul the Apostle, trans. W. Montgomery (New York:
Seabury Press, 1968 [19301)52-55,110-15. Schweitzer did not use the term "apocalyptic," even
though he argued that Paul was to be understood in light of Jewish eschatology. He maintained a
consistent futuristic eschatological (apocalyptic) approach to Paul, even though, in his view, it proved
to be an illusion in the end since the kingdom of God failed to arrive at Christ's death and
resurrection (115).
961bid., 3,117,225.
970f the
many evaluations of Schweitzer's "consistent eschatology, " the following are
helpful: T. F. Glasson, "Schweitzer's Influence-Blessing
or Bane? " JTS 28 (1977) 289-302; A. C.
Thiselton, "Schweitzer's Interpretation
of Paul, " ExpTim 90 (1978-79) 132-37; and W. Willis, "The
Discovery of the Eschatological Mngdom: Johannes Weiss
Kingdom
in
The
"
Schweitzer,
Albert
and
of God in 20th Century Interpretation, ed. W. Willis (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1987) 1-14.

34
C. H. Dodd also recognizedthe eschatologicalframework for Paul's
theological thinking, but he interpreted it as an expression of Paul's belief that history
had reached its fulfillment in Christ's death and resurrection. 98 In his view, Paul
shifted from "futuristic" to "realized" eschatology. Then, Paul brought this to full
development in his emphasis on "Christ-mysticism" (one's consciousnessof spiritual
union with Christ) and on the Church as the sphere of divine grace and spiritual life.
Rudolf Bultmann also saw the significance of eschatologyfor Paul, but he
considered Jewish apocalyptic ideas to be a stumbling block becausethey had not
been empirically confirmed. According to him, Paul moved the interpretation of the
earliest kerygma beyond mythology to an anthropologically construed doctrine of
justification by faith. The present reality of the believer's status before God replaced
any thought of future redemption. For Paul, the eschatological moment of salvation
is neither a space-time event in the past nor an event yet to occur in the future but
happening
that takes place in each individual's confrontation with the
an e3dstential
the
Paul's
decision
99
for
faith.
Thus,
the
of
gospel
and
claims
consequent
core of
theology is not eschatologybut the anthropological conceptsfound in it.
During the mid-20th century, however, the discovery and publication of the
iorce
began
Qumran documents and the apocalyptic
theology
their
to
sectarian
of
interpreters
Schweitzer's
to
return
appreciation of the apocalyptic character of early
Christianity. While Greeks typically viewed time as cyclical,100Hebraic thought
typically viewed time as a successionof ages and looked for the age to come (the

98C. H. Dodd, The Apostolic Preaching and Its Developments, 2nd


ed. (New York- Harper &
Row, 1951 [19361) 44,63-65.
99R. Bultmann, The Presence ofEternity: History
and Eschatology (New York Harper &
Brothers, 1957) 33-50; id., "History and Eschatology in the New Testament, " NTS 1 (1954) 5-16;
id., Theology, 191. See also
pp. 26-29 above.
10OSeeA. A. Long
and D. N. Sedley, The Hellenistic Philosophers, 2 vols. (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1987) 1:308-13.

35
"messianic age" in some circles) to deliver them from the evils of the present age.101
Paul shared the latter view modified by the coming of Jesus Christ and the split
between the "already"past and present, and the "not yet" future. 102
Apocalyptic as an interpretive approach to Pauline theology came into full
discussion with the later work of Ernst KAsemann who asserted that "apocalyptic
Bultmann's
"103
He
Christian
theology.
the
anthroagainst
was
argued
mother of all
defended
Schweitzer's
Paul's
that
apocalyptic world view was
claim
pocentricism and
determinative for his thought. 104He and others contributed to the development of a
fresh look at the nature of apocalyptic and its place in early Christianity. 105
J. Christiaan Beker has made a spirited plea for this perspective by arguing
that apocalyptic in the senseof the imnlinent, cosmic triumph of God over the
is
heart
locates
the
Paul's
the
Paul
He
thought.
that
created order
center
of
contends
in
focuses
Beker
the
the
interpretation
Christ-event-106
the
gospel
of
apocalyptic
of
101See,e.g., Dan. 2 and 7; CD 6.10,14; 12.23; 15.7; 1QpHab 5.7; and the later Jewish
(e.
Ezra
4
g., 6:7; 11:44) and 2 Baruch.
apocalypses
102Cf. Rom. 1:2-4; 8:15-18,23-25; 1 Cor. 2:6-8; 10:11; 2 Cor. 4:4; Gal. 1:3-5; 4:4-6; Phil.
3:20-21; Col. 1:26-27; Eph. 1:19b-21.
103E.Kdsemann, "The Beginnings of Christian Theology" in New Testament Questionsof
Today, 102. For a summary and analysis of Kdsemann's work, see W. G. Rollins, "The New
Testament and Apocalyptic, " NTS 17 (1970-71) 454-76. See also Beker, Paul the Apostle, 13-19,
360-62.
104Seefootnotes 84 and 85 above and "An Apologia for Primitive Christian Eschatology"
in Essays on New Testament Themes,trans. W. J. Montague (London: SCM, 1964) 169-95.
Kasemann took issue with Schweitzer's claim that Paul's apocalyptic hopes relegated the doctrine of
justification by faith to a subsidiary role as simply a polemical device against Judaizers. In his
essay,"Justification and Salvation History in the Epistle to the Romans" in Perspectiveson Paul, 6078, he insisted that it is God'sjustification of the ungodly by faith in Christ that is the distinctive
raark of the new age.
105E.g., 0. Cullmann, Christ and Time: The Primitive Christian Conceptionof Time and
History, rev. ed. (London: SCM / Philadelphia: Westminster, 1962) 88,145-55; id., Salvation in
Ilistory (London: SCM / New York: Harper and Row, 1967) 170-75,202; P. Stublmacher,
Gerechtigkeit Gottes bei Paulus (G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1965) 175,203; and W. G.
Kftmmel, The Theologyof the New TestamentAccording to Its Major Witnesses:Jesus,Paul, John,
trans. J. E. Steely (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1973 [1969]) 144.
106Beker,Paul the Apostle, 18-19, also 205, "The cross
is the apocalyptic turning
...
Point of history; " and 207, "The death and resurrection of Christ in their apocalyptic setting

36
"a
but
it
Paul's
distinctive
that
Jewish
acknowledges
undergoes
on
apocalyptic
use of
in
Christ.
ChristBecause
decisive
God's
light
the
in
act
of
profound modification"
of
live
in
believers
"the
the
the
and
power
of
creation"
event,
new
can already claim
Spirit. At the same time, the Christ-event is a proleptic anticipation of God's final
glory and the consummation of history. Since it inaugurates the end times and points
to God's cosmic triumph, the Christ-event itself is eschatologically oriented. 107
Despite an ongoing debate over the meaning and the appropriate use of the term
"apocalyptic,"108Beker's work has prompted further studies109that have added
support to his conviction that affirms Schweitzer's basic insight: Paul's interpretation
of the Christ-event reflects the use of Jewish apocalyptic language and ideas.
Nevertheless, as Beker acknowledges,Paul's use of traditional apocalyptic is
"modified," a modification that fits with his understanding of God's activity in
history.
redemptive
In line with Schweitzer's insight but with less emphasis on apocalyptic is
the highly influential work of E. P. Sanders that spawned a "new perspective on Paul"

constitute the coherent core of Paul's thought. " See also pp. 13-17,40-41,277-78,355-58,362-67.
1071bid.,145-52. This modification calls in question Beker's very broad view of
traditional apocalyptic, which is primarily concernedwith future events. The word "eschatological"
"eschatology"
for
descriptive
Pauline
be
thought
term
to
since
seems
a more appropriate
encompassesthe entire present-future polarity.
108SeeR. E. Sturm, "Defining the WordApocalyptic': A Problem in Biblical Criticism, " in
J. Marcus and M. L. Soards, eds.,Apocalyptic and the New Testament, JSNTS 24 (Sheffield:
Sheffield Academic Press, 1989) 17-48; and R. B. Matlock, Unveiling the Apocalyptic Paul: Paul's
Interpreters and the Rhetoric of Criticism, JSNTS 127 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1996).
109Forexample: Martyn, "Apocalyptic Antinomies, " 410-24, focuseson the cross rather
than the parousia (pace Beker); M. A. Getty, "An Apocalyptic Perspective on Rom. 10:4," HBT 4-5
(1982-83) 79-131; L. E. Keck, "Paul and Apocalyptic Theology," Interp 38 (1984) 229-41; and
11.Moore, "Paul and Apocalyptic, " IBSt 9 (1987) 35-46. Dunn, Theology of Paul, 461-72, following
Cullmann, calls the distinctive "already fulfilled" but "not yet completed" framework the
toeschatological tension" in Paul's theology. Although many Pauline studies define the role of Jewish
apocalyptic in Paul's theology differently, they all-along with a growing number of contemporary
scholars-believe that one cannot do justice to Paul's theology without accounting for his widespread
use of apocalyptic language and ideas. The diversity of views is due in large measure to a lack of
consensusregarding the nature and extent of Jewish and Christian apocalyptic thought.

37
in the final two decades of the twentieth century. 110 Using a holistic approach,
Sanders presents a descriptive account of two patterns of religion, namely, Second
Temple Judaism and Paul, and compares them. 111 After a detailed discussion of
Jewish texts, he concludes that first-century Judaism was not a legalistic religion of
"works-righteousness, " the prevailing view in Pauline scholarship and popular
112
Instead, Judaism was a religion of grace-the
preaching.
by divine initiative-with

been
had
given
covenant

human obedience to the law understood as the proper

for
God's
Observing
law
transgressions
to
the
grace.
response
along with atonement
"staying
Sanders
in"
"getting
into"
the
the
calls this
was
means of
not of
covenant.
11113
forms
"covenantal
Judaism
pattern of religion underlying various
nomiSM.
of

In his treatment of Paul, Sanders concludes,among other things, that


justification by faith cannot be the center of Paul's theology, the traditional view held
by many scholars.114Instead, following Schweitzer, he argues that the language and
imagery of participation in Christ is the dominant (soteriological) theme in Paul.
Union with Christ effects a transfer from one sphere of lordship (sin, law, death) to
110E.P. Sanders,Paul and Palestinian Judaism: A Comparison ofPatterns of Religion
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1977); id., Paul, the Law, and the Jewish People (Philadelphia:
Fortress Press, 1983); id., Paul (New York: Oxford University Press, 1991); and id., Judaism:
Practice and Belief, 63 BCE-66 CE (Philadelphia: Trinity Press International, 1992). The "new
perspective" designation comesfrom J. D. G. Dunn, "The New Perspective on Paul," BJRL 65
(1983) 95-122. Dunn has been a leading voice in adopting Sanders'view (with modifications) and
working out its implications in understanding both first-century Judaism and Paul. See Dunn's
Romans 1-8,9-16.2 vols. WBC 38A, 38B (Dallas: Word Books, 1988); his collection of essays,Jesus,
Paul, and the Law: Studies in Mark and Galatians (Louisville, KY: Westminster/John Knox Press,
1990); and his Theology of Paul, 335-40.
111By"pattem of religion, " Sanders means the description how
functions
in
a
of
religion
terms of how its adherents / members understand "getting in" and "staying in" the group of the
saved (Paul and Palestinian Judaism, 17).
112Sanders,Paul and Palestinian Judaism, 1-12,33-59,552. See
also Bultmann,
Theology, 1:243 and Dunn, Romans, 1:185.
338-39.1131bid.,

75 (definition), 420,422 (summary), and 544. See also Dunn, Theology of Paul,

1141bid.,438-41. At the same time, Sanders


notes that "there is no neat division in
Paul's thought between 'mystical' [participationist] and 'juridical' [language / categories]" (441) and
he discussesthe relationship between the two (502-08,520).

38
be
(righteousness,
life)
transformation
the
another
gospel,
and
ensuing
will not
fimdamentally
is
Lord
This
the
completeduntil
pattern of religion, which
returns.
different from Judaism, Sanders calls "participationist eschatology."115
Sanders'work has generated considerable discussion on the relationship of
Paul's theology to his Jewish heritage (esp.his view of the law), and his "new
his
116
Nevertheless,
have
been
perspective" views
criticized at several points.
first-century
has
Judaism
reexamination of
countered caricatures and
Paul's
has
it,
his
Paul
treatment
on
refocused attention
misrepresentations of and
of
participationist language and reaffirmed the redemptive-historical, eschatological
character of his theology.
1.2.2.2 Redemptive History and Eschatology.

We noted above that a

is
Paul's
the eschatologically-understood
thinking
theological
governing principle of
is
the
hand,
Christ.
On
God
Jesus
this
through
activity
saving
saving activity of
one
fulfillment of God'swork in the history of Israel and thus also the fulfillment of Old
Testament Scripture. On the other hand, it reaches out to the parousia of Christ and
the ultimate consummation of all things in the future kingdom of God. In light of this
broad conception of Paul's theological thinking, the most adequate interpretive
future
the
be
does
justice
both
to
the
to
that
approach appears
present and
one
Paul's
backbone
historical
"eschatology"
dissolving
the
this
of
significance of
without
future
dismissing
has
the
taken
preaching concerning what
already
place, nor

11-5Ibid.,441-42,523,547-49 (descriptive summary), 552. "In Christ" not "in Judaism"


Paul found life, thus, according to Sanders, his theological thinking moved from the solution (Jesus
Christ) to the problem (human enslavement to sin) and what he found wrong in Judaism was that
it was not Christianity (552). Since Sanders makes no sustained attempt to explain what Paul
meant by "participation in Christ, " see Dunn, Theology of Paul, 390-412, for further development of
this imagery.
1160f the many summaries
following
Sanders'"new
"
the
and evaluations of
perspective,
are helpful: J. Neusner, "Comparing Judaisms, " I-Mel 18 (1978-79) 177-9 1; R. H. Gundry, "Grace,
Works, and Staying Saved in Paul, " Bib 66 (1985) 1-38; S. Westerholm, Israel's Law
and the Church's
Faith: Paul and His Recent Interpreters (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988); F. Thielman, Paul and the
Law: A Contextual Approach (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1994)
esp. ch. 1; and Riches,
A Century of New Testament Study, 136-42. For further bibliography,
see ch. 3,173 n8l.

39
dimension concerning what must yet take place. This could be summarized as the
heilsgeschichtliche-eschatologicaIcharacter of Paul's theology.117This approach
emphasizesthe element of fulfillment in Paul's preaching (realized eschatology),and
the importance of a continual future expectation (futuristic, apocalyptic eschatology).
Within this framework, the various strands of Paul's theology can be integrated in
terms of their unity and diversity as well as their continuity and discontinuity.
The christological character of Paul's eschatology emerges plainly in the
tension between fulfillment and expectation. On one hand, he speaks of "the fullness
Cor.
6:
2)
(2
(Gal.
"the
that
day
4:
4),
"the
time"
time"
of
acceptable
and
of salvation"
have already taken effect. This is also apparent when he speaks of the great change
that occurred with the death and resurrection of Christ as the arrival of a "new
but
(2
Cor.
5:
17).
This
is
in
individual,
creation"
spiritual sense,
meant not only an
The
dimension.
in
also a redemptive-historical, eschatological sensewith a corporate
person who is "in Christ, " therefore, is in the "new creation." He or she with others
belong to this new order that has dawned with Christ's resurrection.
On the other hand, Paul was clearly aware that the person "in Christ" still
lives in the present world ("this age") and the time corresponding with it ("the now
time; " cf. Rom. 8: 18; 11:5; 12:2 et al. ). He speaks of the present world time as "the
ends of the ages" (cf. 1 Cor. 10: 11), the overlap of "this age" that is passing away and
the "new age" begun with Christ. He can speak of "the present evil age" as a
situation from which Christ has delivered His people (Gal. 1:4), while elsewhere he
speaks of the present age as the place where believers must live godly lives and
itshine like stars in the universe" (Phil. 2: 15).

117Ridderbos,Paul, 42. Another compatible


approach arguing that Paul's dynamic,
raultifaceted theology emergesfrom its narrative substructure (i. e., the story of God and creation,
Israel, Christ, the Church and consummation) has been
Scripture
forth
Echoes
Hays,
by
R.
B.
of
set
in the Letters of Paul (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1989); N. T. Wright, The Climax of the
Covenant. Christ and the Law in Pauline Theology (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1992); and
1B.Witherington, Paul's Narrative Thought World (Louisville: Westminster / John Knox, 1994).

40
Thus in certain contexts Paul describes existence prior to the redemptive
time of Christ as iroTl ("once," Rom. 6:20-23; 11:30; Gal. 4:29; cf. Col. 1:21-22; 3:7-8;
Eph. 2:2,12). This stands in contrast with the present PDP("now") of the new
Cor.
8:
1,18;
2
fulfillment
(Rom.
5:
9-11;
3:
21,26;
the
time
creation,
of redemption and
5:16; Col. 1:26; Eph. 2: 13; 3:5,10). In other contexts, however, the present Pot,("now"
/ "already") refers to the continuation of earthly existence defined by the world over
2-3;
4:
Cor.
5:
5;
1
(1
Thess.
("then")
the
the
to
against
76-re
of
consummation still
come
13:10,12; 15:28,54; Col. 3:4). These two motifs, "once/ now" and "already / not yet, "
future.
the
to
time
the
the
to
the
relate
present
past of redemptive
present and
This dynamic is also found in passagesin which Christ is set over against
Adam. Paul speaks of Adam as "the first man" and of Christ as "the last Adam, " the
"secondman" (1 Cor. 15:45-47). Adam is a type of Christ (Rom. 5:14). In this regard,
he represents the whole of humanity and the present age (5:12) while Christ
His
By
(5:
17b).
humanity
15b,
the
to
represents
age come and redeemed
become
light
life
has
to
the
the
a
and
resurrection
new
of
new creation
already come
in
Christ
die,
In
Paul's
in
".
for
in
Adam
this
so also
reality
all
age.
statement, ..
as
"in
be
(1
Cor.
Christ"
15:
22),
"in
the
shall all
made alive"
are parallel with
words
Adam. " Adam and Christ stand in contrast to each other as two archetypal figures
life.
"
death
"realms,
"creations,
"
two
the
two
the
the
and
at
outset of
old and
new, and
In their actions and destiny lie the course of life and destiny for all who belong to them
becausethey are included in them and thus are reckoned either to death or to life.
This relationship between Adam and Christ and those who belong to them reflects an
ancient Hebraic (Josh. 7:16-26) and Greek (Sophocles,Oedipus, 314) idea of "all in (or,
connectedto) one," a concept at one time denoted by the unfortunate expression
11
118
"
A more appropriate designation is "corporate solidarity, "
corporate personality.
118The concept of "corporate
personality" had its origin in the work of H. W. Robinson,
The Christian Doctrine of Man, 8; id., Corporate Personality in Ancient Israel,
rev. ed. (Philadelphia:
'Fortress Press, 1980 [19351). See also J. Pedersen, Israel: Its Life
Oxford
(London:
Culture
and

41
is
figure
to
which points an archetypal
who represents a whole group of people and
the one with whom the individual members of the group are identified becauseof a
in
"the
figure.
have
This
is
they
the
particular relationship
reflected
with
archetypal
(Rom.
/
Christ
language
Adam
Paul
to
many all"-in-"the one"
and
uses with respect
5:12-21; 1 Cor. 15:22). Though he doesnot elaborate on this corporate connection,
119
it.
interpreters
"corporate
to
the
various
explain
use
concept of
solidarity"
1.2.3 Conclusion

As surveyed above, recent scholarly discussion has called attention to the


holistic and relational nature of Paul's anthropology with both an individual and
corporate dimension. It also has given attention to the redemptive-historical,
his
facets
framework
Paul's
the
theology
of
various
eschatological
within which
of
thought operate. The "once/ now" turning point from the old to the new creation and
the "already / not yet" tension of redemptive time relate the past to the present and
both of these to the future. This wider theological perspective provides the context for
Paul's
to
/
focus
"old
terms
their
the
a narrower
contribution
on
man new man" and
University Press, 1959 [1926,19401) 1-11:263-96,474-79; III-IV: 76-86; A. R. Johnson, The One
Shedd,
R.
P.
Wales,
1942);
in
Israelite
Conception
God
(Cardiffi
University
Many
the
the
of
and
of
Man in Community. A Study of St. Paul's Application of Old Testament and Early Jewish
Conceptions of Human Solidarity (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1964) 132-38; and A. J. M.
Wedderburn, Baptism and Resurrection: Studies in Pauline Theology Against Its Greco-Roman
Background, WUNT 44 (Tubingen: J. C. B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1987) 351-56. For a critique of the
legal aspects of the concept, see J. R. Porter, "Legal Aspects of Corporate Personality, " VT 15 (1965)
361-80. J. W. Rogerson, "The Hebrew Conception of Corporate Personality: A Reconsideration, " JTS
21 (1970) 1-16, presented a rigorous critique of Robinson's views in which he questioned the
theoretical basis of his position. Rather than a concept of psychical or even physical unity, Rogerson
argues that there is a concept of corporate representation in the OT. He concluded correctly that the
expression "corporate personality" should be dropped. See also S. E. Porter, "Two Myths: Corporate
Personality and Language / Mentality Determinism, " SJT 43 (1990) 289-307; and Dunn, Theology
of Paul, 408-10.

119Some,among others, who use the Adam-Christ typology in this


E.
Percy,
way are
Der Leib Christi in den paulinischen Homologoumenaund Antilegomena (Lund: Gleerup, 1942);
S. Hanson, The Unity of the Church in the New Testament. Colossiansand Ephesians, ASNU 14
(Uppsala: Almquist & Wiksells, 1946) 67-70; E. Best, One Body in Christ: A Study in the
Relationship of the Church to Christ in the Epistles of the Apostle Paul (London: SPCIK,1955); C. M
Barrett, From First Adam to Last. A Study in Pauline Theology (New York: Charles Scribner's and
Sons, 1962); D. E. H. Whiteley, The Theology of Saint Paul, 2nd
45-46;
Blackwell,
1974)
(Oxford:
ed.
132-34; Ridderbos, Paul, 61-62; and, in a more nuanced sense, Dunn, Theology of Paul, 90-97,199204,208-12; 241-42.

42
thought in this study. To prepare the way further, we must ask an additional
did
formulations,
In
did
Paul
taking
these
terms,
or
up
make use of eidsting
question.
he himself contribute these terms to Christian thought? This leads us to consider the
background of this dual metaphor.
1.3 Background

'
/
Man!
New
"Old
Man
the
of

The word &6wvos-has a versatile range of usage. It includes "man" (male


120
The
being"
(generic),
(collective).
"human
"humanity"
main
and
person),
Hebrew
word,
corresponding

TT

has a similar range of usage, including a reference to

for
the first man, Adam. 121 'ApOpoiTrosalso allows
a variety of special combinations
(see
for
involves
the
4).
Specifically,
this
modifying
p.
our study,
as noted above
the
"put
"put
"old"
"new"
the
with
on"
off' and
and
and particularly
verbs
adjectives
"old man" and "new man" as their object respectively.
In light of such adjuncts, background investigations could be wide-ranging if
one were to pursue possible antecedent parallels related to the metaphorical uses of
"old" and "new" and the clothing metaphor "put off / put on" by themselves. However,
"new
focused
"old
is
the
man"
man" and
more narrowly on
our concern
combinations
"put
"put
independently,
the
off' and
verbs
or as objects of
used as metaphors either
for
11
that matter, any other verb.
on, or,

120H. G. Liddell and R. Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon [LSJ], 9th


ed. rev. and augmented
by H. S. Jones and R. McKenzie, 2 vols. in 1 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1925-40) s.v. dpopmTos',
provide several examples of the meaning "man, both as a generic term and of individuals, the ideal
man, humanity, and in the plural, mankind. " See also W. Bauer, A Greek-English Lexicon of the
New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature [BAGD], trans. and adapted from Bauer's 4th
rev. ed. by W. F. Arndt and F. W. Gingrich, 2nd ed. rev. and augmented by F. W. Gingrich and F.
W. Danker from Bauer's 5th ed., 1958 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979) s.v. dvoponrw, 1.
121F. Brown, S. R. Driver,
and C. A. Briggs, A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old
Testament (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1953) s.v. Tin. There is a wordplay on "man, " "mankind, "
and the first man, "Adam, " in Gen. 1-3; see Dunn, Theology of Paul, 82-84.
TI

43
1.3.1 "Put Off / Put On!'ParaHels
The verbs d7TcK86w
kyat,

"take off') and ep8m' kpai,

"put on"), with the "old

"new
man" and
man" respectively as objects appear in Colossians 3: 9-10 while the
same construction occurs in Ephesians 4: 22-24 using diTo-riftu kpai,
ev&w.

"take off') and

These verbs, often depicting the act of taking clothes off and putting them on

in the active voice, were frequently used in the middle voice as metaphors in the
ancient world. They had the sense of "taking off (of oneself), removing" something and
"taking on (for oneself), acquiring" something, and often denoted a change in identity,
122
The
items.
The
involved
impersonal
status, or character.
objects
were usually
picture of putting off vices and putting on virtues was relatively common in prePauline Hellenistic literature. 123 The imagery of clothing oneself with a person was
less
"playing
the part of
in
much
common, usually occurring
a stage-play setting as
[someone]," that is, taking on the status and character of that person and becoming
like him / her. 124 The idea of the soul that puts on a body as a "garment" and the
in
body
"garment"
death
is
"put
in
the
the
that
physical
was widespread
as
of
soul
off'
125
antiquity.

122BAGD,
sx. IK&vo), 2 fig. (also sx. yvpv6s-, 4 fig.
evUo), 2. b fig. See also LSJ, sx. d7TOTtO77AL,
11.1-2; &86o), III.
in The Theological Dictionary of the New Testament [TDN7],
and ed. G. W. Bromiley, 10 vols. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,

); diTcKUoyat, 1; dvoT[0771u, Lb fig., and


1; ev,56w, I. 1; and A. Oepke, "Uw, KTA,11
eds. G. Kittel and G. Friedrich, trans.
1964-76) 2: 318-21. Cf. ch. 4,212.

123Forremoval of vices or hindrances, see,


e.g., Demosthenes4.8,8.6; for post-Pauline
uses, see, e.g., Plutarch, Cor. 19.4; and Lucian, Dial. Mort. 10.8.9. For taking on virtues or benefits,
see,e.g., Plato, Rep. 457A, 620C; Euripides, Iph. T. 602; Aristophanes, Eccl. 288; for post-Pauline
uses, see, e.g., Tacitus, Ann. 1.75; 6.25; Artemidorus 3.14; Hermas, Sim. 9.24.2; and CH 10.18;
13.8-9.
124E.g., Dionysius Halicarnassus, Ant. Rom. 11.5, "to
put on Tarquin, " i. e., to play the
role of Tarquin; also Callimachus, Epigr. 21.6; Cicero, Tusc. 1.38.92; Off. 3.10.43; for post-Pauline
uses, e.g., Libanius, Epist. 968,1048.2-4; and Maximus Tyrius 1.4e.
125E.g., Pindar, Nem. 11.15-16; Euripides, Heracl. 1269; Bacch. 746; Aristotle, Anima
1.3; also Philo, Leg. All. 2.56,59; Mut. 233; Fug. 108-12; and Op. 134. For the origin of this idea
and further discussion, see Kdsemann, Leib, 87-94; and E. R. Dodds, The Greeksand the Irrational
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1966) 135-50. This
later
in
authors,
metaphor also occurs
for example: Artemidorus 5.40; CH 1.24-25; 7.2; Origen, Contra Celsum 8.44 and Hippolytus, Haer.
5.8.44; 8.10.7.

44
In the Hebrew Scriptures the verb dn often denotes a change in character
benefits.
by
"clothing"
the
of someonewith moral and spiritual qualities or
or position
Using ev&w, translators adopted this metaphor in the LXX with a variety of objects:
1) uoj7plav(2 Chron. 6:41; Ps. 132:16; Isa. 61:10); 2) &KaLooinv(Job 29:14; LXX Ps.
131:9; Isa. 59:17); 3) eoyoMrqo-tvKale6vp0Tctav(LXX Ps. 103:1; 92:1; Job 40:10 has
WavKal Tty4v); 4) to-XW'(Prov. 31:25; Isa. 51:9; 52:1); and 5)Kardpav and EvTpor4v
(LXX Ps. 108:18,29). 126Similar usage involving the removal of bad or the acquisition
127in
literature,
the
found
benefits
in
Jewish
is
early
of goodmoral qualities or
also
New Testament (e.g., Rom. 13:12; 1 Thess. 5:8; Col. 3:8,12; Eph. 4:25; 6:11,14; Heb.
12:1; Jas. 1:18-21; 1 Pet. 2:1-2), in rabbinic literature (e.g., humility and reverence,
Sim.
Hermas,
(e.
Christian
Gen.
in
Aboth
Rab.
6.1;
50.2),
authors g.,
e.g., m.
and early
9.23.5; Chrysostom, Hom. in Eph. 13). In the mystery religions and Gnostic
literature, the metaphor is associatedwith an event of "transformation, " such as in
the Isis community where an initiate was clothed with a heavenly garment and
transformed into a new being, and the priestess of Isis "clothed herself 'with the
power of the goddess(cf. Apuleius, Metamorphoses,11.21-24).
All these passagesand others show that the dual "clothing" metaphor was
bold
Paul's
have
in
in
itself
the
this
encouraged
well-known
may
ancient world, and
128
Most
14).
Rom.
13:
Gal.
27;
(cf.
3:
it,
"person"
the
use of especially with a
as
object

126Moreexamples are cited in E. Hatch and H. A. Redpath, A Concordanceto the


Septuagint and the Other Greek Versions of the Old Testament, 2 vols. (Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1897; reprint, Grand Rapids: Baker, 1983) s.v. IP66o);also Oepke, TDNT, 2:320; and L. Coenen,
E. Beyrenther and H. Bietenhard, eds., The New International Dictionary offew Testament Theology
[NIDNTT], trans. with additions and revisions by C. Brown, gen. ed., 3 vols. (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan, 1975) 1:314-16.
127E.g., Wis. 5:17-20; Bar. 5:1-2; 4 Ezra 4: 14; Ep. Arist. 122; 1 Enoch 62.14-16; 1QS
4.7-8; Philo, Conf. 31; and Som. 1.224-25.
128Paulineusage of the clothing
metaphor occurs in connection with three events: 1)
conversion-initiation (Gal. 3:27); 2) ongoing acts of ethical renewal (1 Thess. 5:8; Rom. 13:12,14;
Eph. 6:11,14; Col. 3:8,12); and 3) receiving the resurrection body (1 Cor. 15:53-55; 2 Cor. 5:2-5).
At issue for our study is the category in which Col. 3:9-10 and Eph. 4:22-24,25 fit.

45
When
denotes
it
in
a personal
a change character, status, or mode of existence.
often
is
likely
involved,
less
to a stage actor
is
is
the
allusion
common,
which much
object
taking on the persona of his character in a play. However, neither the "old man" nor
the "new man" appear as the object of these verbs prior to Paul.
1.3.2 "Old Man / New Man! ' Parallel?
To our knowledge, an exact antecedent parallel to the metaphorical use of

129
literature.
found
been
in
/
has
"old
the terms
extant pre-Pauline
not
man new man"
P. W. van der Horst claims to have found an exception to this in a fragment of
Aristocles of Messene,a Peripatetic philosopher of the secondcentury AD. 130This
fragment from his historical work, Ikpl OtAouoolag,was preserved by Eusebius in his
Praeparatio Evangelica (14.18.26). Aristocles, in turn, preserved a fragment of
Antigonus of Carystus, a popular biographer of philosophers, who lived in the third
Sceptic
the
founder
Elis,
deals
Pyrrho
fragment
the
of
of
century BC. This
with
thus,
is
Pyrrho
people
that
and,
philosophical school.
reality unknowable
claimed
he
dog,
by
he
However,
sought
ignore
impressions.
a
was
attacked
when
should
sense
his
did
behavior
his
in
demonstrating
that
tree
philosophical
not reflect
refuge a
inconsistency,
for
him
this
bystanders
When
convictions.
mocked and criticized
Pyrrho admitted they were right and by way of excusesaid: XaAew6t,cl T6vdvOpoj7Tov

129Jeremias,TDNT, 1:366 n12, states that "the extra-Christian provenance


the
of
...
image of the old and new man has never been proved." He notes that the image occurs in
Manichean literature (Aug. contra Faustum, 24.1.717-21),but Mani (3rd century A. D.), no doubt,
borrowed it from Paul. J. Jervell, Imago Dei: Gen. 1,26f im Spdtjudentum, in der Gnosis und in den
Paulinischen Briefen, FRLANT 76 (GUtingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1960) 240-41, also
concludesthat no exact parallel has been found in non-Christian sources. The formulations
"knowing the perfect man" and "putting on the perfect man" appear in two later Gnostic works
dealing with the creation of man, viz., the Apocryphon of John (NHL IIA. 15-25), and The Gospel
According to Mary (NHL BGC 8502.1.18),see E. Hennecke and W. Schneemelcher,eds.,New
TestamentApocrypha, ed. W. Schneemelcher,trans. R. McL. Wilson, 2 vols. (Philadelphia:
Westminster Press, 1963) 1:322,343. Later Christian writings refer to the new man: Ignatius,
Eph. 20.1, "the new man Jesus Christ; " Ep. Barn. 16.8, believers "have becomenew [people]";
Ep. Diog. 2.1, Diognetus has become"a new man. "
130p. W. van der Horst, "Observations On A Pauline Expression," NTS 19 (1973) 181-87.

46
eIKEvat, "It is difficult to put off the man."
This wording cannot be attributed to either Eusebius or Aristocles because
it occurs in Diogenes Laertius (9.66) who also reports this story from Antigonus of
Carystus. Thus the words 7-6vdvOpcoirov
&80vai go back to Antigonus (3rd century
BC) and may even go back to Pyrrho himself who was a contemporary of Antigonus.
Van der Horst concludes that in the third century BC the expression was used "in
to
the
from
language
denote
the
to
the
transition
state
unenlightened
philosophical
...
the
"131
He
believes
Paul's
that
popular
with
enlightened state.
acquaintance
the
his
the
time
this
of
origin
philosophy of
makes
a plausible explanation of
However,
three
"
"put
"put
the
the
on
new man.
expressions
off
old man" and
in
1)
this
extant
such a relatively rare use
observations make
conclusion unlikely:
literature suggests that the expression was not well known and makes Paul's
"it
than
likely
Pyrrho's
improbable;
2)
it
means no more
acquaintance with
statement
is difficult to put off what is human" (i. e., a natural human response); and 3) in
have
"new"
that
"old"
Pauline usage dkqow7To.
by
is
the significant words
and
9 qualified
no parallel in Pyrrho's statement or its context.

1.3.3 General Background

Proposals

In light of the absenceof an exact antecedent parallel, scholars have offered


have
Three
background
to
the
received
several general solutions
proposals
question.
the most attention. First, some scholars appeal to the mystery religions or
Gnosticism as the sourcesbehind this motif. Accordingly, the clothing metaphor "put
on" refers to 1) the act of initiation into the mystery religions in which the initiate is
132
divine-life
deification
final
clothed with cosmic,
power symbolizing
or
redemption;
131Ibid., 186.
132Reitzenstein,Hellenistic Mystery Religions, 338-42; M M. Fischer, Tendenzund Absicht
des Epheserbriefes,FRLANT 111 (G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1973) 158-60; see
Rdsemann, Leib, 147-50; and Jervell, Imago, 130-40, for parallels;
"Die
W.
Matthias,
alte und
also
der neue Mensch in der Anthropologie des Paulus," EvTh 17 (1957) 385-97, esp. 386-87. The text

47
knowledge
Gnostic
idea
is
2)
in
the
the
the
or,
of salvation which
recipient clothed with
identity
into
divine
his
by
heavenly
the
true
the
taken
world and
up
redeemer and
of
infused with its enlightenment and power.133
However, when Paul uses clothing imagery, he doesnot refer to a
into
divine
infusion
transformation
the
a
element
of a
of a person or
constitutional
him,
Other
image
kind.
For
different
the
objections can
pictures change of a
person.
involve
different
ideas
be
belong
that
1)
to
often
a
sphere of
also raised: most parallels
from the o-61-ta
the release of the 77ve0ga
prison; 2) none of the parallels cited predates
the New Testament; 3) a true parallel with "man" or "person" as the object of the
&Uw / v6w verbs has not been found; and 4) the proponents of this view find it
difficult to explain how Paul came into direct contact with these ideas.134In Gnostic
texts there is no concept of an "old" and a "new" man becausethe inner man, the
135AII
(pneuma-eikon)
himself.
in
is
&6wTrosthis
the
militates
spirit-image
man,
background
in
Gnosticism.
the
against a
mystery religions or
Second,several scholars have suggested a connection between the clothing
imagery
136
If
the
Christian
baptism
(cf.
Gal.
3:
the
27-28).
so,
metaphor and
event of
almost universally and exclusively cited in support of this interpretation
2.24; 11.21-24.

is Apuleius, Metamorphoses

133R.Bultmann, The Old and the New Man, trans. K. Crim (Richmond: John Knox Press,
1964 [three essays published in 1924,1932,19591) passim; H. Schlier, Wom Menschenbild des
Neuen Testaments," in Der alte und der neueMensch, ed. G. von Rad et al., BEvT 8 (Mnchen:
Kaiser Verlag, 1942) 24-36; id., Christus und die Kirche im Epheserbrief (Tbingen: J. C. B. Mohr,
1930) 27-37; Ksemann, Leib, 87-94; F. W. Eltester, Eikon im Neuen Testament, BWANT 23
(Berlin: Tpelmann, 1958) 156-64; and E. Brandenburger, Ulter und neuer Mensch, erster und
letzter Adam-Anthropos, " in Vom alten zum neuenAdam, ed. W. Strolz, WR 13 (Freiburg / Basel
Wien: Herder, 1986) 182-223.
134E.g., Bultmann, Theology, 1:174,251.
135SeeJervell, Imago, 240-41; O'Brien, Colossians, 189;
and van der Horst,
"Observations," 181-87.
136R.C. Tannehill, Dying
and Rising with Christ. A Study in Pauline Theology,BZNW 32
(Berlin: T6pelmann, 1967) 52-54; G. R. Beasley-Murray, Baptism in the New Testament, 2nd ed.
(Exeter: Paternoster Press, 1972) 148-49;F. Zeilinger, Der Erstgeboreneder Sch6pfung.
Untersuchungenzur Formalstruktur und TheologiedesKolosserbriefes(Wien: Herder Verlag, 1974)
152; R. Scroggsand M I. Groff, "Baptism in Mark: Dying and Rising with Christ, " JBL 92 (1973)
539-40; and van der Horst, "Observations," 182.

48
/
ML'W
!
be
the
K86W
verbs may
of
an allusion to the custom of putting off old garments
baptism.
However,
from
this
the
of
on
new
waters
ones after emerging
and putting
baptismal
in
later,
the
ceremonies
custom, which occurs
was probably not practiced
inherently
137
is
Also,
in
Pauline
there
the
nothing
early church.
even
usage,
of
"baptismal" about the clothing metaphor itself (cf, 1 Thess. 5:8; Rom. 13:12,14).
Third, as noted above, the pervasive influence of Judaism on Paul causes
influence
in
direction.
look
Many
interpreters
that
the
to
of pagan
alleged
counter
one
ideas by an appeal to Jewish antecedents. Barth points out several possibilities: 1)
Philo's doctrine on the creation of two men (one earthly, one spiritual); 1382) a wide
3)
139
the
Adam;
first
Jewish
to
the
and
references
variety of apocalyptic and early
"corporate solidarity" concept that underlies the Old Testament and subsequent
Jewish references to Israel's patriarchs, the king, or the servant of the Lord-140 To
language
be
Genesis
Jewish
Adam
in
1-3
to
this must
proselyte
added references
and
in rabbinic writings.
In response, Philo's treatment of the ideal man and the earthly man as the
is
between
for
"old"
Paul's
"new
the
the
unlikely since
man"
antithesis
and
source

137Evidencefor this conclusion can be found in J. D. G. Dunn, Baptism in the Holy Spirit,
SBT 15,2nd series (Naperville, IL: Allenson, 1970) 109-10, esp. n16. If Gospel of Thomas 37
"The
Garments
Christian
baptismal
Smith,
by
Z.
J.
to
of
an
allusion
practice
contains
as argued
Shame," HR 5 (1965) 217-38, then this would be the earliest evidence, probably from the first half
of the 2nd century AD. With respect to other later material that contains a reference to the practice,
"An
Ancient
A.
F.
J.
IUijn,
Syriac Baptismal Liturgy in the Syriac Acts of John, " in XAFIS AW
see
S001A, FS for M H. Rengstorf, ed. U. Luck (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1964) 216-28.
138E.g., Leg. All. 1.31-32,53-55; 2.4; 3.104; Op., 134.
139For example, 4 Ezra 3:7-10,21-26; 4:30-32; 7:11-14,116-31; 8:44-45; 2 Enoch 30-31;
and 2 Bar. 54.14-19,115-19, although late 1st century, probably reflect ideas already current in
Paul's time. SeeR. Scroggs,The Last Adam: A Study in Pauline Anthropology (Philadelphia:
Fortress Press, 1966) 59-75,97-111; and J. R. Levison, Portraits of Adam in Early Judaism: From
Sirach to 2 Baruch, JSPSup (Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1988), who presents a critique of previous
Adam
background
for Pauline theology (14-23) and points out the diversity that
of
as
studies
characterized early Jewish interpretations of Adam.
140See pp. 40-41
above; and Barth, Ephesians, 2: 538 n200.

49
Philo doesnot use these terms and lacks a clear eschatological perspective.141
Although Philonic and later Jewish texts show the influence of Gnostic thought
fall
Genesis
Adam
the
the
early
and
patterns,
narratives and extensive reflection on
in late SecondTemple Judaism provide ample Jewish tradition prior to Paul's time. 142
The treatment of Adam takes place within the broader framework of
Jewish views on creation, the fall, and new creation. In Jewish thought, he is the
him,
God
individual
in
human
the
creating
who represents
archetypal
whole
race, and,
is
143
Adam
In
the
often exalted
eschatological person as well.
some sources,
created
beings
to
human
his
frequently
God
intended
those
that
attributes
and
cited as
144
Considerable
in
those
they-will
the
to
possess
possess now and
age come.
human
is
Ada&s
its
the
to
transgression
race.
also given
and
attention
effects on
According to some strands of Jewish thinking, the salvation of the end time (Endzeit)
in
his
lost
had
be
him
Adam
humanity
the
that
through
restoration of all
would
and
fall at the beginning (Urzeit). 145 The eschaton was pictured as the new creation-the
fall
the
the
and the restoration of paradise-in
of
effects
of
reversal

the Old

Testament prophets (e.g., Isa. 65: 17; 66: 22; 51: 3; 4: 2; Amos 9: 12; Isa. 11:6-9; 65: 25;

141Pace E. Kamlah, Die Form der katalogischen Pardnese in Neuen Testament, WUNT 7
(Tiibingen: J. C. B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1964) 204; see Lohse, Colossians, 142 n60; and 0. Merk,
Handeln aus Glauben: Die Motivierungen der paulinischen Ethik, MThSt 5 (Marburg: Elwert, 1968)
206.
142E.g., Sir. 17: 1-12; Wis. 2: 23-24; 15: 1-11; 4 Ezra 3: 7-10,21-26; 7: 11; Jub. 3.17-31; 2
Bar. 17.3; 18.2; 48.42-43; 54.14-19; see further Levison, Portraits of Adam, 35-48,123-24,130-36.
143E.g., 4 Ezra 7:97,125; 2 Bar. 72.1-74.4; 1 Enoch 62.15-16; 85-90; T. Levi 18.4.
144E.g., Sir. 49: 16
with 4 Ezra 7:95-97; 2 Enoch 30.11 with 1 Enoch 38.4; 39-7-9;
103.2-3; and 2 Bar. 15.8; 49.3,51; 54.15,19,21.
See Scroggs, The Last Adam, 23-30,54-60.
145Genesis Rabbah 12.6 lists
six things lost to Adam that are to be restored in the world
to come. Three of these refer to Adam himself. his glory, life, and stature. The other three are
deprivations affecting the cosmos that will also be restored: the spontaneous reproduction of plants
and trees, the brilliance of the luminaries, and peace between animals and people.

50
27:1; 24:21; 25:8; 26:19) and in early Judaism (e.g., 1 Enoch 4-5; 72:1; 91:16; 2 Bar.
32:6; 44:12; 1QS 4:23; 1QH 3:22; 11:12) as well as in early Christian eschatology
(e.g., 2 Pet. 3:13).146
Some have also associatedthe clothing imagery with the restoration in the
Jewish Urzeit-equals-Endzeit schemementioned above.147Nils Dahl points out that
the positive correlation of protology (Urzeit) and eschatology (Endzeit) was as much a
feature of Jewish eschatology as the contrast between this age and the age to come,
the
firm
it
the
the
tradition
church,
early
also
a
position
common
of
and was
within
New Testament, and especially the Pauline epistles.148This correlation is expressed
in several themes such as the creation / new creation motif and the Adam / Christ
typology, but the common thought running throughout all these discussionsis the
idea that "the end will bring the final realization of what, from the beginning, was the
Rev.
12;
6,
God,
Creator,
himself
first
(Isa.
is
last
the
the
xliv. xlviii.
who
will of
and the
L8, xxi. 6, etc.)."149 However, none of this was expressedby an "old man / new man"
Jewish
both
in
Though
UrzeitlEndzeit
the
themes
and
many of
appear
motif.
Christian eschatology,there is a shift of focus and a sharp difference of emphasis in
the latter. The superiority of the new creation is emphasized more in the New
Testament (especially by Paul) than is usual in Judaism becauseof Jesus, the
but
Fall,
before
Messiah.
Paul
does
the
Adam
the
crucified, risen
not speak of
glory of
Gal.
Cor.
3:
27;
"last
Adam,
Christ,
"
(cf.
2
5:
17;
the
the
the
and
glory of
of
new creation
146SeeW. D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism: SomeRabbinic Elements in Pauline
Theology, 4th ed. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1980) 36-57; Scroggs, The Last Adam, 32-58,70;
D. S. Russell, Method and Message,280-84; and N. Dahl, "Christ, Creation and the Church, " in The
Background of the New Testament and its Eschatology, ed. W. D. Davies and D. Daube (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1956) 422-43.
147W. A. Meeks, The First Urban Christians: The Social World
(New
Paul
Apostle
the
of
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1983) 155,188; id., "Image of Androgyne, " HR 13 (1974) 165208, esp. 207-08.
148Dahl, "Christ,
1491bid., 429.

Creation

and the Church, " 423, with

supporting

references.

51
6:15). Nevertheless, this correlation provides for several applications of the creation
history
to
dealings
God's
in
that
humankind
to
our
useful
are
redemptive
with
pattern
study.
Another area of potential influence can be found in Jewish proselyte
language. Erik Sj6berg has gathered material from Jewish rabbinic texts that speak
into
"created
herself
Israel
"created
Gentile
a new
as
proselyte as
anew" and of
of a
being."150The idea of creating a Gentile anew and making him / her a proselyte may
have been known in pre-Christian, Hellenistic Judaism as shown by the conversion
heavenly
by
On
becoming
Aseneth.
told
a
a proselyte, she was
experienceof
formed
be
from
"Behold,
alive
made
today,
and
anew
and
will
renewed
you
messenger:
became
Gentile
declared
A
11151
a
that
teaching
a
when
common rabbinic
again ....
to
from
he
of
one
unholiness
of
a
condition
change
experienced
a
radical
proselyte,
but
to
152
Such
to
also
holiness.
a proselyte was not only compared one newly created
153
have
he
to
was
no previous existence.
as
such
considered
and
a newborn child,
his
that
have
former
sins
indicates
This
that a proselyte's
ceasedand
relationships
have been forgiven.
/
He
Judaism.
life
begins
for
Gentile
to
Thus, a whole new
she
a
converted
is
/
her,
him
there
For
legal,
a
social, and religious situation.
enters a completely new
Indeed,
there
longer
into
former
beginning.
The
things
taken
are
account.
are no
new
150E.Sj6berg, "Wiedergeburt und Neusch6pfung im. palastinensischen Judentum, " StTh
4 (1950) 44-85, esp. 45-61. For example: Gen. Rab. 39.14; Ex. Rab. 15.6; Lev. Rab. 30.3; Num.
Rab. 11.2 (about Abraham); Cant. Rab. 1.3.3,8.1-5 (about Israel); and Midr. Ps. 18.1.
151Josephand Aseneth 15.5 (4), cf. also 8.9-11,27.10. The date and origin of this
Hellenistic Jewish romance is disputed, but most scholars believe it originated in Egypt between
100 BC and AD 115; see C. Burchard, "Joseph and Aseneth" in The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha,
Charlesworth,
Cf.
H.
(Garden
City,
J.
2
NY:
Doubleday
&
Company,
Inc.,
1985)
1878-88.
vol.
ed.
also Cant. Rab. 8.1-2.
152Seeb. Yeb. 11a, 42a, 98a; b. Ket. 4.3;
and b. Sanh. 57b, 58a.
153See b. Yeb. 22a, 23a, 48b, 62a; b. Bek. 47a;
and H. Strack and P. Billerbeck,
Kommentar zum Neuen Testament aus Talmud und Midrasch [Str-B], ed. J. Jeremias, 6 vols.
(Munich: C. H. Beck, 1922-61) 2:423.

52
have
Paul's
influenced
Christian
that
to
may
conversion
somestriking analogies
thinking. Nevertheless, analogy is not necessarily origin. The "old man / new man"
least
is
different,
if
does
Paul's
totally
at
not appear, and
understanding, not
motif
distinctive in this religio-cultural milieu.
1.3.4 Conclusion
There is no mention of the "old man / new man" metaphor in Hellenistic or

Jewish texts prior to Paul. However, if we accept the above assessment, the Hebrew
Scriptures and a Jewish milieu provide the best conceptual background for the "old
draws
he
it
that
At
in
Paul's
/
on
this
thought.
appears
point
motif
man"
new
man
the Adam / Christ typology and its corporate associations within his distinctive
he
Then
/
formulate
"old
terminology.
framework
to
the
man new man"
eschatological
takes up a common clothing metaphor representing a change of condition and
in
to
in
from
his
order capture
own thinking
character and attaches these two objects
be
ideas
his
If
fashion
in
an
this
theology.
well
may
motif
so,
central
some
summary
Now
formulation
Paul
Christian
that
to
prepared
thought.
are
we
contributed
original
to survey various views on the referential meaning of this Pauline language and motif.
1.4 Views on the Meaning of the "Old Man / New Man! '
Various attempts have been made to explain the meaning and function of
this double Pauline metaphor. Translators who retain the noun "man" in their
by an
translation reflect the Greek text more literally than those who render dvOpmws/
"154
life.
living
"nature,
"
"self,
"
"being,
"
"humanity,
"way
"
term
of
such as
or
abstract
Literal translations alone, however, give little help in understanding the meaning of

154Many translations give the


/
6
dvOpO)7TOS'
its
phrase 6 7TaAat6sKatv6S'
counterpart
and
interpretive
dtOpwirog
Col.
9-10
"old
/
in
3:
(RSV,
NEB
an
rendering
such
as:
nature
new
vlosnature"
"the
Eph.
4:
22,24);
man we once were / new humanity" (NEB in Rom. 6: 6 and Eph. 2: 15
and
/
"old
(NJB,
NAS,
NRSV, NIV); "sinful / renewed being" (Jeremias,
self
new
self'
respectively);
TDNT, 1:365); and "old way of living / new life" (Phillips). The KJV and ASV have the literal
/
"old
new man. "
man
rendering

53
the "old" and the "new man. " The difficulty of this task is illustrated by the array of
defining terms and the diversity of views among scholars. Barth summarizes the
headings:
the
individual
the
three
the
and
view,
corporate
view,
various views under
155
to
Barth
The
turns
out
prefers,
representative view, which
representative view.
be a defining element of the corporate view, so it will not be considered separately.156
We shall use the first two categories as a convenient taxonomy for our discussion,
bearing in mind that they are not mutually exclusive.
1.4.1 The Individual

View

Interpreters who hold this view, treat the terms "old man" and "new man"
that
life
They
individual
to
the
maintain
experience of each
person.
as a reference
"
"new
his
his
"old
has
to
to
man.
own
own
put off
man" and put on
every person
Within this group of interpreters, however, there are two main explanations of these
terms.
1.4.1.1 The Old Nature Versus the New Nature.

Some interpreters in

this group understand the contrast between the "old" and the "new man" as a conflict
"new
between
believer
"old
derived
from
the
Adam
the
the
nature"
and
nature"
within
derived from Christ. 157In this view, the terms refer to distinguishable moral

155Barth, Ephesians, 2: 537-40.

156Barth, Ephesians, 2:539, states his preference for the representative person view
becauseit "includes the former two and gives them proper edge and depth." For him, the "old man"
denote
Christ
Adam
"new
and
man"
respectively and each one rules over the people connected
and
to them determining their attitudes and actions. He claims that the christological understanding of
the term "new man" in Eph. 4:24 is supported by the use of the term "man" elsewhere in Ephesians
(cf.
Christ
/
2:
15;
to
3:
16-17;
4:
13)
"put
the
relation
specific
as
on put off' metaphor
with
as well
Christ
in
Gal.
Rom.
the
3:
27
13:14. However, these texts involve issues that
as
object
and
with
militate against viewing the "new man" as Christ Himself as we shall see.
157Someform of this view has been held in
various Christian circles since the time of the
Reformation. Some, among others, who hold this view are: M. Luther, Lectures on Romans, trans.
W.
Pauck, LCC (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1961) 15:182; id., Luther's Works, eds.
and ed.
J. Pelikan and H. T. Lehman (Philadelphia: Muhlenburg Press, 1958) 26:352, where he says, "by
propagation from Adam we have acquired this garment, that is, this corrupt and sinful nature,
'the
Paul
calls
old man;...J. Calvin, The Epistles of Paul the Apostle to the Romans and to the
which
Thessalonians, trans. R. Mackenzie, eds. D. W. Torrance and T. F. Torrance (Grand Rapids:

54
in
Christian,
hence a coexistenceof "two natures, " the "old" and the
the
components
"new" nature. Accordingly, in Romans 6:6, the "old man" is judged and his power is
"rendered inoperative" at one's conversion, but he remains active. He does not cease
to exist. Thus the "old man" is a metaphor for the corrupt, sinful nature variously
describedas: the rebel within, the sinful disposition, indwelling sin, the inborn
tendency to evil, the propensity to sin, the sin principle, the sin nature, the old Adamic
"
"flesh.
"
The
"old
"new
the
is
in
the
man, a
nature, or even
man"
conflict with
for
(sinless)
the
metaphor
nature implanted in (added to) the Christian at conversion,
described
the
is
"inner
the
the
the
of
man
as:
new
nature,
spiritual nature, or,
which
heart. " When a believer sins, he is acting out of the old nature / man, which he still
he
/
he
does
is
he
is
the
what good,
acting out of
retains; when
new nature man, which
has received. The moral struggle of the Christian life, in this view, is the struggle
between these two natures within the believer's being.
The "put off / put on" constructions in Colossians 3:9-10 and especially
Ephesians 4:22-24 are usually taken as imperative in force. They call for an ethical
responseand thus are a reference to progressive renewal in the Christian that
involves a continual "putting off of the old man" and a "putting on of the new man."
Thus, the "old man" and the "new man" coe)dst,that is, the believer is understood to
be partly an "old" and partly a "new man" at the same time, and this antithesis is
functionally equivalent to what Paul refers to elsewhere as the conflict between the
flesh and the Spirit (cf. Gal. 5:16-17).
Many of these interpreters believe that the conflict between the old and the
/
is
Christian
the
ongoing
man
nature
new
conflict with sin that is not fully and finally
Eerdmans, 1976) at Rom. 6:6; id., Institutes of the Christian Religion, ed. J. T. McNeill, trans. F. L.
Battles, LCC (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1960) 1:603; J. Owen, in The Works of John Owen,
H.
Goold,
(reprint,
W.
16
London: Banner of Truth, 1965) 3:222, "This'old manis the
vols.
ed.
corruption of our nature; " C. Hodge, Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans (reprint, Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1950 [18861)197; J. B. Lightfoot, St. Paul's Epistles to the Colossians and to
Philemon (reprint of 9th ed., Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1959) 209, who says that each believer has
in himself a two-fold moral potentiality-the "old man" and the "new man; " and L. S. Chafer, He
That Is Spiritual (reprint, Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1967 [19241) 113-14,144-45.

55
"putting
the
Thus,
Christian's
the
the
of
off
end of a
earthly e2dstence.
resolveduntil
lifelong,
is
"putting
the
the
the
gradual processof
on of
new man"
old man" and
158
the
"two
Some
this
ongoing
view
affirm
natures"
sanctification.
within
progressive
total corruption of the "old man / nature" but, at the same time, the present
is
believe
this
/
however,
"new
"159
Others,
that
the
conflict
man nature.
perfection of
is
Christian
initial
the
the
eradicated
conflict with sin until
sin principle within
only
finally
Christian
is
"old
the
time
the
the
achieves a state of
crucified at
man"
and
160
complete sanctification.
1.4.1.2 The Old Self and the New Self. The interpreters in this group
to
"new
between
"old"
an
the
the
the
a
reference
as
and
man"
contrast
understand
in
Adam"
"in
is,
before
the
individual
person
and after conversion respectively, that
"in
Christ.
"
In
the
to
the
terms
this
the
person
to
whole
view,
refer
person
contrast
Christ.
through
lordship
Adam
lordship
of grace
or under the
of sin through
under the
The "old man" is a metaphor for one's pre-conversion identity and status, and the
"new man" is a metaphor for the Christian's post-conversion identity and status.
These interpreters hold that in Romans 6:6 Paul declares that the "old
the
death
Christ
(i.
to
to
the
result
with
person enslaved sin) was put
with
man" e.,
is
"new
is
longer
by
the
he
Presumably,
man"
that
a slave to sin.
contrast,
or she no

158H. Bavinck, Magnalia Dei, 2nd ed. (Kampen: Kok, 1931) 474-75; id., Our Reasonable
Faith, trans. H. Zylstra (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956) 492-93; A. A. Hoekema, "The Struggle
Between Old and New Natures in the Converted Man, " BETS 5 (1962) 42-50, who later changed his
Exposition
W.
Hendriksen,
Ephesians
(Grand
Rapids:
Baker,
213-14.
1967)
of
view; and
159J.T. Mueller, Christian Dogmatics (St. Louis: Concordia, 1934) 388, states: "The
believer is perfectly holy in so far as he is a new man." Also: "When a true believer sins, it is not his
but
See
him
his
(399).
in
Old
Adam,
flesh"
his
the
that
or
new
man
sins,
self
corrupt
regenerated
Spiritual,
Is
He
That
148.
Chafer,
also
160B.Carradine, The Old Man (Chicago: The Christian Witness Company, 1965 [18961)
118-22;H. 0. Wiley, Christian Theology (Kansas City: The Nazarene Publishing House, 1940)
2:481-83, "The 'old man' must be kept on the cross until he dies; and when sin expires, in that
lives
is
the full life of perfect love" (483); this view is
the
sanctified
and
entirely
soul
moment
by
W.
"The
held
Taylor,
Epistle
but
to the Ephesians," in Beacon Bible Commentary,
not
mentioned
City:
Beacon
Hill
Press,
(Kansas
Harper
1965)
F.
A.
9:218-21, "the'old man'is the camal mind,
ed.
in
is
which removed the experienceof entire sanctification" (220).

56
the whole person under the lordship of Christ. This is the basis for and the ruling
is
from
"old"
"new"
believer's
life-conduct.
The
to
the
transfer
usually said
principle of
to have occurred at the time of faith / baptism (conversion).161
In the ethical texts of Colossians 3 and Ephesians 4, however, the contrast
between the "old" and "new man" is understood in two distinct ways. First, many
interpreters in this group take at least one (Eph. 4:22-24) or both of these passages
(Col. 3:9-10 and Eph. 4:22-24) as imperative in force. They see Paul urging his
daily
bring
into
their
their
to
conversionconduct
correspondence
with
readers
initiation position by exhorting them to "put off the old man" and "put on the new
that
Christian's
"
In
terms
to
the
this
the
such
are applied
ethical situation
way
man.
he is to turn from the old, pre-conversion life of sin and error to the new, postis
there
Consequently,
(e.
life
Eph.
4:
22-24).
truth
g.,
of righteousness and
conversion
Romans
in
"old
from
(baptismal)
the
term
man"
a conversion-initiation
use of
a shift
6:6 to an ethical use in Colossians 3 and especially Ephesians 4. In these "ethical"
(vices)
be
lace
his
believing
dis
Paul
is
the
to
to
conduct
P
said
urging
readers
passages
dual
(virtues)
"old
"new
"
The
the
the
the
metaphor,
man" with
conduct
of
man.
of
/
"already
/
both
"once
the
transfer
the
not
then, encompasses
of conversion and
now"
162
Christian
tension
of
existence.
yet"

161j. Jeremias, TDNT, 1:365-66, states that the "old man" denotes "the sinful being of
the unconverted man" and the "new man" denotes "the renewed being of the convert to Christ"
(365). Someinterpreters use regeneration language, viz., "the unregenerate and regenerate man,11to
(cf.
Bruce,
Epistles,
146-47 n83).
this
antithesis
express
162Some,among others, who take this position are: H. A. W. Meyer, Critical and
Exegetical Handbook to the Epistle to the Romans, trans. J. C. Moore, 5th ed. (Edinburgh: T. & T.
Clark, 1881) 1:288; W. Sanday and A. C. Headlam, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the
Epistle to the Romans, 5th ed., ICC (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1902) 158; J. A. Robinson, St. Paul's
Epistle to the Ephesians, 2nd ed. (London: Macmillan, 1909) 108-11; B. Rey, 'Uhomme nouveau
d'apr6s S. Paul. Exdg6se de Rom. 6,4-11; Col. 3,5-15; Ep. 2,11-22; Ep. 4,22-24," RSPR 48:4 (1964)
603-29; 49:2 (1965) 161-95; C. E. B. Cranfield, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistle
to the Romans, 2 vols. ICC (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1975) 1:309; Lohse, Colossians, 141; Lincoln,
Ephesians, 285; D. Moo, The Epistle to the Romans, NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996) 37275. Both Lincoln (Ephesians, 285,291) and Moo (Romans, 374) et al. take Col. 3:9-10 as indicative
in force but Eph. 4:22-24 as imperative in force.

57
Second,some interpreters in this group take both "ethical" passagesas
indicative in force. They maintain that Paul is not exhorting believers to "put off the
"put
"
but
he
the
and
on
urges them to stop committing
man"
new man,
rather,
old
"put
because
have
have
"put
they
the
already
already
off
old man" and
various sins
"
"Putting
is
the
the
man.
new
off
old man" neither a gradual, continuous process
on
level,
duty,
it
is
individual
At
the
an accomplishedreality of salvation.
nor a present
faith / baptism is the dividing line between the "old man" (unregenerate person) and
the "new man" (regenerate person). Though there is continuity of person since the
individual,
the
"put
"put
is
the
the
the
off
old man" and
same
on
new man"
one who
discontinuity-a
is
emphasis on

in
identity
theological
status and
radical change of

to
"new
"old
"
The
dual
then,
the
the
only
applies
man" replaces
which
man.
metaphor,
the "once/ now" transfer of conversion.163Consequently, it is unwarranted to speak
the
believer
having
"new
him
/
her
both
"old"
the
the
the
at
man"
as
of
within
and
time.
/
his
her
being
both
"old"
"new
the
time,
the
the
same
or, of
same
man" at
and
To describe it another way, the "old man" was the believer in his / her predesires
by
the
deceived
conversion mode of existence-a person who was constantly
in
flesh
in
being
/
the
He
the
the
state of
and was
processof
corrupted.
of
she was
being "dead in sin" and "without God." The "new man" is the same person in his / her
basis
believer
the
lives
the
of
on
new post-conversion mode of existence-the
who
being
being
is
in
image
Christ.
/
is
in
He
the
the
renewed
gospeland
state of
of
she
"dead to sin" and "alive to God." In this way, the terms apply both to a state of
life
164
to
the
that
and
way
of
existence
within
state.
163Some,among others, who take this
position are: Abbott, Ephesians, 136,284;
J. Murray, Principles of Conduct. Aspectsof Biblical Ethics (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1957) 202-28;
id., The Epistle to the Romans, 2 vols., NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1968) 1:219-20; Best,
OneBody In Christ, 67-68; van Roon,Authenticity of Ephesians, 325-49; D. M. Lloyd-Jones, Romans:
An Exposition of Chapter 6, The New Man (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1973) 62, "The'old man'is
the man I used to be in Adam.... It is the man I once was, but which I am no longer. "
164Seefurther, van Roon,Authenticity
of Ephesians, 336-40; Kdsemann, "On Paul's
Anthropology, " 1-31, "Thus baptism marks the death of the old man and the miraculous beginning

58
1.4.2 The Corporate View
The interpreters who hold this view maintain that the "old man" is a
designation for sinful humanity as a whole (old humanity) and the "new man" is a
Christ
Body
Church,
is,
the
for
humanity
the
that
designation
of
as a whole,
redeemed
is
165
In
there
humanity).
(new
one
only
the
the
effect,
creation
of
new
expression
as
"old man" and one "new man, " each a collective entity. The death and resurrection of
"
"new.
the
"old"
between
dividing
line
history
the
Christ in redemptive
and
mark the
life
beginning
dawns,
In this event the new creation
of a new order of
representing the
be
it
because
"man"
is
The
term
for humankind.
can used
considered appropriate
(see
42
"humanity"
above).
p.
generically and collectively, meaning
Con
1
12-19;
5:
(Rom.
Adam-Christ
typology
This view arises out of the
15:21-22)45-49) in that the "old man" refers to sinful humanity in solidarity with
(see
Christ
Adam and the "new man" refers to redeemedhumanity in solidarity with
15,
2:
Ephesians
in
"one
by
It
is
the
40-41
new man"
expression
reinforced
above).
pp.
Christ.
Body
for
Church,
designation
the
the
is
of
corporate
which viewed as a
(2:
16),
body"
"one
descriptions
Church
Ephesians
a
the
in
the
Elsewhere
of
as
"mature man" (4:13), and "the bride of Christ" (5:22-33) appear to uphold a corporate
view.
In support of this view, Hermann Ridderbos argues that the contrast
between the "old man" and "new man" is not to be understood primarily and only as a
dies;
the
(8);
".
banner
the
truly
life
the
the
and
radically
old
man
of
resurrection"
under
of a new
..like
(10).
the
be
is
to
therefore
of
old"
a metamorphosis
understood as something
not
new man
165Some,among others, who hold someform of this view are: C. F. D. Moule, The Epistles
Press,
1968)
University
(Cambridge:
Cambridge
Philemon,
CGTSC
3rd
Colossians
to
the
to
ed.,
and
119; Barrett, From First Adam to Last, 92-99, who says the "old man / new man" terms are applied
is
Christian,
individual
but
the
the
they
to
to
a
new community-"man"
also point
primarily

historical and individual term for Paul, but it is also an eschatological and collective term; id.,
Romans, 125, "'The old man'is Adam or rather ourselves in union with Adam and'the new man'is
Christ, or rather, ourselves in union with Christ; " Barth, Ephesians, 2: 539, who relates the "old
directly
Adam
Christ
"new
to
more
and
man"
respectively (see footnote 156 above);
man" and
Ridderbos, Paul, 62-64,205-14,224, who also acknowledges the personal application of this to the
individual at conversion; Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 24-30,48-54; and O'Brien, Colossians, 18993.

59
life
faith
/
baptism
in
individual
the
that
the
through
comes
about
of
change
Christian, but it is a change that took place oncein history with the death and
"old
Christ.
because
It
has
Christians
in
their
their
existence
resurrection of
affected
Christ
man" was crucified with
on Golgotha (Rom. 6:6). In His death and resurrection
believers have been "transferred to the new order of life-the

life order of the new

"put
"166
At
Ridderbos,
the
the
the
time,
to
off
new man.
creation,
same
according
in
Colossians
imagery
3:9-10 and Ephesians 4:22-24 refers to the transition
put on"
that came about in the life history of the individual believer by faith / baptism. Yet
/
faith
in
because
here,
terms
these
retain a supra-individual significance
even
baptism believers apply to themselves that which has already taken place in Christ.
In faith / baptism they bid farewell to the old mode of existence ("old man") and
becomeincorporated into the new mode of existence, the Church, which Christ has
Himself
"one
in
as
new man" (Eph. 2:15).167
created
1.4.3 Summary

The classification of views concerning the "old man" and the "new man" given
in
the
various ways which scholars have understood these metaphors
abovepresents
in the Pauline corpus. Some explain them in individual salvation-historical terms;
human
being
they
to
are
applicable
every
consequently
subject to certain conditions.
Some see them as metaphors related to the "once / now" conversion transfer only,
/
both
/
"already
"once
them
the
the
not
as encompassing
while others view
now" and
Christian
Still
existence.
of
others emphasize a corporate redemptive-historical
yet"
dimension; consequently there is only one "old man" and one "new man, " each a
linked
Adam
Christ
to
entity
and
collective
respectively. Some even equate the "old

166Ridderbos, Paul, 63,208;


also note Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 25-30,46-54.
1671bid., Paul, 223-24.

60
Adam
directly.
At
is
"new
Christ
the
there
man" with
and
a
any
man" with
rate,
corporate structure involved for both the "old" and the "new man. "
In light of these options and the integrative nature of Paul's theology, it is

in
Pauline
that
double
this
some scholars understand
not surprising
metaphor a
multi-dimensional sensethat is contextually defined. Thus they subscribe to a
line
being
the
to
of
views presented abovewithout
combination of
confined any one
interpretation. 168Nevertheless, this classification of views provides a useful point of
departure for a detailed investigation of the Pauline passageswhere these terms
leads
final
This
in
us, a
section, to identify the key issues that will guide our
appear.
investigation and to state our method of approach.
1.5 Key Questions and Method of Approach
This study proposesto deal with the meaning and function of the "old man /
new man" metaphor as a motif in Paul's theology. The contributions of the various
in
the
be
together
perspectives and viewpoints presented above may now
gathered
form of three major questions that set forth the rationale for this study and form its
agenda.

1.5.1 Key Questions


First, what is the meaning of the Pauline double metaphor "old man / new
human
for
To
is
distinctive
the
man"?
elaborate,
referent
each a
component of
figure,
nature, a representative
a corporate community of people, an individual
person, or a combination of these referents? Is the metaphor applied in only one way

168For example, for some,the "new


man" is the Church in Eph. 2:15 and the individual
person in Christ in Eph. 4:24 and Col. 3:10: Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 115; Barrett, From First
Adam to Last, 92-99; O'Brien, Colossians, 189; and Lincoln, Ephesians, 283-289. For others, the
"new man" refers to Christ, the Church, and the believing individual-all three: Caird, Paul's
Letters, 206; Bruce, Epistles, 147 n83,299-300,359; and Dahl, "Christ, Creation, and the Church,"
436, where he states: "the new man is not simply the converted individual, but an eschatological
entity, personal, corporate and pneumatic, nearly identical with Christ himself "

61
depending
the
in
is
it
Pauline
the
throughout
on
ways
applied various
corpus, or,
it
individual
Does
or a corporate structure?
operate within an
context?
Second,do the "old man" and the "new man" coexist at both the individual
he
does
to
does
"old
level?
To
the
man" continue exist, or
elaborate,
and the corporate
between
the
is
former,
the
in
If
time?
the
to
relationship
what
come an end at a point
"old
from
to
does
If
latter,
transfer
the
"new
the
"old man" and the
man"
when
man"?
"new man" take place? Is it a singular, one-time event, or, is it a gradual process?
Third, what was Paul's purpose in using this double metaphor? To elaborate,
(the
(the
indicative)
doctrinal
doesit function as
or practical exhortation
affirmation
it
does
/
Paul's
"once
Does
it
both?
imperative) or
now" construct or
apply only to
his
theology?
/
/
"already
"once
both
the
the
of
not yet" structure
now" and
encompass
Doesit serve more than one purpose for Paul at the same time?
1.5.2 Method of Approach
The above questions can only be answered satisfactorily after a thorough
Paul
in
four
both
the
the context and the content of
investigation of
passages which
for
this
(see
Thus
double
3-4
the
method of approach
metaphor
pp.
above).
uses this
light
the
in
Then,
detailed
is
treatment
these
of
of
passages.
exegetical
study a
final
forth
in
the
to
these
chapter.
questions
answers
results, we will set
The order in which we will consider the Pauline texts is complicated by two
factors: 1) the chronology of Paul's letters, and 2) the scopeof the metaphor,
both
2:
15;
the
"new
in
Ephesians
"old
in
Romans
6:
6;
the
the
and
man"
man"
namely,
"old man" and "new man" in Colossians 3:9-10 and Ephesians 4:22-24. The
do
depend
theory
this
present
of
study
chronological
not
on
any
particular
conclusions
development
hypothesis
the
Paul's
169
The
the
thought.
of
about
any
of
problem
or
169Though we do
not see signs of major theological development in Paul's thought, there
Yet
differences
in
in
he
the
himself
in
different
are
way
which
expressed
certainly
circumstances.
behind varying formulations
The variations are
there is a basic consistency of theological thinking.
developments
in
as
presentation
and argument.
viewed

62
Paul's
letters
is a complex one, but we maintain that Romans precedes
sequenceof
the other two and consider it likely that ColossiansprecedesEphesians but both
from
his
his
Roman
imprisonment
the
time
the
same
comeat roughly
near
end of
life. 170The order in which we will discussthe texts, however, is topical based on the
"old
to
the
single reference
man" in Romans 6:6, the "new man" in Ephesians 2:15,
Colossians
3:
9-10
/
both
in
"put
together
the
with
clothing
and
metaphor
off put on"
and Ephesians 4:22-24.
In addition to the exegetical analysis of the "old man / new man" passages,
this study also seeks to relate these terms to Paul's anthropology and to his
fact
the
Most
redemptive-historical, eschatological perspective.
scholars recognize
that there is a tension between the present and the future in Paul's eschatology,but
there is less agreement about the precise nature of it. These elements have often
been investigated in studies of various motifs, but, to our knowledge, no single, full/
has
been
from
"old
the
the
man new man"
scale study
undertaken
perspective of
intended
is
This
the
to
the
motif with a view answering
questions stated above.
following
the
contribution of
study.
Some of the questions we have raised have an important bearing on wider
issues in the interpretation of Paul's theology. The targeted passagesand the "old
/
have
man new man" metaphor
played an important role in various attempts to
describe the basis and nature of Paul's teaching on sanctification and spirituality.
Thus in the course of our discussion, we will attempt to shed some light on the
following points: 1) the relationship between the redemptive-historical, corporate
emphasis and the personal, individual emphasis in Paul's pastorally-applied theology;
2) the relationship between the "old man / new man" and other anthropological
antitheses mentioned at the outset of this chapter (p. 4); 3) the relationship between

170For discussion
and support of this view, see p. 6 nll

and pp. 20-21 above.

63
the "old man" and the "flesh" in the life of the Christian; and 4) the relationship
between the "indicative" and the "imperative" and their function in Pauline ethics.
These issues will be addressedat the conclusion of our study in the final chapter.
In light of these defining features, our thesis will proceedalong the following
lines. Chapter two will investigate the crucifixion of "our old man" with Christ in
Romans 6:6. Chapter three will discuss the creation of the "one new man" by Christ
in Ephesians 2: 15. Chapter four will deal with the formulations, "put off the old man"
the
"put
in
Colossians
five
3:
9-11
the
on
new man"
and
will examine
and chapter
formulations
in
Ephesians
On
investigations,
basis
4:
22-24.
the
these
same
of
function
draw
the
meaning,
chapter six will summarize and
some conclusions about
"old
"new
in
Pauline
theology.
the
the
man"
and
significance
of
man"
and

CHAPTER2
ROMANS6: 6
OUR OLD ALAN CRUCIFIED
The words "our old man was crucified with [Christ]" occur in Romans 6:6.
This is the first occurrence chronologically and a primary reference theologically to
the "old man" in the corpus Paulinum.

It is also the only text in this literature to

For
"
these
"new
its
the
"old
an
reasons,
the
man.
counterpart,
man" without
mention
This
is
important
to
in
its
this
text
our study.
context
of
examination
exegetical
(2.1)
the
Romans
historical
and
the
setting of
of
an
overview
with
proceed
will
chapter
6:
1Romans
form
discussion
(2.2),
literary context of Romans 6
of
of the structural
a
(2-4),
1-7
6:
6:
1-14,
in
Romans
14 (2.3), an exegesis of relevant elements
especially
(2.5).
"old
the
man"
and some concluding observations on

2.1 Historical

Setting of Romans

Paul wrote a letter to the Christians in Rome at an important transition


he
had
For
25
his
in
nurtured
and
planted
career.
nearly
years
missionary
point
he
Now
(15:
a
Mediterranean
15-21,23).
in
planning
the
was
region
eastern
churches
(15:
22-24,
labor
for
further
into
Spain
by
Rome
journey westward
missionary
way of
28). In his letter, he explained and defendedthe gospelhe preached to a Gentile
(majority) and Jewish (minority) Christian community. 1 He had neither founded nor
his
in
him
he
it
but
hoped
(1:
22-23),
11-13;
15:
this
would support
church
visited

lRomans contains evidence that Paul addressed both Jewish (e.g., 2:17-3: 8; 3:19-20,
27-31; 4: 1,11-15; 5:13-14,20; 6: 14; 7:1-25; 8:2-4; chs. 9-11; 14:1-6; 16:3,7,11) and Gentile (e.g.,
1:5-6,13-15; 11:13-32; 15:1-2,7-12) Christians. Consequently, a majority of scholars believe his
in
latter
the
Rome
in
Jewish
Gentile
Christians
the
was
a
mixed
community
of
and
with
audience
Word
See
J.
D.
G.
Dunn,
Romans
Romans
(Dallas:
1-8,
9-16,2
WBC
38B
38A,
vols.,
majority.
Books, 1988) 1:xlv-liv; J. A. Fitzmyer, Romans, AB 33 (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1993) 25-36,
9-13.
D.
Moo,
The
Epistle
Romans,
NICNT
(Grand
1996)
Eerdmans,
32-33;
to
the
Rapids:
and
esp.
C. E. B. Cranfield, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, 2 vols., ICC
(Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1975-79) 1:17-21, acknowledges both groups but does not wish to
in
influence.
their
relative
proportion
number
or
estimate
64

65
(15:
24,28-29).
To
in
Mediterranean
the
accomplish
region
western
missionary work
this purpose, among others, he wrote a letter containing substantial theological
(1:
1-15)
logical
2
by
Bracketed
structure.
a personal epistolary opening
content and
in
Rome,
(15:
Christian
14-16:
letter
27)3
that
to
the
the
community
relate
and closing
the main body (1:16-15: 13) is a "treatise" on Paul's gospel. It contains a sustained
important
theological
the
expounding
of
arguments
gospel
and
addressing
series
issuesfacing Christianity in the middle of the first century AD. In light of this,
Romans could be called a tractate letter; however, it is not a historically isolated
treatise nor a comprehensive summary of Paul's theology.
2.2 Literary

Context

Romans
6
of

2.2.1 The Wider Context: Romans 1-8


After introducing himself and announcing his plans to bring the gospel to
Rome (1: 1-15), Paul stated his theme in 1:16-17. He expressed his full confidence in
the gospel because it mediates "the power of God that brings salvation to everyone
because
has
"
both
Jew
believes,
Gentile
(1:
The
16).
such power
and
alike
gospel
who
it reveals "the righteousness of God," namely, His saving activity in Jesus Christ, and
His
live
faith
it
in
"right"
Qustified)
before
God
to
under
and
are put
all who respond
favor (1: 17).4
2Paul's purpose in writing is one of the most debated questions in the critical study of
Romans. Becausehe says little on the subject directly (d 15:15), many different answers have been
Rapids:
(Grand
issue,
On
Romans
in
L.
Morris,
Epistle
this
The
the
the
to
see
survey
of
views
given.
Eerdmans, 1988) 7-18; the essayscollected in K P. Donfried, ed., The Romans Debate. Revised and
Expanded Edition (Peabody,MA: Hendrickson, 1991);A. J. M. Wedderburn, The Reasonsfor Romans
(Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1988); and, with some critique of Wedderburn, A. J. Guerra, Romans
Apologetic
Tradition.
The
Purpose,
Genre,
SNTSMS
Audience
Paul's
81
Letter,
the
and
of
and
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995) 40-41,170-79. At the very least, one can say that
Paul had missionary, pastoral, and theological reasons for writing Romans.
3Most recent commentators believe there
are good grounds for concluding that ch. 16
(minus vv. 25-27 for some) was part of Paul's letter to Rome. For a review of the arguments and
Cranfield,
Romans,
1:9-11; Fitzmyer, Romans, 55-67; and Moo, Romans,
see
references,
additional
5-9.
4The theme of "righteousness" in Paul, expressed by 8tKaLoa*q
has
its
cognates,
and
discussion
in
considerable
recent years; see, e.g., M. T. Brauch, "Perspectives onGod's
generated

66
The righteousness of G6d by faith is the theme of the first major section of
the letter, 1:18-4: 25. To explain why it was necessary for God to manifest His
by
it
Gentile
Jew
alike, can experience only
and
righteousnessand why all people,
faith, Paul declared that all people,Jew and Gentile alike, have rebelled against God,
turned away from Him, and are bound by the enslaving power of sin (3:9). They are
judgment
do
God's
impartial
to
to
themselves
and gain a
anything
escape
unable of
this
God
Him
(1:
As
Paul
it,
20).
18-3:
change
can
saw only
right relationship with
the
has
by
He
done
through
this
sacrificial
graciously
making available
situation, and
death of His Son the means of becoming righteous before God. This enables Him to
Him,
from
dilemma,
in
their
them
to
and
a right relationship with
put
redeempeople
this
that
Paul
Again,
justice
(3:
His
21-26).
do
this
to
stressed
without violating
own
justification can only be obtained by faith for Jew and Gentile alike (3:27-31), as
illustrated clearly in the life of Abraham (4:1-25). Justification brings about for the
believer a new status before God and, at the same time, a new kind of existence. But
for
the
have
it
does
implications
is
What
this
present
the
new status?
nature of
what
lives of believers and their future? Paul addressedthese questions next.
Traditionally, scholars have viewed chapter 5 as the conclusion to Paul's
discussion of righteousness by faith in chapters 1-4.5 However, in recent years, with
5
have
been
inclined
to
place chapter with
persuasive exegetical arguments, many
Righteousness'in Recent German Discussion," in E. P. Sanders, Paul and Palestinian Judaism:
Comparison of Patterns of Religion (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1977) 523-42; M. C. de Boer, The
Defeat of Death: Apocalyptic Eschatology in 1 Corinthians 15 and Romans 5, JSNTSup 22 (Sheffield:
JSOT Press, 1988) 149-56, where he summarizes and evaluates the Bultmann-asemann debate
about the meaning of righteousness in Paul; Moo, Romans, 79-90; and Wedderburn, Reasons, 12223, who correctly emphasizes that the term "righteousness (of God)" has a "field of meaning" that
embracesdistinct aspects for Paul.
5The
best recent treatments defending this structure can be found in U. Wilckens, Der
,
Brief an die Rdmer, 3 vols., EKKNT (Neukirchen/Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag and Ziirich: Benziger,
1978-82) 1: 181-82,286-87; 2:3-5; M. Wolter, Rechtfertigung und zukanftiges Heil. Untersuchungen
BZNW
Rdm
5,1-11,
(Berlin:
43
Walter de Gruyter, 1978) 207-16; and Dunn, Romans, 1:242-44.
zu
See also J. Murray, The Epistle to the Romans, 2 vols., NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1959,
1965) 1:211-12; and Morris, Romans, 243 n1. Some argue for a major transition at 5: 12; see F. J.
Leenhardt, The Epistle to the Romans: A Commentary, trans. H. Knight, CNT 6 (London:
Lutterworth, 1960,131; and A. Feuillet, "Le r6gne de la mort et le r6gne de la vie (Rom V, 12-21), "
RB 77 (1970) 481-521.

67
6-8
Christian
future
Paul's
as
chapters
part of
presentation of present
existence and
hope.6 In chapters 5-8, then, he deals with the new situation that has come about
for all thosejustified by grace through faith. Being justified means "peacewith God"
hope
for
final
hope
is
in
future
(5:
This
1-11).
the
secure
and
a
now
grounded
salvation
in the believer's solidarity with Christ who has undone the effects of Adam's sin and
free
life
for
from
belong
believers
Him
(5:
Christ
has
12-21).
to
all who
won eternal
set
the power of sin and, although they still must battle against its attacks, sin is no
longer their master (6:1-14). God is their new master to whom they must present
themselves for conduct pleasing to Him (6:15-23). Similarly, the Mosaic Law, which
longer
has controlling power over them (7:1-25). Through the
cannot conquer sin, no
final
God's
Spirit
God's
Christians
them
of
agencyof
who makes
are assured
children,
God's
death
(8:
the
that
1-17).
The
Spirit
them
power of
victory over
same
assures
purposes,already worked out in justification, will be brought to a triumphant
future
in
(8:
18-39).
conclusion
glory
2.2.2 The Immediate Context: Romans 5
Chapter 5 plays a crucial role in the argument leading up to chapter 6. In

5:1-11 Paul celebrated the soteriological benefits given to those who have been
justified. He emphasized two of them: "peacewith God" or reconciliation to God now
(5:1-2a, 11), and the sure hope of final salvation in spite of present sufferings based
love
God's
in
Christ's
death for sinners (5:2b-10). Three things are of
revealed
on
interest
here:
1) for the Christian, the present reality of "peacewith God"
particular

6The best recent treatments defending this


structure can be found in Cranfield, Romans,
1:252-54; Fitzmyer, Romans, 96-102; and Moo, Romans, 290-95. See also 0. Michel, Der Brief an
die R6mer, KEKNT (G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1978) 129; and E. Kdsemann,
Commentary on Romans, trans. and ed. G. Bromiley, HNT8a (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1980) 131,
159. Some argue that ch. 5 should be viewed as a transitional "bridging" chapter: B. N. Kaye, The
Thought Structure of Romans with Special Referenceto Chapter 6 (Austin, TX: Schola Press, 1979)
1-13; Sanders, Paul, 486-87; J. C. Beker, Paul the Apostle: The Triumph
Thought
in
Life
God
and
of
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1980) 64-69,83-86, esp. 85; and de Boer, Defeat of Death, 148-49.

68
in the realm of grace,7 and the hope of sharing the future glory of God is based on the
for
died
by
God,
8
Christ,
by
faith
(5:
Jesus
2)
1-2);
sent
past reality ofjustification
Christians while they were still sinners and alienated from God, thus demonstrating
the magnitude and reliability of God'slove undergirding their hope (5:5-8); and 3) the
(5:
9,10)9
the
unbreakable connection
arguments
show
ydAAom
parallel TroAAO
between the Christian's present status (already "justified" / "reconciled") and his / her
future destiny yet to come ("shall be saved"). The soteriological "now" (VDV,
vV. 9,11)
basis
forms
the
Paul's
"already-not
tension
of
yet" eschatological
situation as part of
death
for
have
life
the
it
and
the
to
of
exposition
new
and
reader
prepares
means
what
life to follow.
In 5:12-21 Paul explains why those who have beenjustified / reconciled
death)
(eternal
final
be
be
from
that
and
they
saved
wrath
will
already can certain
/
Adam
he
the
forever
(eternal
God's
life).
To
in
this
used
glory
accomplish
share
Christ typology to show that there is "a life-giving union between Christ and His own
Adam
between
but
death-producing
is
that similar to,
union
more powerful than, the
for
life
Christ's
"10
It
is
death
his
that
guarantee eternal
and
resurrection
own.
and all
71n 5: 2 XdPLS'is used to denote the state or realm into Ws-) which God through Christ
is
It
the
(5:
10).
God
in
believers
the
realm
transfers
who were once
realm of wrath as enemies of
(domain) "in which Vv v) we have taken our stand" (pf., &7-4Kapep, 5: 2), in which "grace reigns"
(5: 21), and one that stands in contrast to the realm of Law such that believers are not "under the
law" but "under grace" (6: 14-15). This realm, where grace (i. e., God's work in Christ) rules,
limited
to,
but
believers
God
Christ,
including,
through
that
to
not
conveys
encompasses all
(pace Cranfield, Romans, 1: 259, and Murray, Romans, 1: 160-61).
justification
8The aorist participle &KaWO1VTf5'(5: 1) is
"since
force:
have
to
we
causal
understood
have been justified by faith; " see D. B. Wallace, Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics: An Exegetical
Syntax of the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996), 662,631-32.
9The

P
(5:
9,10,15,17)
style of
words iroA4 pdAkv
reflect the common rabbinic -IM)nl
by
be
the
to
which
point
established is based on another already accepted or
argument
accomplished point that makes the conclusion all the more certain. Here the argument moves a
/ reconciliation)
minori ad maius in which the already accomplished and accepted action (justification
is mentioned first, from which the conclusion (final salvation) is evident a fortiori (cf. Wolter,
179-80).
Rechtfertigung,

1OMoo,Romans, 318. Most interpreters agree that


ToVTo(5:12) is retrospective and the
introduces
5:12-21 as a conclusion to something in the preceding context such as:
8tti
ToOm
phrase
1) the whole argument from 1:18-5: 11 (Dunn, Romans, 1:272); 2) the benefits won for the believer

69
all those who receive the gift of righteousness (5:17).
The argument of the paragraph begins with a comparison (6=cp, v. 12)
introducing the key similarity between Adam and Christ that is not completed until
later in the passagebecausePaul expands on the protasis of the comparison (5:12) in
fact
for
he
(5:
In
18).
13-14
the
the
of universal
apodosis
verses
reinforces
preparation
death,
define
in
transgression
law-code
the
to
as
even
sin
absence
sin and
of a written
between the time of Adam and Moses,the Law-giver. At the end of verse 14 Paul
declares that Adam is a type of "the One who was to come," namely, Christ (cf. Matt.
11:3), but before completing the comparison of verse 12, he presents the dissimilarity
their
)
between Adam and Christ in a series of clauses Wg
that
contrast
olrwKat
...
...
The
in
5:
15-17.
the
comparison
respective consequences
representative acts and
begun in verse 12 is reintroduced in 5:18a ('Apa ovvd)g ), completed in 5:18b (olms...
Vi
),
by
further
(&wq
in
19
5:
ydp ... OrW Kai ...
clarification
Kai ... and supported
These verses highlight the key similarity between Adam and Christ: just as through
the disobedience of one man, Adam, "the many" (all those belonging to him) were
constitutedl2sinners

the
through
death;
destined
for
so also
who are
condemnation and

through Christ in 5:1-11 (Cranfield, Romans, 1:271; Kasemann, Romans, 146; de Boer, Defeat of
Death, 145-46);3) the reference to reconciliation in 5:10-11 (Morris, Romans, 228); or, 4) the
forges
the
final
in
(Moo,
last
5:
9-11
Romans,
The
316-18).
clearest,
of
salvation
view
assurance
have
9-11
between
because
5:
both
fitting
link
largely
5:
the
1-11
5:
12-21
content of
most
and
brought Paul's whole argument from 1:16 onward to an effective climax.
11Most commentators and translators observe a break in the grammatical construction
at the end of v. 12 and treat it as an anacolouthon with the original protasis reintroduced in v. 18a,
completedwith the proper apodosisin 18b, and both explained in v. 19 (cf. Cranfield, Romans,
1:272-73 for supporting arguments). On anacolouthon here, see F. Blass and A. Debrunner, A
GreekGrammar of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, trans. and rev. of the
9th and 10th German edition by R. W. Funk (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1961) 459
[hereafter BDFI; and A. T. Robertson,A Grammar of the GreekNew Testament in the Light of
Historical Research(Nashville: Broadman Press, 1934) 438. Pace C. M Barrett, A Commentary on
the Epistle to the Romans, HNTC (New York: Harper & Row, 1957) 109-10,who seesno anacoluthon
here and translates Kai oftws- ("and so") in v. 12c as "so also."
12Theverb KaOtaMytin this text has a
real, though forensic, connotation of "make" or
"appoint" (active), "be constituted" (passive), or, with a double accusative, "to make someone(to be)
" in Theological Dictionary of the
something" (cf. Jas. 3:6; 4:4; 2 Pet. 1:8). See A. Oepke, "KaOlo-Myt,
New Testament, 10 vols., ed. G. Kittel and G. Friedrich, trans. and ed. G. W. Bromiley (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1964-76) 3:444-46 [hereafter TDN71; and W. Bauer, A Greek-English Lexicon of
the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, 2nd ed., trans. W. F. Arndt and F. W.

70
be
Christ,
belonging
"the
(all
Him)
to
those
one
man,
obedienceof
shall
many"
justified
oneswho are destined for righteousness and life. For Paul, people
constituted
"made"
in
because
deservedly
Adam,
are actually
sinners solidarity with
all
and
so
but
Christ,
in
"made"
sins;
and
commit
people are actually
righteous solidarity with
because
His righteousness is freely and graciously given to those who
so
undeservedly
it
by
faith
(5:
17). To round off the discussion, verse 20 introduces the role of the
receive
Mosaic Law in multiplying sin in redemptive history, and verse 21 brings the section to
a conclusion with a comparison V)o-ffcp... ol;Tws-)emphasizing the surpassing power of
God'sgrace over sin and death.13
Several items are of special interest here in setting the literary context for
"all
his
Romans 6. First, the emphasis on "the one man" (Jg dv0po)VOS-)
on
effect
and
(people,
to
diOpcovot)
in
"the
(ol
is
men"
Trdv7e-g
reference
or
many"
7WAot) striking
both Adam and Christ. 14 In each casethe act of one determines the existence and
destiny of "the many. " On one side stands Adam, his disobedient act, and its
On
19a).
for
18a,
in
him
17a,
those
(5:
12,15a,
16a,
consequences all
solidarity with
the other side stands Christ, His obedient act, and its consequenceson all those in
is
(5:
Adam
Him
15b,
in
16b,
17b,
14
18b,
19b).
In
light
solidarity with
which
of verse
be
One
to
type
the
a
of
said
who was to come (Jesus Christ, 5:15,17), these texts
clearly show the division of humanity into two groups. Each is determined by its
Gingrich, rev. F. W. Gingrich and F. W. Danker (Chicago/ London: University of Chicago Press,
1979) sx. KaOtumu, 3 [hereafter BAGD1.
13For a good summary of the structure
of this passage,see G. Bornkamm, "Paulinische
Anakoluthe in Mmerbrief, " in Das Ende des Gesetzes:Paulusstudien, BEvT 16 (Kaiser, 1952) 76-92,
esp. 81-82.1. H. Thomson, Chiasmus in the Pauline Letters, JSNTSup 111 (Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic Press, 1995) 186-212, views this passage as a masterful chiasmus similar to the pattern
proposedby de Boer, Defeat of Death, 158-62. With de Boer, he concludesthat the broken
construction of 5:12 is completed conceptually by 5:21b, emphasizing that "the reign of sin is
by
superseded the reign of grace through &Katoo-6Mresulting in eternal life" (212).
14The
here
is
connection of dPOpco7rwwith "the one" and "the many" relationship
used
even clearer in 1 Cor. 15: 45-49 where Paul begins with a scriptural
text (Gen. 2: 7 LXX) that uses
the term &Oponwg and then designates Adam as the first dvOponrog and Christ as the last
(eschatological)
A8dy (representative
man), ignoring all the men who came between them. Clearly,
Adam and Christ are dkOpomot in a sense that other men are not because "the
many" wear the
"image" of the one or the other (vv. 48-49).

71
Adam
figures
divinely-appointed,
the
two
of
representative-corporate
solidarity with
"
Adam,
"in
Adam,
Paul
human
belonging
beings
Christ.
to
or
sees
as either
and
belonging to Christ, "in Christ. "15 His perspective here is redemptive-historical,
disjunctive.
corporate, and
Second,in spite of a consistent third person perspective and a corporate
the
"the
"
does
lose
individuals
Paul
the
up
make
who
many,
not
sight of
emphasis on
On
hand,
he
it
that
total
every person
solidarity.
of
each
one
clear
makes
sum
declares
that
he
is
"in
Adam"
(5:
19a),
12-14,18a,
also
although
without exception
hand,
On
the
knowingly
(5:
3:
23).
14,16,20;
other
cf.
and culpably
every person sins
he also makes it clear that only those who receive the gift of righteousness are "in
Christ" (5:17b, i. e., those who believe, 1:16-17; 3:21-4: 25; 5:1-2), although he
language
to
Adam
by
the
emphasize
parallelism with
using universalist
maintains
how certainly Christ has secured the benefits of righteousness and life for all who
is
"it
17b;
(5:
15b,
belong to Him. 16 In fact, with the 7ToAA0
all
ydAAopconstructions
the
Adam
Christ
he
highlights
that"),
the
and
the more certain
over
superiority of
Christ-solidarity
(5:
17).
triumph
the
of
eschatological
Third, Paul portrays sin ( 61-tapTia
in the singular) and grace ( Xdptg)as
two antithetical personified powers that determine human existence and destiny in
their respective realms. On one hand, sin plays an active ruling role: it "entered" into
the world of humanity (5:12a), and through Adam "has established its rule" in the
(5:
12c),
death
(5:
21a).
Similarly,
death
"entered"
into
through
the
sin
world
realm of
15M. D. Hooker, "Interchange and Atonement, " in From Adam to Christ.- Essays On Paul
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990) 26-41, states: ". it is arguable that for Paul the
..
idea of human solidarity is a vitally important factor in the substructure of his thought, more
fundamental than all the images he uses; and that for him, man's redemption is seen primarily in
terms of moving from the sphere of Adam to the sphere of Christ" (41).
16At this point an exact parallel between Adam
Paul
Although
down.
Christ
breaks
and
hold
to
the view that all people sinned when Adam sinned (cf. 5:12,18-19), he does not take
seems
the position that all people "obeyed" when Christ obeyed (cf. 5:17; 3:22,26; 4:23-25; 5:1-2,6-8)
it
otherwise would nullify the gracious, vicarious nature of Christ's death and the need for personal
faith in response (cf. Kdsemann, Romans, 165-66).

72
by
Adam
(5:
Paul
"came
17a).
In
12,
to
the
trespass
the
rule"
of
one man,
and
verse
for
beingbetween
death
human
the
causal connection
makes clear
sin and
every
the reign of death becauseno one escapesthe power of sin. "17 On
escapes
...
the other hand, God's grace in Christ is also active: it "abounded" unto "the many"
"no one

(5:
in
(5:
Him
it
flourished
20b)
15b),
"overwhelmed"
connectedwith
and
sin wherever
life
"might
it
leading
its
by
to
that
eternal
order
establish
way of righteousness
rule"
through Jesus Christ our Lord (5:21b).
For Paul, then, Adam and Christ have epoch-making significance. Using
the imagery of reigning with its associations of power and sovereignty, Paul sees two
"realms" or "dominions" founded by two divinely-appointed

representative men

(Adam and Christ), in which two contrasting sets of powers (sin / condemnation / law
/
/
Spirit)
dominion
vs. grace righteousness
over people, and whose
rule or exercise
outcome is two contrasting destinies (death / life). On the redemptive-historical

level,

Adam and his realm stand at the beginning of history, and Christ and His realm stand
His
In
be
future
its
from
both
the
understood.
at
center,
must
point
which
past and
"old"
(Gal.
4:
4-5;
4),
Christ
"new"
1:
inaugurated
is
thereby,
rendered
coming
and,
what
in
temporal
is
Adam.
From
that
this
speak
connected with
all
perspective, we can
"new
the
Adam's
Christ's
"old
W(M
the
age"
realm
categories and call
and
age"
realm
W(M.

Because of Adam's disobedience, sin / law / flesh / death determine and

dominate human existence in the "old realm" leading to eternal death. By reason of
their participation in Adam's sin, all people start out and continue in the "old realm"
(5: 12,18-19). Because of Christ's obedience, grace / righteousness / Spirit / life
determine and dominate human existence in the "new realm" leading to eternal life.
By reason of their participation

Christ,
with
as we shall see in chapter 6, only

17MOo,Romans, 323, summarizes various interpretations


last
in
10'
the
clause of
of
v. 12 and, along with many modern interpreters, adopts a causal meaning, which coheresbest with
Paul's emphasis here. Fitzmyer, Romans, 413-17, says that a causal translation is not certain and
argues for a consecutive sensemeaning "'with the result that' all have sinned."

73

believers(5:1-2,17b, 18b)are transferred from the "old realm" of condemnationinto


the "newrealm!' of redemption. All this relatesto the "old" and "new" in the "old man
new man" metaphor.
The contrast of the two realms connectedwith Adam and Christ is basicto
Paul's discussion in Romans 6 becauseit enables him to develop the christological and
death
foundation
the
To
do
he
to
the
this,
soteriological
of
new realm.
refers explicitly
include
Christ
that
that
they
other
and resurrection of
and makes clear
are events
Christ
he
believer's
dying
Thus,
the
takes
theme
the
and
up
of
and rising with
people.
applies it first to the important issue of the Christian's relationship to sin, the ruling
it
because
"old
"
Romans
is
importance
6:
6
the
makes
realm.
power of
of particular
this relationship clear. We now turn to this text in the context of Romans 6:1-14.
2.3 Structural

Form of Romans 6:1-14

Before observing the structure of this text, we must first establish its limits.
Does this pericope close at 6:11 or 6:14? Some interpreters argue that verses 12-14
in
6:
1-11.18
by
develop
imperatives
the
the
that
premise given
use of
open a new section
Also, the similarity between verses 13 and 19 ties verses 12-14 to verses 15-23.
However, the imperative verb forms of 6:12-13 do not serve as the signal for the opening
in
11.
first
form
imperative
verse
of a new section since an
actually appears
Furthermore, Paul's use of oVV(v. 12) followed by a command often does not introduce a
19
but
based
is
introduce
to
that
new section
simply serves
on what precedes.
a command
Thus, verses 12-14 do not give a clear signal that they begin a new pericope.
A much clearer criterion for determining the limits of this pericope is found in
1811dsemann,
Romans,163,172,175;Murray,Romans,1:211,226;0. Kuss,Der
R6merbrief,3 vols.,RNT(Regensburg:
Pustet,1963-1978)
1:295-96;Dunn,Romans,1:305-06;and
Fitzmyer,Romans,431-32.
19BAGD,s.v. o0v,Lb. SeeRom.11:22; 13:12; 14:16; 1 Cor.4:16; 10:31; 16:11;2 Cor.
7:1; Gal.5:1b;Phil. 2:29; 1 Thess.5:6; andPhIm.17whereovvintroducesa commandbasedon
but doesnot introducea newunit. Twopossibleexceptions
to this occurin Rom.
whathaspreceded
14:13andCol.2:16. For further discussion,
seech. 4,201 n14.

74
the structural parallels between 6:1-14 and 6:15-23. Both sets of verses contain: 1)
(vv.
la,
15a);
formed
2)
interrogative7i
the
a second
ovp
with
plus
a question
denial
formed
(vv.
3)
deliberative
1b,
15b);
to
the
a strong
question
with
subjunctive
the secondquestion (vv. 2a, 15c); and 4) a third question that calls attention to the
(vv.
4-11
knowledge
lack
(vv.
introduces
Paul's
it
3,16)
exposition
or
of
and
reader's
has
that
fact
The
6:
2b
17-23).
that
no
contains an additional rhetorical question
and
Since
6:
1-2
in
does
diminish
6:
15
the
clearly opens a
not
overall parallelism.
parallel
do
the
it
is
form
in
6:
15
to
to
the
same.
quite natural
new pericope,
expect
parallel
Thus, Paul's style in chapter 6 indicates that the proper limits of this passageare
the
(vv.
3-10)
indicatives
This
in
binding
1-14.20
together
the
with
results
verses
imperatives (vv. 11-13), a connection that is characteristic of Paul (cf. 1 Cor. 5:7; Gal.
5:25) and is basic to his argument here.21
Structurally, Romans 6:1-14 contains an introduction (vv. 1-2) and two
false
Paul
(vv.
In
introduction,
3-11
12-14).
the
presents a
main sections
and vv.
inference and strong denial (vv. 1-2a) plus a further question (v. 2b) that grows out of
in
he
the
in
5:
20-21.
This
thesis
the
passage question
of
what
claimed
question states
form: "How shall we [Christians] who "died to sin" still live in it? Section one (6:3-11),
6;
"knowing"
(dyvoCiTe,
3;
by
to
v.
v. yiv(uKoV76S., C186TES.,
continual references
marked
first
The
indicative
is
Paul's
9),
to
this
person plural
mood and
answer
question.
v.
following
1)
dominate
It
this
the
subsections: a general
section. contains
expressions
baptism
death"
(vv.
"into
Christ"
his
3-4) that serves as
"into
statement about
and
the answer to the basic question of verse 2b, 2) two parallel arguments that elucidate
20This view is held by W. Sanday
and A. C. Headlam, A Critical and Exegetical
Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, 5th ed., ICC (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1902) 153,167;
Cranfield, 1:296-97,321; Barrett, Romans, 120,127; Michel, Rdmer, 199-201; H. Schlier, Der
R6merbrief, HTKNT 6 (Freiburg- Herder, 1977) 190; Wilckens, Rdmer, 2:7-8; and Moo, Romans, 35051. Pace Kdsemann, Romans, 163. A similar stylistic parallelism occurs at Rom. 7:7 (7:7-12) and
7:13 (7: 13-25).
21R. C. Tannehill, Dying
and Rising with Christ. A Study in Pauline Theology,BZNW 32
(Berlin: T6pelmann, 1967) 8-9.

75
and support the statement regarding baptism (vv. 5-7,8-10), and 3) a transitional
(v.
11). GUnther Bornkamm has laid out and explained the syntactical
exhortation
between
parallelism
verses 5-7 and verses 8-10.22 Both sets of verses contain: 1) a
(vv.
(vv.
future
5a,
8a);
2)
tense
conditional protasis
verbs
a concluding apodosiswith
5bp8b); 3) an explanation stating a consequence(vv. 6,9); and 4) a ydp clause giving
the basis for the explanation and the result (vv. 7,10). Verses 5-7 focus on the
believer's release from slavery to sin, while verses 8-10 focus on Christ's death to sin
in
God.
life
Verse
11
"bridge"
in
Paul's
to
theological
argument
and
serves as a
which
23
be
is
drawn
3-10
together
that
the
transition
to
verses
so
exhortation can made.
Section two of this passage(6:12-14) consists of exhortations following the
inferential conjunction oVPin verse 12. In marked contrast to the constant use of the
indicative mood and the first person plural in verses 3-10, the imperative mood and
the secondperson plural dominate verses 12-13. In these verses Paul gives his
Christian readers general directions for daily conduct based on what was highlighted
in verse 11. Finally, verse 14 closesthis unit with two ydp clauses that elucidate the
imperatival instructions of verses 12-13 and pick up the concepts of grace and sin
from verse 1. At the same time the antithesis, "not under law" but "under grace,"
serves as a springboard for the opening of the next section, 6:15-23, which extends
Christian's
basic
idea
look
6:
1-14.
Both
the
the
and enriches
of
at
paragraphs
transfer from the realm of sin to the realm of righteousness and life. Verses 1-14
focus on the negative side-release from sin, while verses 15-23 focus on the positive
side-dedication to righteousness. It is the former paragraph that contains the first
Pauline reference to the "old man" that we will examine more closely.
22G.Bornkamm,"BaptismandNewLife in Paul:Romans6," in Early Christian
Experience,
trans.P. L. Hammer(NewYork:Harper& Row,1969)71-86,esp.74-75;seealso
Michel,Rdmer,200-01;Dunn,Romans,1:305-06.Moo'sargumentthat it is betterto connectv. 5
closelywith v. 4 is valid (Romans,354),but it doesnot destroythe parallelismbetweenvv. 5-7and
vv. 8-10.
23Cranfield,
Romans,1:315.

76
2.4 Exegesis of Romans 6: 1-14
2.4.1 Romans 6:1-2a: False Inference and Strong Denial
Paul begins with the question: 71o&,,poVpcv, The inferential oVPprovides
the logical link with the preceding context. 24 Here it occurs in an interrogative
formula that in Romans usually raises questions and objections about what he has
taught and leads to further discussion (cf. 3: 1,3,5,9;

4: 1; 6: 15; 7: 7; 8: 31; 9: 14,30;

11:7). It could be paraphrased: "What conclusion, therefore, shall we draw from what
I have said?" This leads to a second question: "Shall we [Christians] remain in sin in
(Fva)25
increase?
"
that
might
grace
order

These questions present an inference evolving out of Paul's argument in


61-tapTia,
5:12-21, and especially his assertion in 5:20b: oV'& 17TAc6paue-P
Xdptg. These words proclaim the triumph of God'sgrace over sin in
b77cpc7rcp[aacvucv
to
in
bound
history,
is
He
history.
If
God
in
this
principle
not
way
acted
redemptive
does
In
"in
this
Christians
to
they
not sin
regard,
sin"9
while
remain
give more grace
take on a positive role in the new order of things?
he
Did
here.
issue
difficult
determine
Paul
this
is
It
to
raised
precisely why
27
it
26
to
distortion
legalistic
or,
are
objection
of grace, a
anticipate an antinomian
)
both problems facing hiM? 28 In light of Paul's negative reference to the Law in 5: 20b
7;
(cf
4:
1;
7:
3:
1-9;
in
Romans
involving
Jewish
issues
his
elsewhere
arguments
and
9: 14,30; 11:7), one might be inclined to think that this is a Jewish or Jewish Christian

24BAGD, sx. o'VVP


1; BDF, 451; Robertson, Grammar, 1191-92.
25The conjunction rva introduces a purpose (final) clause; see C. F. D. Moule, An IdiomBook of New Testament Greek, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: The University Press, 1959) 142-43.
26Kdsemann, Romans, 165; Cranfield, Romans, 1:297
is
Cranfield's
claim probably
n1.
due to his attempt to make dytaop6s-"the key-word of the section [6:1-231,though it does not occur
till v. 19 (cf. v. 22)" (Romans, 1:295).
27Sanday and Headlam, Romans, 153-55.
28Murray, Romans, 1:212; Barrett, Romans, 120-21.

77
29
both.
In
Paul's
law,
their
or
objection,
understanding of sin,
view,
and grace would
irresponsibility.
libertarians
hand,
On
the
moral
encourage
other
might have agreed
with Paul's statements and used them to justify complacency about sin and even
sinful practices. Either way, the objection is real and not hypothetical. It was
Paul
from
has
heard
his
labors
that
in
the
probably one
along
way
missionary
he
but
He
be
the
gospel preached.
opponents of
may
quoting or paraphrasing a critic,
it is more likely that he himself raised this question in order to make his gospel clear
30
In
his
issue.
this
on
answer, he wanted to show Christians that the gospel of grace,
leads
lawlessness
to
to
and sin
properly understood,
ethical righteousness and not
(6:19).
The words ! rrty&ojye-017fl dyapT[02 introduce the subject of the paragraph,
6papria
Christian's
As
in
Paul
the
5,
to
namely,
understands
relationship
sin.
chapter
(singular) here not as an act of transgression but as a personified power that rules
humanity
in the "old realm" of existence inaugurated by Adam's transgression
over
29SeeMichel, Rdmer, 152-53, and Beker, Paul, 86, for a Jewish objection; Wilckens,
R6mer, 2:10, for a Jewish Christian objection; and for both, Dunn, Romans, 1:306-07, who states:
"The interlocutor is thus not depicted particularly as a Jew.... but objection from the Jewish or
Jewish Christian side is certainly included. "
30Bornkamm, "Baptism, " 73; Moo, Romans, 356.
31BAGD, sx. 17nplvoi, 2: used figuratively
meaning "continue, persist (in), persevere"
followed by the dative case (cf. T. Levi 4.1; Josephus, Vita, 143). On this use of this verb in the
Pauline corpus elsewhere, see Rom. 11:22-23; Col. 1:23; and 1 Tim. 4: 16. It is instructive to
compare the present tense of the deliberative subjunctive verb Imp1miyev in v. 1 with the aorist
tense of the deliberative subjunctive verb dpap7-4ao)prvin v. 15. The former indicates an ongoing
course of action, that is, continuing to live in a given state, viz., sin; while the latter indicates a
given action in and of itself, i. e., to commit sin; see J. H. Moulton, W. F. Howard, and N. Turner,
A Grammar of New Testament Greek, 4 vols. (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1908-1976) 3: 71-72
[hereafter MHT1. Paul seems to reserve the deliberative subjunctive for rhetorical questions that
call for a negative response (cf. Rom. 6: 15; 10: 14-15; 1 Cor. 11:22). See also MHT, 3: 98-99; BDF,
366; Wallace, Grammar, 467-68.
32This is the first
of ten occurrences of dpapT[a in 6: 1-14 showing the prominent role it
plays in this passage. The article 7-dis anaphoric (cf. Wallace, Grammar, 217-20) pointing back to
"sin" in 5:21 where it is said to reign as a ruling power, and ultimately back to 5: 12 (cf. StAblin,
TDNT, 1:295-96; Kdsemann, Romans, 165; Dunn, Romans, 1:306;
Paul
Romans,
Moo,
374).
and
uses the dative case instead of a complementary participle (i. e., "sinning") following linylvw (cf
John 8: 7; Acts 12: 16; also 2 Clem. 10.5 and Hermas, Sim. 9.27.3). The dative T d1IqPTt(rindicates
sphere or realm following this verb (BAGD, sx. 17rtylvo), 2).

78
K 5:12; 6:14). To remain "in sin" is to continue to live in its realm. To live in its
live
its
live
to
to
means
realm
under
rule;
under obligation to sin as one's master; to
live as a slave to sin (cf. 6:6,17a, 20a, 22a). Such a relationship, of course, includes
continuing to commit acts of sin and to display sinful attitudes. But Paul's concern
here is with the believer's objective status in relationship to sin.33 Thus the question
in verse lb asks: Shall we Christians remain in the "old realm"ruled by sin in order
that (tva, purpose) grace might becomemore abundant34 since grace as a ruling
deadly
far
disastrous
(cf.
5:
15,17,20-21)?
the
exceeds
grip and
power
results of sin
Paul finds such an inference drawn from his teaching to be false and
35
In
itself,
(v.
it
his
familiar
the
2a).
inference
emphatically rejects with
p ylpoim
has formal logic for support, but Paul's strong denial makes it clear that such an
inference is a fundamental misunderstanding

and misinterpretation

his
gospel of
of

to
he
false
Now
his
thinking
to
and
grace.
moves on
support
repudiation of such
live
Christians
do
to
under the rule of sin.
explain why
not

33PaceK S. Wuest, "Victory Over Indwelling Sin in Romans Six," Bib Sac 116 (1959) 43in the concrete, as indwelling sin ... the sinful nature.
50, who states: ". sin [is] seen here
..
...
This is the key to understanding Romans six. Where the word sin is found as a noun [in Rom. 61,
"sin"
is
too
(43).
is
depraved
This
the
totally
to
of
view
reference made
anthropocentric
nature"
restrictive and is difficult to sustain in the exegesisof this passagecreating questionable
died
"The
believer
he
that
the
off to the sinful
statements such as:
was saved
apostle says
when
God
into
he
At
That
from
it.
the
salvation,
nature.
means
was separated
moment of entrance
from
him
loose
being
in
inner
the
the
cutting
sinner,
performs a ma or surgical operation
of
spiritual
the sinful nature, yet allowing that nature to remain in him until his death" (44).
34BAGD, s.v. vArovd&, 1: "be or becomemore
be present in abundance, grow,
...,
increase." W. Bauder and D. Miller, "m1rovdCaNnThe New International Dictionary of New
Testament Theology, 4 vols. trans. with revisions, gen. ed. C. Brown (Grand Rapids: Zondervan,
1976) 2:131 [hereafter NIDNTIJ, note that Paul uses 7rArovdCo)
with reference to grace in 6:1 in
in 5:20 and explain that here "Paul is concerned with the processof
contrast to [bireplire-ptuar6o)
grace becoming greater. It cannot be stimulated by a consciouspersistence in sin. "
35M4 ylvotro is a formula of strong denial
and in Paul it always follows a question.
Fourteen of fifteen NT instances are in his writings, and in twelve of these it expresseshis
repudiation of a false inference drawn from a correct premise in his argument. In Romans, this
formula occurs at 3:4,6,31; 6:2,15; 7:7,13; 9:14; and 11:1,11. See E. D. Burton, Syntax of the
Moods and Tensesin New Testament Greek, 3rd ed. (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1898) 79; and A. J.
Malherbe, "MH FENOITOin the Diatribe and Paul, " HTR 73 (1980) 231-40. For the significance of
the voluntative optative (also used in Rom. 15:5,13), see Robertson, Grammar, 936-40, and
Wallace, Grammar, 481-83.

79
2.4.2 Romans 6:2b: Christians Have'Died

to Sin! '

Paul reinforces his strong denial in verse 2a with an explicit question in verse
2b that emphasizes an important fact regarding Christian existence. Again, he
form:
in
the
point
rhetorical
makes
question

o7nvc SS6 a'7TcOdvopc-v

7f7cipap7-Ig 770Yi-n

& av7-; This brief rhetorical responseto the false inference of verse 1 sets
C4oropev
forth the main point of 6:1-14: Christians have died to sin as a master and this
Paul
live
This
is
its
the
to
explains and
subject
under
rule.
precludescontinuing
applies in verses 3-14.37
Several observations will serve to identify the main issues in this text. First,
Paul introduces

into
his
idea
theological
argument
a new

by declaring 67TEOdV01.167P
7j7

dpapT[q. Prior to this he has said that Christ died a salvific death that has particular
benefits for those who believe (cf. 3: 24-25; 4: 25; 5: 6-8,9-11;

18-19), and the only

died"
"the
he
death
in
5:
15
that
many
stated
of others came
where
mention of the
because of the trespass of the one man, Adam.
(5:
12,14,16,21).
sin

"Death"

Thus his claim that "we [Christians]

the
accomplice of
as
came
died to sin" signals a

into
thought.
new
area
a
of
movement

The image of "dying" is useful to Paul because in the following verses he


death
Christ's
"dying
the
Christians'
to
the
cross, one who To
on
sin" with
connects
dyap-riq dirlOapev jo&Tae (6: 10). It is also useful because the basic idea behind dying,
when used figuratively

as here, is not annihilation

but separation or the severance of

36The distinction between orTwes-(long form) and the simple relative pronoun 6s-(or,
here
is
in
NT,
is
for
02"Tive-S.
the
a
observed
generally
appropriate
plural), while not
emphasis.
by;
"We
(vs.
"
"being
the
thus:
who
quantity)
and
carries
sense
characterized
relative of quality
of
died
having
by
to sin" (BDF, 293; Moule, Idiom-Book, 123-25 and BAGD, s.v.
are characterized
66-ns-,2.b). Burton, Syntax, 294 states: "A definite relative clause may imply a relation of cause,
result or concession without affecting the mood or tense of the verb. " OMves- likely has a causal
force here. Thus: "Since we died, or rather, since we are those who have died
Robertson,
;"
...
Grammar, 727-28,960. Christians are, by definition, people who have "died to sin. "
37Murray, Romans, 1:213-14; Cranfield, Romans, 1:298-300; Tannehill, Dying and
Rising, 7-10; and J. D. G. Minn, Baptism in the Holy Spirit, SBT 15,2nd series (Philadelphia:
Westminster, 1970) 140, who states: ".
2 is the key without which the meaning of the
verse
..
passage cannot be unlocked and opened up. "

80
him
life
38
bond
to
When
dies
that
the
unites
of
a person
physically
a relationship.
in
longer
is
the
the
in
is
The
this
or
realm
active
world severed.
person no
activity
from
has
died.
Death
he
to
pictures a separation or release
or she
relationships which
Paul
This
imagery
different
into
transfer
serves
realm.
a
one realm of existence and a
logic
fact,
In
the
the
believer's
to
in
the
of
sin.
objective relationship
well explaining
(6:
8),
Him
died
(6:
believers
follows:
died
Christ
10),
to
with
sin
passageruns as
therefore believers died to sin (6:2) and no longer remain / live in sin (6:1).
Second,Paul continues to view sin (6pap-ria)as a personified power that
61-1apTiq
dative
live.
The
(cf.
ev
2b)
in
T
-v.
people
av7-0,
rules over a realm which
is not simply a dative of reference or relationship39 but more
following dircOdpopep
in
dative
of advantage the senseof that which claims or possesses
specifically a
fact
that
40
the
Paul,
For
then,
for
its
own advantage.
someoneor something to use
from
(separated)
have
been
Christians "died to sin" means that they
released
in
the
been
have
which
transferred
they
to
realm
of
out
subjugation sin as a master;
their
because
9)
3:
(Rom.
"under
longer
they
they were slaves of sin;
sin"
are no
to
indicative,
The
decisively.
has
points
d7TcOdpol-lev,
aorist
changed
relationship to sin
The
has
has
Where
death
decisive
ended.
already occurred, sin's rule
a
past event.
follow.
to
in
Paul's
determined
be
death
is
time and nature of this
explanation
yet to
It is important to note in passing, however, that he doesnot say that sin died or that

38BAGD,sx. d7roodoKw,
Lb; de Boer,Defeatof Death, 83-84.
39SOWallace, Grammar, 144-46,154. C. F. D. Moule, "Death 'to sin, ''to law' and 'to the
de
Halleux
A.
A.
Bibliques,
Descamps
Certain
"
in
M61anges
A
Note
Datives,
and
ed.
world':
on
(Gembloux: Duculot, 1970) 367-75, suggeststhat the origin of such a dative of relationship is to be
found in the older use of Cdoiwith the dative of advantage. Cf footnote 32 above.
40BDF, 188,2; Robertson, Grammar, 539; BAGD, s. diToovdaKO),
"dat.
Lb.
of the
)r
v.
five
from
is
death.
by
"
dative
thing
The
d7w0v4aKo)
person or
which one separated
occurs only
after
times in Paul: Rom. 6: 2,10; 14:7-8 and Gal. 2: 19. It also occurs in similar constructions in Rom.
6: 11; 7:4; 2 Cor. 5: 15; and Gal. 6: 14b. In each case the dative expresses the possessor, i. e.,
controlling power, from which one is separated by death. This is a dying to the controlling powers of
law, flesh, the world-i. e., release from servitude to these masters. Tannehill,
the "old realm"-sin,
Dying and Rising, 18-19, is right to stress the notion of ownership and lordship as essential to this
dative. Cf. Col. 2:20 where d7r6with the genitive follows this verb.

81

it died to Christians but that Christians died to it.


Third, based on the fact that Christians "died to sin, " Paul asks: 7nZy&L
C4aopek4levawlj (i. e., dyapTfa); Does this rhetorical question have the force of a
theological assertion (the indicative)42 or an ethical appeal (the imperative)? 43 The
following factors combine to indicate that the first alternative (the indicative force) is
likely.
The
interrogative
more

into
ff(644calls
question and implicitly rejects the

Christians
"will
(&i)
live in sin, " a clause that corresponds to
that
assumption
still
"shall we remain in sin" in verse 1b.45 As noted above, to "remain in sin" means to
To
in
live
its
to
the
to
master.
continue
exist
realm of sin, namely,
rule as one's
under
"live in sin" VP ab7f% then, also means to exist in the realm of sin under its authority. 46

41The construction Cdo)Iv occurs ten times in the Pauline corpus (BAGD, s.v. ), but it is
d
C
in
local
In
here,
in
Col.
these
2:
20
3:
7.
0)
passages
used a metaphorically
only
and
sense, as
refers to the objective theological status of one's life, not the subjective manner of it. In Rom. 6:2,
Paul is not concernedwith how believers live but in what sphere or relationship they locate their
life, and here the senseis negative, i. e., it is not "in sin. "
42F. L. Godet, Commentary on St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans, trans. A. Cusin, 2 vols.
(Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1880-81; reprint, Grand Rapids: Kregel, 1979) 1:236; Murray, Romans,
1:213; and Dunn, Romans, 1:307, who says: "What Paul had in mind is a death which puts the
individual beyond the power of sin (as in 6:7,10), and so unable (becausedead!) to 'live' in it, that
is, in its realm under its authority. "
43Cranfield, Romans, 1:299; and Morris, Romans, 246. Moo, Romans, 358-59, discusses
both options but prefers the imperatival force describing a lifestyle of sin. However, for the reasons
given above,this does not seem to fit the immediate context the best, although it is a logical
implication. The ethical senseis reflected in the NIV: "Shall we go on sinning?" In this view, to
remain / live in sin is merely "morally incongruous" for the Christian.
44BAGD, s.v. 7TQy,
Ld, this word is used ". in questions that call an assumption into
..
question or reject it altogether; " thus, "it is impossible that. "
45Burton, Syntax, 60, points out that the progressive future affirms that an action will
be in progress in future time. The future indicative C4oopevstands parallel to the aorist subjunctive
emylvo)prv in v. 1 and functions exactly like it (note Mark 6:36 and 1 Cor. 11:22 where both verb
forms are used in a deliberative question); see BDF, 366,2; and Wallace, Grammar, 570. Some
manuscripts (p46 CFGL V133 81 et al. ) have made this parallel explicit by reading CdaO)j1fV
instead of Maroyev.
46Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 19, states: "The importance this
[1v
phrase
a]
of
becomesclear when we see that the idea of livingin' sin is part
of a broader Pauline pattern of
expression ... (such) as 'in law, ''in flesh,' or'in spirit. "' The preposition & could be interpreted as
meaning: "under the influence of ' or "under the dominion of ' (see Rom. 2:12; 3: 19; 7:5-6; 8:1,8,9;
Gal. 3:11; 5:4; Phil. 3:6); cf. Michel, Rdmer, 153.

82
ITLin

The adverb

this questionanticipatesa negativeanswerand indicatesthat

was.
longer"
"no
is
in
it
something
effectas once

47

Thus, the logical forceof this

in
Paul
this
is
(the
indicative)
that
the
theological
truth
passage
emphasizes
question
(vv. 1-10,14,17-22):"we Christians are thosewho no longer live under the authority
for
"lived
in
they
Christians
"
were slavesof sin
sin"
once
and controllingpowerof sin.
(6:17,20a)but now they do sono longer for they died to sin (6:2). In this sense,it is
impossiblefor a Christian to remain / live in sin (6:1-2).
But these verses (6:1-2) should not be interpreted to mean that it is
impossible for a Christian to commit acts of sin in life experience.48 The necessity of
in
imperatives
49
from
it.
It
is
the
but
is
the
clear
sinning gone,
not
possibility of
Christian.
to
the
Paul
threat
11-14
that
verses
viewed sin as an ever-present
Nevertheless, in the indicatives of verses 2-10, he makes it clear that Christians
have been delivered from sin's power and thus no longer live as slaves under its
for
basis
incentive
This
is
moral
theological
the
subsequent
and
authority.
necessary
appeal.
2.4.3 Romans 6:3-4: Christians

Died to Sin Through

Baptism

In 6:3-4 Paul begins an explanation of his thesis in verse 2 that Christians


In
(v.
2b).
these
in
its
live
longer
died
(v.
2a)
thus
to
those
realm
are
no
sin
and
who
baptism
Christian
linking
by
"when"
"how"
he
the
with
verses answers
questions
and

Christ's death, a death that itself was a "death to sin" as he will state in verses9-10.
47BAGD, s.v. In, Lb: used in negative statements "to denote that something is
for
in
has
depending
Here
"life
has
the
stopped
stopping,
sin"
on
context.
stopped, or should stop"
the Christian.
48PaceSanday and Headlam, Romans, 153, who paraphrase v. 2 as: "The baptized
Christian cannot sin. Sin is a direct contradiction of the state of things which baptism assumes
...
[This at least is the ideal, whatever may be the reality. ]" Also see J. Knox, "Romans," in The
Interpreter's Bible, ed. G. A. Buttrick et al. (New York: Abingdon-Cokesbury Press, 1954) 9:471-73,
479.
49Beker, Paul, 215-18. The fact that a Christian does not live (exist) "in sin" doesnot
negate the fact that he / she will commit sins in life experience.

83
The use of baptismal language raises two preliminary issues. First, to what
act or event is Paul referring by such language? Is it a reference to "baptism in / by
the Spirit, "50"immersion" as a metaphor for incorporation into ChriSt,51or Christian
water baptiSM?52 Without denying the significance of all these ideas, the primary
here
be
baptism
for
to
the conversion-initiation
reference
seems
water
as shorthand
event as a whole. Moo argues that all but one (1 Cor. 10:2) of Paul's eleven other uses
Gal.
(1
Cor.
[twice];
3:
27)
1:
[twice],
[debated];
13,14,15,16
17;
29
12:
13
15:
of j8a7r-r1&
denote Christian water baptism. Furthermore, by the time Paul wrote Romans,
Parr-ricya"appears to have becomealmost a technical expression for the rite of
Christian initiation by water, and this is surely the meaning the Roman Christians
for
Paul
have
for
"53
A
be
that,
the
the
would
given
word.
view
good casecan made
and the early church, water baptism stood for "conversion-initiation" as one unified
experiencepresupposing faith and the gift of the Spirit who, in fact, effects the
54
baptiSM.
spiritual reality associated with
Second,why does Paul refer to water baptism here? It is important to note
that baptism is not the subject of this passageeven though this text has played a
(6:
3-4)
in
discussions
baptism.
There
is
"baptismal
major role
section"
of
no so-called
that can be isolated from the rest of the chapter becauseit is an exposition of water
baptism. 155As noted above, the theme of the passageis death to sin and newness of
50D. M. LloydJones, Romans. An Exposition of Chapter 6.- The New Man (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan, 1973) 35-36.
-51Dunn,Baptism, 139-46; id., Romans, 1:311-13; Michel, Rdmer, 149.
52MOo,Romans, 359, and most interpreters.
531bid.,359. Moo states that the
one exception, 1 Cor. 10:2, is probably used in analogy
to Christian water baptism. Similarly also the debated text, 1 Cor. 12:13; see pp. 86-87.
54Dunn, Baptism, 145-46; G. R. Beasley-Murray, Baptism in the New Testament, 2nd ed.
(Exeter: Paternoster Press, 1972) 272-73.
55Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 7-10; Dunn, Baptism, 139-40;
Beasley-Murray,
pace
Baptism, 126-46. Fitzmyer, Romans, 430-31, calls baptism a secondary topic in vv. 1-11 that

84
life under grace in answer to the false inference of verse 1. Paul's reference to
baptism in verses 3-4 contributes to his explanation of this theme as doesfurther
he
in
baptism
Elsewhere
5-10
can
again.
without mention of
elaboration verses
"old
dying
Christ
the
to
realm" powers
same point about
make
sin and other
with
6:
14).
5:
24;
Gal.
19;
baptism
(cf.
Cor.
2:
Rom.
4,6;
2
5:
14-15;
7:
without mentioning
Thus, it is more likely that in Romans 6 the language used of Christian existencein
baptism,
beginning
that
is
for
Paul,
to
the
the
that,
of
general applied
marks
rite
break
decisive
from
for
Christians.
No
Christian,
is
the
then,
exempt
existence all
break
(v.
because
2)
"we
died
Paul
the
to
that
a
such
affirms with
sin"
words
with sin
is a constitutive part of one's existence if he or she is a Christian.
2.4.3.1 Romans 6:3. Paul introduces his explanation with the clause
(cf.
be
introducing
It
dyvodF-re
6-ri
7:
1).
P1
could
simply
a
way
of
polite
17
...
knowledge. 56 However, the fact that Paul makes his point without
he
indicate
is
that
to
appealing to something
seems
further
he
gives
which

development,

familiar
already

new

much elaboration
to his readers to

they
them
ought
making
aware of consequences

to recognize. 57 The only New Testament

parallel,

he
7:
1
in
adds
where
which occurs

AaM,
P61.
tov
supports this.
ip
ydp
ywc6aKovo,

discussion
find
to
"the
baptism
by
"
Some
Paul
in
his
letters.
interpreters
allusions
main
of
contain
baptism in other verses in Rom. 6, but none of them is likely. See Kaye, Romans 6,58-65, and
P. Siber, Mit Christus leben.Eine Studie zur paulinischen Auferstehungshoffnung,ATANT 61 (Zunch:
TVZ, 1971) 217-27.
56H. Lietzmann, An die R6mer, IINT 8 (TUbingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1933 [19061) 67,72;
Kuss, R6merbrief, 1:297; G. Wagner, Pauline Baptism and the Pagan Mysteries: the Problem of the
Pauline Doctrine of Baptism in Romans VI. 1-11 in the Light of Its Religio-Historical'Parallels,
'trans.
J. P. Smith, AThANT 39 (Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd, 1967) 278; H. Frankem6lle, Das
Taufverstdndnis des Paulus: Taufe, Tod und Auferstehung nach R6m 6, SBS 47 (Stuttgart: KBW,
1970) 40; also Dunn, Romans, 1:308.

57Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 128; Barrett, Romans, 121-22; Cranfield, Romans, 1:300;


A. J. M. Wedderburn, Baptism and Resurrection: Studies in Pauline TheologyAgainst Its GrecoRoman Background, WUNT 44 (Tiibingen: J. C. B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1987) 46-48. The idea is:
assuming you believe 'Y' based on your baptismal instruction, then you must also believe "y," which
Paul goeson to provide.

85
Most interpreters think Paul is appealing to familiar tradition at least from
58
fueled
has
itself.
This
Christianity
from
if
Hellenistic
the
primitive church
not
early
because
familiar
ideas.
Were
they
debate
they
the
these
were
sources
about
of
a
in
Rome
Christian
ideas
known
Paul's
through
to
preaching and
readers
specifically
teaching, or, were they well-known in the wider religious world of that time?
Specifically, the debate has focused on the possible influence of Hellenistic mystery
baptism
interpreted
have
directly
indirectly.
Some
Paul
that
on
or
argued
cults either
59 After a thorough collection
the analogy of the initiation rites of the mystery CUItS.
the
that
GUnter
Wagner
concluded
and evaluation of religio-historical material,
baptism
direct
Pauline
doctrine
had
influence
the
and are of no
of
no
on
mystery cults
help to us in interpreting Romans 6.60
Others, however, claim that there was indirect influence from these cults
he
baptismal
Paul
Hellenistic
Christian
traditions,
or
to
modified
which
via
mediated
61
investigation
in
light
his
After
thorough
the
theology.
and
a
of
own
corrected
baptism
Paul's
A.
J.
M.
Wedderburn
that
view of
concludes
evaluation of this claim,
from
derived
language
dying
Christ
idea
nor
of
were not
and
and rising with
and the
58E.g., Cranfield, Romans, 1:300; Fitzmyer, Romans, 431; Y%Asemann,
Romans, 160-64;
Michel, Rdmer, 130; Murray, Romans, 1:214; Ridderbos, Paul, 397 n4; Tannehill, Dying and Rising,
9-14; Wilckens, Rdmer, 2:11,50; and R. Schnackenburg, Baptism in the Thought of St. Paul. A
Study in Pauline Theology,rev. ed. trans. G. R. Beasley-Murray (New York- Herder and Herder,
1964) 32.
59W.Bousset,Eyrios Christos. A History of the Belief in Christ from the Beginnings of
Christianity to Irenaeus, trans. J. E. Steely from the 5th German ed. (Nashville: Abingdon Press,
1970) 140,158-72,223-27; R. Reitzenstein, Hellenistic Mystery-Religions: Their Basic Ideas and
Significance, trans. J. E. Steely, PTMS 15 (Pittsburgh: Pickwick Press, 1978) 40-42,78-80,85-86;
R. Bultmann, Theology of the New Testament, 2 vols., trans. K Grobel (London: SCM Press, 1956)
1:140-44,311-13; Lietzmann, Rdmer, 30-31; Bornkamm, "Baptism, " 85 n5; Michel, R6mer, 139.
60Wagner, Pauline Baptism, 268,277-80,286-87. Also, Dunn, Romans, 1:308-11, who
focuseson the initiation into the Isis cult as described by Apuleius in Metamorphoses 11.21-24 and
"a
direct
influence from any mystery cult or from the Isis cult in particular, on Paul or
that
concludes
on the theology of Romans 6:3-4, is most unlikely" (Romans, 1:310); and A. J. M. Wedderburn, "The
Soteriology of the Mysteries and Pauline Baptismal Theology," NovT 29 (1987) 53-72.
61Y%Asemann,Romans, 160-63; Tannehill, Dying
and Rising, 2,9-14; J. Jervell, Imago
Dei: Gen. 1,26f im Spdtjudentum, in der Gnosis und in den paulinischen Briefen, FRLANT 76
(Gdttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1960) 257.

86
indirectly influenced by the initiation rites of the mystery cults of his day.62 Though it
is difficult to determine how much of what Paul says in Romans 6 the Roman
Christians already knew, Wedderburn makes a good case for the view that, even
though Paul's language is probably his own, the background to his thought is most
likely the ideas of solidarity with and representation by prototypical figures in ancient
Israel and Jewish tradition. 63
Verse 3 exhibits a chiastic arrangement in which Paul joins together the
baptismal formula "into Christ" and the further idea of baptism "into Christ's death":
[V] clgT& OdvaTova&roV[al eParrT-[uOi7ycV;
[a] O'O'OL64
e,&7TT1dft16V [b] eig XptoT6v Y77aoCv,
It appears that he constructed the verse in this way in light of his use of baptismal
formulae in other places in which the eig prepositional phrase precedes the aorist passive
his
he
If
27).
Gal.
3:
form of the verb, 8arTi& (cf. 1 Cor. 1: 13,15; 10:2; 12: 13;
altered
so,
in
N.
3a)
follows
the
initial
formula
the
baptismal
here
verb
els-phrase
so that the
use of
Christian
the
baptism
between
highlight
the
that
the close association
of
exists
order to
linked
is
baptism
Christian's
Christ's
death.
The
with
the
closely
now
past event of
and
the past event of Christ's death itself (cf. 5: 6-8) and all that it accomplished.

At this point we must consider the meaning of ePaTrr[o-tpcPris- Xpio-r&


into
baptized
"we
Some
777o,
were
scholars treat the phrase as an abbreviation of
oOv.
the name of Christ Jesus," and interpret els-to mean "with reference to, " or, in a
formula
is
belonging
"
"with
Thus
the
to
to.
phrase simply a
a view
purpose senseof
"All
Cranfield
For
identity.
transfer
states:
example,
of ownership or religious
showing
62 Wedderburn, Baptism, 342-43,356-59,391-93. In fact, Wedderburn believes that
"the interpretation of Paul's doctrine of union with Christ as derivative from the mystery-cults of his
day [is] a'dead-end'in Pauline studies" (396). For a counter opinion, see H. D. Betz, "Transferring
a Ritual: Paul's Interpretation of Baptism in Romans 6," in Paulinische Studien: Gesammelte
Au/sdtze III (TUbingen: J. C. B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1994) 240-71.
631bid.,343-56. This concurs with our general assessment in
ch. 1,46-52.
64BAGD, s.v. 6dog,2. The relative adjective 6aot is
used substantivally as a relative of
"All
(vs.
in
"As
2);
in
"
thus:
individuals
this
quality as with orrives- v.
context,
quantity
many
as, or,
we who" with the antecedent embodied in the first person plural of the verb.

87
that Paul wishes to convey in this clause is the simple fact that the persons
is
have
however,
"65
interpretation,
Christian
baptism.
This
received
concerned
inadequate. Paul never refers to baptism, "in the name of Christ Jesus" elsewhere,
he
was probably acquainted with this formula that refers primarily to the
although
baptismal rite (1 Cor. 1:13). Transfer of ownership takes place, but Paul means more
than this here.
Most scholars, therefore, hold the view that to be baptized eig XpLoT&
(6:3a) refers to union with Christ. 66 Three lines of argument support this
interpretation.

First, in light of 5: 12-19, Christ is viewed here as the second / last

Adam, the representative corporate figure for all those who belong to Him. Second,
the "with (o-6v)Christ" concept dominates verses 4-8, and E-Ig(v. 3) has an
"incorporative" meaning indicating Paul has believers'union with Christ in mind.
Third, the "incorporative" idea is reinforced by other Pauline passages where
fla7ml(e7a0ateig is used (cf. Gal. 3:27-28; 1 Cor. 12: 12-13). These parallel passages
indicate that "baptism into Christ" is connected with entry into Christ as an inclusive

65Cranfield, Romans, 1:301. See also Wagner, Pauline Baptism, 8-57, for various views
Wilckens,
Rdmer,
2:
11,
in
Romans
baptism
6,
Beasley-Murray,
Baptism,
128-29;
287
esp.
of
n121;
48-51; Siber, Mit Christus leben, 206-07. For a treatment of these formulae, see Oepke, TDNT,
1:538-43; Bietenhard, TDNT, 5:274-76; and Beasley-Murray, NIDNTT, 1:146-47.
66Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 22-24; Kasemann, Romans, 165; Dunn, Baptism, 112,
who states: "On each of the three occasionswhich are decisive for its meaning the context requires
pavT[Ceo-0ai
cls-to bear the sense of 'baptized into'-baptized so as to become a member of the
SecondAdam (Rom. 6:3), of the Body of Christ (1 Cor. 12:13), of Christ the sole seed of Abraham
(Gal. 3:27);" Oepke, TDNT, 1:539; E. Best, One Body in Christ. A Study in the Relationship of the
Church to Christ in the Epistles of the Apostle Paul (London: SPCK, 1955) 56-57; Murray, Romans,
1:214; Ridderbos, Paul, 401-03; Wedderburn, Baptism, 54-60; and Moo, Romans, 376-77. BeasleyMurray, Baptism, 128-30, objects to giving cls-a local "incorporative" meaning on the basis Of ValTfsr
IPa7TT1a077aav
Moii)cp
in 1 Cor. 10:1-2. But, that whole passage is an illustration (7-6iros-,
elsv. 6) of
Christian experience where the lesser Moses typifies the greater Moses, and Paul uses the exodus
event as an illustration of the Christian's incorporation into Christ and exhorts believers to
perseverencein light of 1 Cor. 9:24-27. Thus, when a person is the object, it is inadequate to take
denoting
desired,
the
goal
or to translate Rom. 6:3b as "baptized with reference to His
as
elsdeath." Cranfield, Romans, 1:301 n3, objects to deriving the sense of the first clause in 6:3 from the
but
one
offers no definitive reasons.
second

88
"corporate" person. 67 This also means entry into the realm of grace since Christ, as
in
inclusive
Himself.
In
this way,
this
person,
represents and embodies
an
new realm
Paul supported his declaration in verse 2 that believers "died to sin" and thus no
longer Eve under its dominion.

This raises the question about whether being "baptized into Christ"
itself
is
definite
it
baptism
to
within
a
contains
a
reference water
or whether
describing
James
Christian's
Christ.
into
incorporation
the
way
of
metaphorical
Dunn argues that pau-r[CcaOat
from
is
"a
drawn
Xpt
the rite of
eig
oT6v
metaphor
baptism to describe

the entry of the believer into the spiritual relationship of the


...
Christian with Christ, which takes place in conversion-initiation. "68 If so, this may
for
fact
the
that other New Testament writers do not speak of the rite of
account

baptism as dying and rising with Christ apart from Pauline influence.69
This view is supported by Galatians 3:27: "For as many of you as were
baptized into Christ have put on Christ. " It seemsclear that jV86aaceatXpIOT&is a
70
logically
if
be
(though
it
is
the
necessary)
metaphor, and so,
same could claimed
not
interchangeable
for the parallel phrase PavT[Cca0aL
The
Xpic-r6v.
two
elsphrases are
"to
is
for
"to
Christ"
is,
be
baptized
into
the
that
put on
same reality,
expressions
Christ. " Both metaphors have an incorporative significance. The same could be said
e,
in
&77-riu6ye-v
of
els- 1 Corinthians 12:13, where Paul is not speaking of water
baptism but about baptism in the Spirit. That he is using the metaphor of baptism is
by
his
Old
Testament imagery in describing the Corinthians'
to
confirmed
reference

670n this view see Michel, R6mer, 148-49; Grundmann, TDNT, 7:789-92;
and Best, One
Body, 66-67.
(1977-78)

68Dunn, Baptism, 109; id., "The Birth


of a Metaphor: Baptized in Spirit, " ExpTim
134-38,173-75;
Tannehill,
Dying and Rising, 41-43,52-54;
Wagner,
Baptism,
and

89
287.

69Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 127,


cites this as a difficulty in adopting the view that Paul
baptismal
liturgy in Rom. 6:1-11; pace Michel, R6mer, 128-29.
a
quotes
701bid., 147-48. See
ch. 1,43-45.

89
Spirit
baptized
into
by
in
body
"we
the
one
experienceof
conversion as
all were
one
Spirit" (12:13c; cf Isa. 32:15; 44:3; Ezek. 39:39; Joel 3: lff). 71
is
best
We conclude, then, that the phrase epairrto-a7ye-v
XptaT6v
Yj7o-orv
e-lsChrist,
"
believer
"into
describing
the
an
understood as a metaphor
act of putting a
inclusive / corporate figure. The e-is-is local (incorporative) rather than referential,
It
is
He
(see
Cor.
21-22).
implied
in
jgarTiuOi7ycP
God
1:
is
2
the
the
agent of
and
action
1
3:
27
incorporation
Gal.
into
Christ
(cf.
the
and
who effects
also
passive verbs of
Cor. 12:13). This union was effected invisibly and inwardly by divine grace through
faith, and this, in turn, is visibly and outwardly expressedand ratified in water
baptism. Being baptized into solidarity with Christ describes entrance into the state
(relationship) of being "in Christ. " Those who are "baptized into Christ" are those who
identifies
have
life
baptism
"in
Christ"
(cf.
In
6:
11).
this
and
afterwards
sense,
designates those who are Christians.
2.4.3.2 Romans 6:4. In this verse, Paul draws a conclusion (inferential
death
the
His
from
If
baptism
in
3.
Christ
includes
into
on
verse
obv)
participation
(a&7Qthrough
Him
it
is
have
Christians
been
buried
then
true
that
also
with
cross,
(&a) this (ToV)baptism into (c1g)His (76P)death. This rendering of verse 4a is based
(with
(with,
1)
two
6av7[o-ya7og)
the
and76P
syntactical considerations:
on
articles -roD
Odva-rop)
are anaphoric, referring to the baptism and death described in verse 3; and
2) the prepositional phrase c1gT6POdvamvis adjectival and is to be connectedwith 6td

711n itself, RavTI& does


not specify water baptism. Primarily it means "dip in or under,
immerse in" (BAGD, s.v. PaTm[Coi;Oepke, TDNT, 1:529-30,538-43) and in non-Christian literature
it is used in the sense of "plunge into, overwhelm" (e.g., Josephus, J. W. 1.22.2,2.18.4; Ant. 4.4.6).
Dunn makes the point that there would be a contradiction in sense in Mark 10:38; Luke 12:50;
Acts 1:5; 1 Cor. 10:2; 12: 13 and a tautology in John 1:26, if flavTICEW always demanded immersion
in water, even in a metaphorical use (Dunn, Baptism, 129). Indeed, for Paul, it has both a literal
(the water-rite, e.g., 1 Cor. 1: 13-17) and a metaphorical (incorporation into Christ, e.g., Gal. 3: 27;
l Cor. 12: 13) usage. Though the metaphor is drawn from the rite, it does not include the ritual act
within itself. What makes Rom. 6 distinct is that only here (v. 4) and in Col. 2: 12 does Paul
explicitly relate the rite to the spiritual reality involved. All this does not mean that water baptism
was a "bare symbol" or an "optional extra. " For Paul and the early Christians, there were no
"unbaptized believers" since water baptism followed almost immediately upon one's confession of
faith in Christ (cf. Acts 8: 30-39; 16: 13-15,22-34).

90
72
This
fiaimloryamg (cf. v. 3b) rather than the verbO. L.
V6-T-dO77/16-V. verb recalls the
kerygmatic statementKal, 67LcTdO77
in 1 Corinthians

15:4 (cf. also Col 2: 12). Just as

burial confirmed the real, corporeal death of Christ, so also to be "buried with Him"
believer
"died
"73
Paul
Him.
Thus
that
the
applied the terminology of
confirms
with
the past Christ-event to baptism, a natural usage since he had just claimed that
Christians were baptized into Christ's death (v. 3).
This compound a6t- verb introduces us to Paul's o-bvXpto-rOlanguage and

imagery in this passage(cf, also vv. 5,6,8). It is probable that he is the originator of
this concept,74although some scholars claim that he has taken it from Jewish
75
the
Christ
His
describe
between
to
the
and
use of u6v
apocalyptic.
relationship
Christian can refer to the Christian's past, present, and / or future experience.76 Not
but
formula
has
is
the
thus
the
a
same meaning,
every occurrence
phrase not a set
his
Consequently,
in
Paul
"withness"
is
temporal
uses.
motif
not always view, and
intended meaning goesbeyond ideas of correspondence("as Christ, so also we") and
Christ,
("because
so we also") to the idea of "association or participation
causality

72Cranfield, Romans, 1:304; Murray, Romans, 1:216; Kdsemann, Romans, 166. Pace
Dimn, Romans, 1:314; Kuss, R6merbrief, 1:298; Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 133; and B. Frid, "R6mer
6:4-5: cls- T6,v 0dvaTov und T6 6yotiOyaTLToDOavdTovavToD als SchlUssel zu Duktus und
Gedankengang in R6m 6,1-11, " BZ 30 (1986) 188-203, who claim the phrase is adverbial and
connect it with o-vvrTd0nye-v(i. e., "buried unto death") because there is no article preceding r1s.tying
the phrase to gawTiopaTog. However, Koin6 Greek often omits an article before adjectival
prepositional phrases (BDF, 272; Robertson, Grammar, 784, and MHT, 3: 221). Moulton notes
have
been
by
that "in written style the ambiguous position of els- T& 0dvaTov
cleared
up
would
...
prefixing ToD,if the meaning was (as seems probable)'by this baptism into his death... (MHT, 1:8384). On the anaphoric article, see Wallace, Grammar, 217-20.

73Bornkamm, "Baptism, " 74; Leenhardt, Romans, 156; Cranfield, Romans, 1:304.
74Wedderburn, Baptism, 50-52,342-56; Siber, Mit Christus leben, 191-213.
75E. Schweizer, "Dying and Rising
with Christ, " NTS 14 (1967-68) 1-14; Kdsemann,
Romans, 160-63; Beker, Paul, 274-75.
76Past: e.g., Rom. 6:4,6,8a; Gal. 2:19-20a; Col. 2: 12-13,20; 3: 1; Eph. 2:5-6;
cf. 2 Tim.
2:11a; present: e.g., Rom. 6:5a; 8:17,29; 2 Cor. 13:4b; Phil. 3: 10; Col. 3:3; future: e.g., Rom. 6:5b,
8b; 8:17b, 32b; 2 Cor. 4: 14; Phil. 1:23; 3:21; 1 Thess. 4: 14b, 17; 5: 10b; Col. 3:4; cf. 2 Tim. 2:11b.

91
77
Christ").
("we
with
with"
...
It is probable that the basis for Paul's oiv Xpta-ro language is his
understanding

of Christ as a representative,

inclusive

figure. 78 As noted above,

Romans 5: 12-21 has made clear that His obedient act (i. e., His death, 5: 19) affects all
those people who belong to Him.
representative,

inclusive

From this, one can deduce that Christ's death is a

death
those
is,
it
is
the
time
the
that
of
same
act,
at one and

this
Paul
to
"with
Him.
"
As
Douglas
Moo
make
appears
points out,
who are united
deduction in 2 Corinthians
abrol.

[o-bv
0avov
dpa
5: 14: Jg Wp 7Tdv-rc,
ol rrdvTcs-d7T!
)v d7re70avcv,

If both aorist verbs point to Christ's death on the cross, as is likely, then from

the fact that One died for "all, " Paul concludes that "all" died with Him.
Christ died as a representative

The death

those
death
be
the
all
of
considered
of others can also

He represents. 79

What, then, is the meaning of being "buried with Christ, " and how is it

4a),
(v.
light
language
baptism?
In
Paul's
&a
the
to
which
phrase
and
of
a6v
related
by
God's
(not
baptism
which
the
the
activity
of
means)
sacramental
occasion
makes
Christians were buried with Christ, this concept describes the believer's participation
in Christ's own burial at one's baptiSM.80 This doesnot mean that the redemptive77Grundmann, TDNT, 7:781-86.
78See discussion in ch. 1,40-41. Also, see W. D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism:
Some Rabbinic Elements in Pauline Theology, 4th ed. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1980) 101-08;
Best, One Body, 55-57; Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 132-38; Tannehill, Dying and Rising, passim;
Ridderbos, Paul, 57-62; 206-14; Wedderburn, Baptism, 343-48; and Moo, Romans, 391-95.
79Moo, Romans, 394.

8OBeasley-Murray, Baptism, 130, states: "Paul's first thought in this passage


is not
...
that the believer in his baptism is laid in his own grave, but that through that action he is set
alongside Christ Jesus in His [gravel." Paul apparently does not see baptism as symbolical bf
resurrection, although Col. 2:12 suggests that he does. However, the ev Kat that begins v. 12
&4
the
Kat of v. 11 and refers to Christ ("in whom also") as the antecedent and not
repeats
baptism ("in which also"). The theme and emphasis of vv. 9-12 that redemption and fullness of life
"
demand
in
Christ
Him.
"in
interpretation.
to
this
These
took
things
are accomplished
seem
place
SeeDunn, Baptism, 153-57, for the arguments supporting this view. On the other hand, BeasleyMurray, Baptism, 133-34,152-69, takes baptism to be the antecedent of ev , and thus he argues
that Paul draws an analogy between baptism and the death (immersion), burial (submersion) and
resurrection (emersion) of Christ. See also Sanday and Headlam, Romans, 153,162-63.

92
historical event is "timeless," allowing it to be understood as repeated in, or present in,
the rite of baptism as an efficacious sacrament.81 Baptism is not the means by
Christians
buried
(6td)
Christ
but
the
are
with
occasion
when this participation
which
/ identification takes place.82 Nor doesthis mean that the time of their burial with
Christ was the time of His own burial (AD 30/33) such that they were already "in
Him" and thus have already participated individually in the redemptive events "With
Him. "83
Paul, then, draws the conclusion (ovv)that believers were "buried with
Christ" (6:4a) because,as in the kerygma summary (1 Cor. 15:3-4), burial confirmed
the reality and finality of His death. The Christian's death with Christ to sin is
definitive and final. But why doesPaul make baptism the occasionwhen the
Christian becomesidentified with these redemptive events, especially in light of the
faith
the
(Rom.
by
1:
17;
3:
28;
4:
4-5,24-25)
the
which
of
centrality
as
means
believer's relationship to Christ is established? As noted above, the early church
faith,
baptism,
Spirit
the
the
and
gift of
viewed
as components of one unified
(6:
3-4),
then,
Dunn
"conversion-initiation.
"84
In
that
these
we
calls
verses
experience
baptism
for
for
Paul
that
the whole conversion-initiation experience
assume
stands

81PaceSchneider, TDNT, 5:195; Kuss, R6mer, 298-300. In 6:10, Paul emphasizes the
"once-for-all" nature of Christ's death with the word lodvae.
82BAGD, sx. &d, IIIJ. e. This tends to rule out the popular view going back to Tertullian
(4th century) in ch. 3 of his Homily on Baptism, trans. and ed. E. Evans (London: SPCK, 1964) that
gives symbolic significance to the actual physical movements of immersion and emersion involved in
baptism (cf. Moo, Romans, 361-62). Baptism, then, is not the means by which believers die and rise
with Christ, nor is it primarily a symbol or picture of dying and rising with Christ as Paul presents it
in Rom. 6. He emphasizesthe historical event and the believer's participation in it, not the ritual of
baptism (cf. Frankem.611e,Taufverstdndnis, 52,55-56). However, Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 133-34,
139 argues for a secondary allusion to such symbolism in the rite of baptism (cf. footnote 80 above).
It is likely that early Christian baptism was usually by immersion (cf. Did. 7.1-4).
83PaceRidderbos, Paul, 63,207.
84Dunn, Baptism, 145. This gives the term "baptism"
here
marking
sense
a metonymic
the decisive turning point in a person's life. On metonymy, see G. B. Caird, The Language and
Imagery of the Bible (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1980) 136-37.

93
is
faith
Spirit.
Baptism
to
the
the
mentioned
give a
not
and
gift
of
presupposing
Christ,
but
buried
how
Christians
to
call
with
explaining
picture
were
symbolic
buried
Him
fact
the
they
to
that
with
at conversion-initiation.
were
attention
This perspective contributes to our understanding of the "old man" and the

Paul's
found
later
in
Baptism
6
o-bv
and many of
verse as we shall see.
uvtA-verb
I

XpLc-rostatements point to events in the life of Christ and in the life experience of the
individual believer. This leads us to concludethat we are dealing with a relationship
is
There
but
it
in
is
time.
time,
that
transcends
takes
a
that
present
place
also one
temporal tension between the historical accomplishment of redemption at the cross
Christian's
The
it
individual
Christ
to
the
people.
subsequent application of
and
of
"old"
from
/
the
her
him
"with
Christ"
in
transfers
the redemptive events
participation
in
/
by
Christ.
This
"new"
transition,
to the
accomplished
age realm established
individually
is
history
by
Christ's
the
at
salvific
on
cross,
realized
work
redemptive
the conversion of each believer. Paul's cvv language, therefore, "refers to a
'redemptive-historical"withness' whose locus is both the cross and resurrection of
Christ-where

the 'shift' in ages took place historically-and

the conversion of every

believer-when this 'shift' in agesbecomesapplicable to the individual. "85


The purpose (Fva,v. 4b) of identification with Christ through baptism into
His death is that Iidg

ev KatP67T-L

Ccjs-

is
This
iTcpL7TaT4o-ojpe-P. the main point of verse

4. Paul expressedthis purpose in the form of a comparison denoted by 6=cp ...


has
been
Christ
having
(i.
force
in
"because
Urwsthis
causal
context e.,
Kal with ckircp
o
Christ
").
With
he
identification
the
to
the
with
o5owep
clause
relates
our
raise4. . .

85MOO,
Romans, 365. The nature of this participation with Christ is objective (positional)
and transformational rather than mystical (cf. Sanday and Headlam, Romans, 153) in any
because
He
inclusive
is
the
sense
representative for all those who belong to Him
ontological
(Wedderburn, Baptism, 343-48). In light of this, Paul's "participationist" language is compatible
with his "judicial" language. They are not in conflict (cf. Ytasemann,Romans, 165; Ridderbos, Paul,
169; pace Sanders, Paul, 463-68).

94
86
his
On
basis
Christ
from
Wqg
dead
the
8td7-g
the
of
-.
ToD7TaTp6-,
resurrection of
both
baptism
linking
his
in
RomanS87and
this
with
of
construction
other uses of
Christ's death and burial in verses 3-4a, one might expect Paul to declare that
Christians have also been raised with Christ in verse 4b. But he doesnot. It is
in
4b,
6:
he
breaks
between
the
the
that
and
parallelism
protasis and apodosis
striking
instead of stating that believers were raised with Christ, he declares that they "walk
in newnessof life, " thereby focusing on the new kind of life that results from Christ's
in
88Though
Paul
does
directly
Christian's
the
participation
not
speak of
resurrection.
Christ's resurrection as already realized (cf. Col. 2:12; 3:1 and Eph. 2:5-6), he
life
from
Christian
benefits
the
that
the
and power
already
nevertheless makes clear
because
is
89
"shift"
life
(cf.
for
in
The
6:
11,13).
this
His
this
reason
resurrection
of
Paul's main concern arising out of verse 1 is to give a pointed, yet positive, contrast to
"remaining in sin." A defmitive break in the Christian's relationship to sin as an

86The "glory of the Father" seemsto echo a doxological formula (1:23; 3:23; 5:2), which
The
indication
Paul
is
drawing
his
further
in
be
that
traditional
teaching
argument.
upon
may
has
"glory"
for
Paul
(e.
17,21),
2:
7,10;
8:
5:
2;
suggesting
eschatological
associations
of
g.,
concept
that he seesChrist's resurrection as an eschatological event inaugurating the "age to come"in God's
"glory
The
God"
is
for
His
of
purpose.
a
summary
expression
character perfections
all
of
and
plan
Romans,
Dunn,
displayed
Christ's
in
Murray,
217;
Romans,
1:
that were
gloriously
resurrection; see
1:315; and Cranfield, Romans, 1:304, who relates glory to God's use of His power since glory and
7,10).
16:
(d,
7,11;
in
Bible
15:
in
Exod.
the
the
often
associated
g.,
are
e.
exodus
miracles
power
This phrase may also allude to the power of the Spirit who is the agent at work behind the glory
that raised up Jesus Christ (Rom. 8:11), and it may also imply that this same power is the power of
the new age that has dawned with Christ's resurrection.
871nthe other uses of (ffairep oUTo)sin Romans (5:12,19,20; 6: 19; 11:30-31), the
...
in
terms of terminology and imagery. Thus, the reader would
apodosis
are
parallel
and
protasis
here.
fmd
Since
the
to
these conjunctions were prominent in the preceding
same
pattern
expect
Christ
(5:
Adam
12-21),
here
"with
they
to
that
thought
train
and
call
one's
attention
on
of
section
the purpose of emphasizing that the new head of the line is not Adam but Christ, " Leenhardt,
Romans, 159; also Cranfield, Romans, 1:272 n5. The connection between the two here is not merely
to show similarity but rather to show logical relationship: the apodosis is based on the protasis.
88This unexpected shift in the apodosis of v. 4b by Paul has been
emphasized correctly
by Dunn, Baptism, 143-44, and K.Asemann, Romans, 166-67, who lists scholars who have not fully
"eschatological
Paul's
here.
reservation"
recognized
89Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 138-39; and Moo, Romans, 367. Pace Wuest, Victory, 45,
impartation
(divine)
4b
the
as
v.
of
a
new
views
nature such that the believer has "two natures
who
in him, the sinful and the divine. "

95
/
Instead
him
her
has
that
of
saying
we were
power
over
occurred.
authoritative
God
by
to
Christ
in
baptism,
Paul
His
the
to
of
power
resurrection
points
raised with
life
basis
for
believer's
life
the
the
status and consequent
new
and status as
a new
"newness
life.
"
in
of
conduct
The implicit assertion is that Christians now walk in newness of life. 90 The
is
verb 7rcpt7TaT&j used exclusively

in a figurative

life
lifestyle
of
way
or
present
person's

denote
letters
to
in
Paul's
a
sense

(e. g., Rom. 8: 4; 13: 13; 14: 15). 91 The phrase

in
depicts
(the
5:
17)
"new
"
Cor.
2
&sthe
which
new realm
creation,
KaLv6777-rt
Christians

by
the
in
lives
they
their
empowered
now conduct
which
now stand and

direct
in
It
God's
Spirit
(cf.
Rom.
8:
4).
7:
6;
the
stands
new age, especially
realities of
Paul
2.
6:
in
in
6:
&L
ev
1
C4o-olie-v
to
and TuZT dyapT[q
abTj
f'7TL1.1eVWYfV
contrast
consistently

Gal.
17;
5:
6;
Cor.
3:
(Rom.
7:
(1
Cor.
2
6)
11:
25;
uses Katv67s,
and Kaiv6g

6: 15; Eph. 2: 15; 4: 24) in reference to the "new age" of salvation


ChriSt. 92 The genitive noun Ccoijghas been understood
attributed
descriptive

becomes
&sthe principal
genitive where
attribute

normally

inaugurated

in several ways:

by Jesus

1) an

word and Katv677L provides a

2)
"93
life;
by
"new
thus:
an
supplied
an adjective,

90SeeBDF, 337,1, on the use of the aorist subjunctive verb 7Tcpura7-4awyrv


instead of a
beginning
be
Here,
ingressive,
imperative
the
the
of a new
stressing
verb.
aorist
may
well
present
Aspect
Verbal
M.
Fanning,
See
B.
life
in
the
the
that
old.
new age of salvation
contrasts with
way of
in New Testament Greek, OTM (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990) 357-64, esp. 361, for a discussion of
Paul's use of the (ingressive) aorist rather than the present in certain contexts as a reflection of the
"old life-new life" motif in Pauline literature.
91Seesemann,TDNT, 5:944-45. Paul's use of this verb, unknown in classical Greek, is
taken from the OT and Jewish writings where JM is used this way (e.g., Exod. 18:19-20; 2 Kgs.
20:2-3; Ps. 86:11; Prov. 8:20). It serves as an appropriate metaphor for him because there is a
dynamic element implicit in his concept of life: the believer, who has already becomenew, moves
(cf.
God
has
him
Bultmann,
by
before
TDNT, 2:870-71; Dunn,
toward
the
goal
step
set
step
Romans 1:315-16). See ch. 4,210-11 and ch. 5,251.
92BAGD, s.v. Kaiv6Ms-,Behm, TDNT, 3:447-51. KaLv6gdenotes
what is new in nature and
in
is
See
when
compared
with
value
what
old.
ch. 3,175 n84; ch. 4,227-29; and ch. 5,279.
superior
93Wallace, Grammar, 89-90, who notes, however, that semantically ...newness of life'has
life.
"'
See
MHT,
force
3:
Robertson,
BDF,
than'new
213;
Grammar,
496,651;
also
and
stronger
165, who call this use a genitive of quality or an attributive genitive that should be rendered "living
/ lively newness," although MHT, 3:213, translate it as "new life. " On the difference between an
Wallace,
Grammar,
86-90.
genitive,
see
and
attributed
attributive

96
its
&sthe
gives
principal word and
epexegeticalgenitive where Katv677i remains
defming essence,thus: "newness [the new realm], that is, life; "94or, 3) an objective
its
is
is
thus:
&g
object,
KaLV677L
where
given
a verbal nuance and
genitive
"newness[the new realm] that leads to, or, confers life. "95 Either of the last two
Paul's
here
because
both
meaning well
maintain the emphasis on
options serves
burial
Christ
death,
As
following
His
and
entered a new order of existence
KaW677L.
Christians
by
in
these redemptive
their
so
also,
virtue
of
resurrection,
participation
been
have
have
They
in
the
entered a new realm of existence
present.
events,
transferred out of the "old realm" to the "new realin'in which they are empowered
the
live
kind
life
to
to
the
of
a new
of
according
values and standards
and summoned
"the
is
A
following
that
to
this
concept
relates
newness
upon resurrection
new realm.
96
"
Paul
does
here.
though
the
term
not use
new man, even
Having discussed Paul's argument in 6:3-4, we are now better able to
time
the
believers
"died
(v.
the
2).
Typically,
to
of
question of when
either
sin"
address
their baptism, 97or, the historical event of Christ's death on Cxolgotha98
are given as
the moments of this death. However, to make this into an either / or point in time is

94E.g., Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 20; and Murray, Romans 1:217.
95E.g., Moo, Romans, 366 n7l.
96Seethe discussion of this topic in
ch. 3,174-81; ch. 4,227-42; and ch. 5,278-84.
97Barrett, Romans, 121; Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 140; Kuss, Rdmerbrief, 1:296;
Schnackenburg, Baptism, 33; Kasemann, Romans, 168; Wilckens, Rdmer, 2:16; and Fitzmyer,
Romans, 434.
98Cranfield, Romans, 1:300, although he
acknowledges the possibility that Paul already
had baptism in mind in 6:2,8; Ridderbos, Paul, 63; Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 24. Cranfield
discusses four different senses in which Christians may speak of dying and rising with Christ:
juridical, baptismal, moral and eschatological. Each sense has to do with both dying and rising
in
Christ
an eightfold scheme. He argues that Paul presupposes this scheme and 6: 1resulting
with
14 cannot be fully understood unless it is kept in mind (Romans, 1:299-300; id., "Romans 6: 1-14
Revisited, " ExpTim 106 [1994140-43). While this scheme may be theologically correct, there is
debate
about whether all of these different senses actually appear in this
considerable exegetical
himself
Cranfield
acknowledges that at least five of the items in the eightfold scheme are
passage.
Fitzmyer,
implicit
Romans,
432-33, follows Cranfield, Romans, 1:299-300 here.
else
absent.
or
only

97
to pull apart what Paul has placed together. Certainly it can be said that in their
baptism (conversion-initiation) Christians died to sin since that is one of the reasons
brings
baptism
be
death
however,
Paul
into
discussion.
Baptism,
this
a
can only
why
to sin becauseit is an incorporation into Christ's death itself in which sin was judged.
It is the past historical event of Christ's once-for-all death that gives baptism its
died
in
Hence,
it
is
Christians
to
to
that
significance.
sin
and
meaning
not enough say
baptism. They only died to sin in baptism becausethrough it they were incorporated
into Christ and thereby included in His liberating death. For Paul, the two are
interrelated, especially as he has affirmed in the chiasm of 6:3 (seep. 86 above).
2.4.4 Romans 6:5-7: Union With Christ in His Death
As noted above, verses 5-7 and 8-10 contain two structurally parallel
for
basis
in
Paul
(yap,
5a)
the
and
gives
explanation
supporting arguments which
v.
the fact that believers have died to sin (v. 2b) in order that they might walk in
being
life
N.
At
4b).
the
time,
these
the
same
results of
verses present
newness of
"baptized into Christ" (vv. 3-4). Verses 5-7 amplify the significance of the believer's
death with Christ by means of a brief reference to being united with His resurrection
(v. 5b). Verses 8-10 begin with a brief reference to death with Christ (v. 8a) and focus
basis
for
life with Him.
the
christological
on
2.4.4.1 Romans 6:5. This verse supports and explains the main point of
believers
from
4,
in
because
life
Christ
now walk
verse namely,
newness of
was raised
the dead. The explanatory yap (v. 5a) introduces a conditional sentence in which the
basis
for
drawn
the
the
in the apodosis, namely, the
states
conclusion
protasis
believer's participation with Christ in His death assures participation with Him in His
Paul
"For
to
if (el ydp) we have becomeunited (u6povml)
goes
on
state:
resurrection.
likeness
(To
61.
his
(avToD)death, certainly also (dAAdKai)99we
the
tou6paTOof
with
99The protasis clause containing
el plus the indicative mood asserts a factual condition
that Paul considers to be fulfilled or assumes to be true (BDF, 372; Wallace, Grammar, 690-94).

98
be
[united
Four
issues
likeness]
"100
be
[his]
the
must
with
of
resurrection.
shall
in
to
order
arrive at the meaning of this verse.
resolved
First, the le)dcal meaning of a6youros-must be determined. This verbal
New
from
is
Testament
hapax
derived
legomenon
is
uquo6w
and
adjective a
(uqyO6qya0,meaning "to grow together with, join, be united with, becomeassimilated,"
force
from
has
"to
"101
It
than
together.
uqpOv-rc6w,
meaning
passive
plant
rather
("beenjoined / united") here and continues the series of theologically significant words
(cf.
biological
in
is
6:
4,6,8).
imagery
The
this
rather
using
passage
O'V'V
and phrases
than horticultural, depicting the fusing together of the broken edgesof a bone or
102
the
describe
Paul
believers
the
to
the
with
uses
metaphor
union of
wound.
"likeness" of Christ's death.
Second,the syntactical relationship of To 6yotO*1anmust be determined.
That with which believers have been united is a matter of debate. Some scholars
dative
following
be
by
the
that
the
pronoun av7Vshould supplied
claim
reader
61-tou6paTL
be
independent
that
taken
and
To
should
yey6paycv,
as an
a6yov-rot
instrumental dative or a dative of reference.103Thus Paul is claiming that we have
The dAAdKal introducing the apodosis after el (or, lav rbrep) is not adversative here; instead it
"yet,
(BDF,
448,5).
and
means
certainty
certainly
also"
signifies
10OThe protasis-apodosis
structure of this conditional sentence necessitates supplying the
6110L&5paTL
482;
in
BDF,
from
the
the
To
and
a6yovTot
a6mO
apodosis
see
protasis;
words
...
Baptism, 36. The elements of the first clause that
Cranfield, Romans, 1: 306; Schnackenburg,
in
the
(pace
Grundmann,
the
those
that
second
same
clause
are
precisely
are
not
expressed
remain

TDNT, 7:792). Curiously, BDF, 194,2, suggest that Or6yovTolis to be supplied but not To
6poWpaTL.

101Grundmann, TDNT, 7: 786,789-92; Cranfield, Romans, 1:307;


and Dunn, Romans,
1:316. Pace Sanday and Headlam, Romans, 157, who claim that the grafting imagery of Rom. 11
is present here since this word has a horticultural background. On the background of u6povms., see
J. H. Moulton and G. Milligan, The Vocabulary of the Greek Testament Illustrated from the Papyri
Sources
(London:
Non-literary
Hodder
Other
and Stoughton, 1952) 593 [hereafter MMI.
and
102H. G. Liddell and R. Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon,
rev. H. S. Jones (Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1958) s.v. avpo6w, [hereafter LSJI; Best, One Body, 51; and Dunn, Romans, 1:316;
Romans,
1:
218;
Fitzmyer,
Murray,
Romans,
435.
and
pace
103BAGD, s.v. 6pottL)pa,1; a&rP is
presumed in the translations of the JB, NEB, NRSV,
NAS and NIV; Michel, R6mer, 154; and P. -E. Langevin, "Le bapt8me dans la mort-r6surrection.
Ex6gbse de Rm 6,1-5, " SciEccl 17 (1965) 29-65, esp. 57-58.

99
been united with Christ in the same death that He died. In support of this, it is
found
is
that
this
5a
6:
4a
to
out
makes
pointed
an
explicit
so
parallel
where
avTl)
-6:
that this inclusion of avTv would be the logical complement of u6pOUT01.104Whileit is
true that a6yov-rot has an affinity for a dative word, one need not be supplied here
because a dative is explicitly given in the text itself that adequately completes the
105Nevertheless,
61iotc6paTL.
construction, namely, T6
some interpreters

still want to

following
u6yovrot and treatTt3 6potolliaTt as a dative of reference/respect,
supply abrop
106However,
thus: "for if we have been united with him Wnp) in a death like his
......
the nearness ofTtO 6you6yaTt as an associative dative seems decisive for taking it
directly with aztovmt, thus: "for if we have become united with the likeness of His
death

....

11107

Third, what is the meaning of 61-tolo)pa


(cf. Rom. 1:23; 5:14; 6:5; 8:3; Phil. 2:7)?
The
three
death?
And, what doesit mean to be united with the 61.
Christ's
totoil.
1aof
likeness,
2)
for
6yolo)pa
imitation,
1)
and
possiblemeanings usually given
are:
copy or
3) form. 108Some interpreters understand verse 5 in terms of "copy or imitation" and

104Fitzmyer, Romans, 435.


105Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 30-31; and Cranfield, Romans, 1:307.

106This is the translation given by the NRSV; also, Fitzmyer, Romans, 435. For a
discussion of this view and a refutation, seeTannehill, Dying and Rising, 30-31, and Schneider,
TDNT, 5:192.
107Cranfield, Romans, 307; Tannehill, Dying
"
"Baptism,
Rising,
Bornkamm,
77;
32;
and
Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 134; Dunn, Romans, 1:316; Schneider, TDNT, 5:192; Murray, Romans,
1:218; Kdsemann, Romans, 168; Wilckens, R6mer, 2:13; and F. A. Morgan, "Romans 6:5a: United
to a Death Like Christ's, " EThL 59 (1983) 267-302, esp. 272-76. CE BDF, 194,2; and MHT,
3: 220.
108For a survey of views on 6yolo)ya,
see Schneider, TDNT, 5:192-95; Beyreuther and
Finkenrath, NIDNTT, 2:501-05; and Morgan, "Romans 6:5a," 267-302. The word occurs
infrequently in classical Greek, meaning, "a copy of an original, likeness, image" (LSJ and MM, s.v.
6poto)ya). It appears in the LXX 42 times, but in addition to the sense of "copy" or "image" with
reference to idols (e.g., Exod. 20:4; Deut. 4: 16,25; Isa. 40:18-19), it is also used in the sense of
"form, " i. e., a concrete form that is not only similar to that of another but fully conforms to the other
(e.g., Deut. 4:12,15). Paul used the word five of its six occurrencesin the NT (Rom. 1:23; 5:14; 6:5;
8:3 and Phil. 2:7). The sixth occurrence is Rev. 9:7 where it means "likeness, appearance": "The
locusts resembled horses in appearance;" cf. BAGD, s.v. 6yoto)pa,3.

100

baptismal
6poloiga
in-dtation
to
the
the
or representation of
rite viewed as
refer
Christ's death by which believers becomejoined with His death. 109This
in verse 5a is in
interpretation is unacceptable, however, becausethe verb YEy6val-1cp
the perfect tense while Paul has only used verbs in the aorist tense to discuss the
diTcOdvopcv,
Q,
baptism
by
implication
8aTrT[uO77ye-v,
3;
4;
v. avve7dO77yev,
v. and
event of
in
Also,
6potoilta7L
implied
fit
its
2).
use
such an understanding of
v.
would not with
110
Finally,
identification
dependent
5b.
61iou6ya7t
is
the
baptism
upon
of
verse
with
is not to be
the inclusion of av7V-,which has already been rejected. Thus, 61-lot6ya7t
"copy
imitation"
111
baptism.
as
or
and equated with
understood
It is more difficult, however, to make a clear distinction between the other
two meanings, "likeness" and "form. "112 If "likeness" is reserved for the senseof
"similar to reality" W Rom. 1:23; 5:14) and "form" is reserved for "identical with
in
(cf.
Rom.
8:
3;
Phil.
2:
7),
in
be
5
the
to
meaning verse seems
somewhere
reality"
between. It is more than "similar" but less than "identical. " Of the five Pauline
illustrate
best
7
6you6pa,
Romans
2:
8:
Philippians
3
perhaps
and
referencescontaining
Paul's use of it here. In these verses 6you6yarefers to a concrete "form, " not merely
"similarity.
"
For
Paul,
Christ's
presence in the world was not a mere
an abstract
in
"likeness"
"flesh
(Rom.
to
8:
3),
but
the
man
of sin"
a real participation as a
outward

109SoBarrett, Romans, 123-24; Kuss, "R6m 6,5a, " 160; Betz, "Transferring a Ritual, "
266-70; Fitzmyer, Romans, 435; Bultmann, TDNT, 3:19 n80; and Schneider, TDNT, 5:192-93,195.
11OThishas been noted correctly by Tannehill, Dying
and Rising, 22-24,34-35; Dunn,
Baptism, 143; Cranfield, Romans, 1:306; Murray, Romans, 1:218-19.
111Amodification of the baptismal reenactment
view is to see the death of Christ as
baptism,
in
is,
baptismal
in
that
the
present
sacramentally
event the Christ-event is present. For a
discussion of these views, see Schneider, TDNT, 5:192-95. There are three convincing objections to
both of these views: 1) the perfect tense verb yey6valiev(BDF, 318,4; 340) in v. 5a and the future
tense verb Ia6prOa in v. 5b rule out equating 6potwyawith baptism at all, even if the future were
future,
believe;
logical
2) it is unnatural to take 6poi6yaTt as an instrumental dative
as
some
a
only
for
it
baptism;
interpret
as
a
synonym
and 3) in vv. 5-7, Paul moves away from the imagery of
and
baptism, choosing instead other images to explain his argument (cf. Cranfield, Romans, 1:307).
112SeeKdsemann, Romans, 167-69,
and Schnackenburg, Baptism, 49-59, for an
difficulties
discussion
the
involved
in this issue.
on
extensive

101

human eidstence (Phil. 2: 7) that is determined by this "flesh of sin, " yet, unlike all
in
113
Romans
lived
He
Taking
humans,
(2
Cor.
this
5:
21).
sense
without sin
other
6:5a, 6yotwpa refers to the death of Christ and believers' participation

in it directly,

but their death is not identical with His in every respect. This view is held by many
114
interpreters.
recent

To be united with the "form" (commonly rendered "likeness") of Christ's


death, then, means that Christians have truly becomeunited with Christ's death by
be
historical
to
in
broken.
Likewise,
the
event which sin's rule was
crucifixion as
be
Christ's
"form"
the
that
they
united with
of
will
resurrection means
united with
Christ's resurrection as the event in which death's hold is broken and life in glory
begins.115At conversion-initiation (baptism) Christians were united with the death of
Christ and thus are now in the state of being "conformed" to that death (Phil. 3:10).
In light of verse 2, this additional element Oyotqia as "form") indicates that "death to
to
Christians.
Paul
Thus,
the
say
on
goes
continuing existence of
sin" characterizes
in verse 5b that if this is the present existence of believers, then certainly WMKal,
footnote
future
99
be
in
their
above)
existence
will
one which they are united with
see
Christ
Christ's
"form"
This
include
being
their
the
of
resurrection.
will
glorified with
Him
(Rom.
living
8:
17-18,23,30).
with
and
Fourth, the preceding discussion leads us to consider the verb tenses in
5
but
In
3
4
Paul
in
5.
tense
the
verses and
protasis of verse
used aorist
verbs,
verse
113Hooker,
FromAdamto Christ,18,saysthat Rom.8:3 is "surelya reference
to the
" that is, "in the
incarnation,andan attemptto affirm that Christ sharedfully in humanexperience,
(27).
Adam"
of
condition
114Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 35,38-39; Ridderbos, Paul, 207,406-08; Frankem6lle,
Taufverstdndnis, 65-70; Cranfield, Romans, 1:308; Dunn, Romans, 1:317; Wedderburn, Baptism, 47
Romans,
Moo,
369
Morgan,
"Romans 6:5a," 295-302. Tannehill appeals to Phil.
n84,370;
and
n7;
2:7 and argues that Paul used 6poto)paas a synonym for yopO4and both of these terms were
idea
from
the
transformation
with
of
one mode (form) of existence to another (cf. Rom.
connected
8:29; 2 Cor. 3:18; Phil. 3:21). Thus 6poto)pain Rom. 6:5 means conformation to Christ in the two
(forms)
His
of
existence: the crucified Jesus and the resurrected Lord (38-39).
modes
115Wilckens, Rdmer, 2: 14-15.

102
he changed to a perfect tense (y6y6paye-P).This perfect takes in the past punctiliar
the
the
the
to
of
e)dstence
continuing
aorists referred and affirms
event which
116
it
does
Being
Christ's
death
to
a past
restrict
not
united with
resultant state.
(condition)
the
is
but
that
to
ongoing
continues characterize
a resultant state
event
life of the Christian (cf. Phil. 3:7,10; Gal. 2:19; 6:14). So Paul used the perfect tense,
he
had
its
because
he
dying
Christ
to
though
was referring
with
as a past event,
even
benefits
in
and
mind.
present significance
In the apodosis clause (6:5b), Paul stressed the certainty (dAAdKai) that our
His
form
Christ's
death
include
form
the
the
of
of
will
union with
union with
resurrection.

In this clause he used the future tense verb &61-tc0a. Interpreters have

idea
is,
the
future,
logical
in
1)
that
three
of
tense
this
as
a
ways:
purely
understood
logical certainty (if A is true, then B will follow), referring to the already realized
1
3:
12;
2:
Colossians
believers
"with
Christ"
in
and
"spiritual" resurrection of
as stated
Ephesians 2: 6; 1172) an e2dstential future, that is, a reference to conformity to the
in
believer
has
begun
life
in
to
the
the
walk
ongoing moral
of
who
resurrection
118
future,
the
life;
is,
to
3)
that
physical
a reference
or,
an eschatological
newness of
2
1
119
Views
believers
Christ
(Phil.
3:
20).
the
and refer
at
parousia of
resurrection of
116BDF, 318,4; 340; Wallace, Grammar, 574-76.
117For example: Murray, Romans, 219, who cites 5: 17,19 as parallels; Fitzmyer,
Romans, 435; Oepke, TDNT, 1:371 n14; Frid, "R6mer 6:4-5, " 198-99; and S. E. Porter, Verbal
Aspect in the Greek of the New Testament with Reference to Tense and Mood, SBG 1 (New York- Peter
Lang, 1989) 422-23.

118For example: Cranfield, Romans, 1:308, who claims this rendering fits best with vv.
4b and 6c: "For if (in baptism) we have becomeconformed to his death, we shall certainly also be
(in
life)
his
"
in
later
he
to
a
our
moral
resurrection;
article
suggests a "future of obligation"
conformed
for 6:5b, "we are to be," and 6:8b, "we are to live with" ("Romans 6: 1-14 Revisited, " 43 n7). Also,
Fitzmyer, Romans, 435; Schnackenburg, Baptism, 37-38; and Schneider, TDNT, 5:194, who points
to v. 11: "alive to God in Christ" as support.
119For example: Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 10-12; Siber, Mit Christus leben, 242-43;
Bornkamm, "Baptism, " 78; Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 135; Barrett, Romans, 124; Kdsemann,
1:303; Dunn, Romans,
Romans, 169; Wilckens, Rdmer, 2: 15; Michel, R6mer, 154; Kuss, Rfterbrief,
1:318; Moo, Romans, 371. Many who take this view treat the references to a past (spiritual)
Christ
in
Col.
believers
departure
2:
12;
3:
1
Eph.
5-6
2:
with
of
and
post-Pauline
resurrection
as a
from Paul's eschatological position (see Frankem6lle, Taufverstdndnis, 63-64,72-73). However,

103
3
life
Christ
Christian's
the
view
to
while
and present new
past resurrection with
her
future
Christ.
his
to
or
existence
with
refers
That ea6ycOapoints to an eschatologicalfuture can be seen in the following
in
(parallelism)
the
Paul
1)
the
clause of
o67WS-Kat
changed
comparison
observations:
the
he
to
2)
tense
to
4b;
past event of
verbs refer
previously used aorist
verse
baptism in verses 2-4, and a perfect tense verb to refer to the believer's present
3)
the
future
in
5b;
but
in
5a,
tense
parallel
and
verb verse
now a
existence verse
light
the
indicates,
in
8
between
5
the
verb
of
addition
of
verses and
structure
is
it
120Moreover,
future.
is
8,
5b
in
to
the
that
a reference
verse
Triare6opep verse
future
life
to
from
in
for
Paul
to
go
present participation
newness of
easy
relatively
two
For
him,
4
5.
he
does
in
of
these
aspects
simply
are
and
verses
as
resurrection,
to
from
he
life,
in
one
Christian's
the
eschatological
and
can easily move
participation
the
Thus,
Phil.
does
(cf.
Cor.
4:
3:
10-11).
he
2
10-14
the other as
and
elsewhere
it
is,
force,
death
is
in
Christ's
that
identification
was
Christian's
perfective
with
his
(conversion-initiation)
baptism
inaugurated in the past event of
and now marks
Christ's
hand,
/
his
her
identification
the
her present existence,while, on
with
other
future.
"less
is
the
to
realized"
and oriented
resurrection
An eschatological future makes good sensein this context for at least three
death,
The
1)
the
and
related,
closely
sin
and
are
powers
of
old
age,
namely,
reasons.
5:21 and 6:9 show that death's rule, to which the Christian is still subject, is not far
from Paul's mind. The last enemy, death, has not yet been destroyed, and "though
Christians have died with Christ, it cannot be said of them, as it is of Christ, that
"realized
be
Rom.
texts
than
6,
they
these
emphasize
eschatology"
viewed
need
more
not
although
from
but,
be
departure
Paul's
an
earlier
perspective
rather,
own application of
can
viewed
as
a
as
his
(so
Moo,
Wedderburn,
Baptism,
to
Romans,
371
a
eschatology
new
situation
of
aspect
n97).
one
70-84, has persuasively argued that Paul did not write Rom. 6 to "correct" these so-called prePauline ideas that are reflected in these later writings. See also, M. J. Harris, Raised Immortal:
Resurrection and Immortality in the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1983) 101-05. See
ch. 4,197 n6.
120Bornkamm, "Baptism, " 74-75. As noted above (p. 73), Bornkamm. has observed a
between
5-7
8-10.
vv.
and
vv.
parallel
structural

104
they'will never die again."'121 2) New life is now in progress, is still open to the
believer
future.
The
"old
"
is
the
the
participates
powers of
realm, and still
attacks of
in new life in the present, but he or she doesnot yet possessit in its fullest and final
form. It still remains God's gift for the future (Rom. 6:23b). 3) The reference to the
future here may also reflect Paul's awareness of the danger of Christian
triumphalism K1

Cor. 4:8). Since Paul did not want to give a footing to those who

future
he
deny
resurrection,
apparently presupposedpast resurrection with
would
Christ even though he choseto speak of it as still future (cf. vv. 4b, 11,13). 122The
believers
for
final
is
that
to
this
complete
remind
and
victory over sin and
reason
death is yet future. Until then, they live in the power of Christ's resurrected life under
is
This
Cor.
4:
10).
in
daily
it
(cf
2
their
imperative
a
the
of making manifest
conduct
/
"already
in
Paul's
tension
the
not yet"
eschatology.
prime example of
2.4.4.2 Romans 6:6. In verse 6 and following, Paul sets forth the
its
highlights
Christian's
death
Christ
(cf.
3b-4a,
5a)
the
and
with
vv.
significance of
died
to
Christians
his
in
doing,
he
further
2:
In
thesis
sin.
verse we
so
explains
result.
-yiV&UKOVT-67S-6-rL123introduce
information
The initial words -ro&To
additional

l2lHooker, From Adam to Christ, 44.


122Beasley-Murray, Baptism, 133,139. G. M. Styler, "Obligation in Paul's Christology
Christ
Spirit
C.
F.
D.
Moule,
in
in
Honour
in
Ethics"
Studies
New
Testament:
the
eds.
and
of
and
B. Lindars and S. S. Smalley (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973) 175-87, esp. 181-83,
Paul
Christ's
Christian's
that
the
understands
resurrection as past and present
argues
union with
(v.
Christians
(v.
future.
That
life"
"alive
God"
11)
"walk
4b)
in
to
as
of
and
newness
are
as well
"out of the dead" N. 13) is the present redemptive-historical "form" (v. 5b) in which they are
identified with Christ's resurrection (cf. footnote 119 above).
123The present participle ymulaKopTesis difficult to classify. It could be understood as an
adverbial participle of cause introducing the premise of known, accepted fact on which Paul built his
"Since
know
in
5,
thus:
this, namely, that.
(Robertson, Grammar, 1128;
v.
we
argument
.
."
Tannehill, Dying and rising, 13-14). Or, it could be understood as a participle of attendant
circumstance (cf. Burton, Moods and Tenses, 173-74) introducing a thought logically paratactic to a
fact
idea
or
another
relevant to the argument, thus: "And we know this, namely, that. ..
previous
(Cranfield, Romans, 308; Moo, Romans, 372; cf. NRSV, NIV). The latter view loosely linking
41.110P
6
N.
dvOpomos*
4a)
(v. 6a) is preferred in this
with
7TaAai6g
azTo
o-vve-oTaqp6A7
avve-Tdoi7yev
demonstrative
The
pronoun Torrro refers to what follows in the JTLclause that
neuter
context.
introduces a statement in apposition to ToOrogiving the content of what is known (BAGD, s.v. ou"'Tog,
J.b; Robertson, Grammar, 699; Wallace, Grammar, 458-59).

105
knew
how
his
What
Paul's
they
this
to
readers
and
obtained
explanation.
relevant
knowledgeis difficult to determine. On one hand, some claim that it was not derived
from traditional Christian teaching or experiencebut is something Paul deducedfrom
the preceding argument and now makes known to his readers.124 On the other hand, as
in verse 3 and in light of his reference to baptism, others argue that Paul is appealing to
information already generally familiar to his readers. As such he developsit further
implications
his
terminology
them
they should
and
own
making
aware
of
using
125
Paul's
latter
is
The
likely.
This
implies
that
readers
view
probably
more
recognize.
first-hand
familiar
"old
designation
through
the
with
man"
perhaps
were already
for
Paul's
to
most readers, at
missionary preaching elsewhere earlier, or,
exposure
64-65
hand,
Paul
himself
(see
had
Rome
been
to
above).
pp.
since
second
not yet
An understanding of verse 6 revolves around its three verb clauses. First,
,
vaAaL6(OV126
6
Paul says:
77P

dpop&)7TOS.

127
The
[Xplo-ro].
compoundverb
C-VV6-0TaVpdj0q

the
(vv.
5a)
4a,
the
and resumes
continues
sequenceof cv'p-compounds
o-wcc-ravpoA7
in
(eu6yc0a)
following
(ye-y6paycp)
future
tense
the
verbs
perfect
and
aorist passive

124Dunn, Romans, 1: 318. The abrupt mention of the "old


man, " a non pre-Pauline
Pauline formulation,
designation, and the continued use of the ubt, Xpto-ro motif, a distinctive
two arguments used to support this view.

are

125Cranfield, Romans, 1: 300,309-10; Wedderburn,


Baptism, 46-48. Paul apparently
have
baptism
his
instruction
the
their
time
or
received
standard
at
of
readers
a
of
core
assumes
See
language
(d
Gal.
familiar
his
further
6:
6)
thus
ch.
without
and
explanation.
are
with
soon after
Kdsemann's claim (Romans, 169) that the "old man" is a pre-Pauline
term, however, is
4,229-31.
(Eph.
he
for
because
later
Pauline
Col.
2:
4:
22-24;
3:
9-10)
15;
must
rely
on
material
questionable
this postulated pre-Pauline tradition.
126The plural possessive pronoun 4p6v with the singular
noun dvOponros-may have
force: "the old man of each one of us" (MHT, 3: 23-24; cf. 1 Cor. 6: 19-20; 2 Cor. 4: 10;
distributive
Rom. 8: 23), or, collective force: "the old man of (including) all of us" (BDF, 139-40; cf. Matt. 12: 35).
The former option is preferred in light of a more individualized
vs. corporate emphasis in this
With
Semitism
5:
12-21.
this
Paul
follows
the Hebraic preference for a
with
as
compared
passage
is
in
distributive
something
applicable to each person in the group. See pp. 107-11
which
singular
for further discussion.
127Supplying Xpto-rO ("with Christ") here is supported
by o-me7doi7pev.
contextually
..
dve0dvoye-P
in
Christ
4
Xpta-rP
in
to
and
v.
a-bv
referring
v. 8. A parallel passage in Gal. 2: 19
abnp
has Xpta-np preceding avvea-ra6po)pat. There, as here, the act of crucifixion
is not to be separated
from the death that follows it. So, one could say, "our old man was put to death with Christ. "

106
Paul
imagery
form
this
death
Christ's
the
Since
took
5.
serves
crucifixion,
of
verse
Christ"
his
"participation
"death
bringing
to
the
in
with
side" of
a climax
well
discussion in verses 3-5. The figure emphasizesthe decisive finality of the death so
is
128
finality
This
dying.
initiation
the
than
describedrather
expressed
of a processof
in
God"
"alive
to
by
"
the
"dead
by
to
the
words
sin, and positively
words,
negatively
11.
verse
In light of this, then, to be "crucified with Christ" refers to the Christian's
faith
believer's
129
is
light
It
God's
in
the
Christ's
in
as
of
act
crucifnion.
participation
death
died
believer
have
the
He
the
to
baptism
in
same
considers
whereby
attested
in
Paul
died,
death
He
130
decisive,
And the
Christ died.
stresses
as
epoch-changing
Christ's
just
for
Consequently,
its
breaking
died
He
as
10,
to
once
all.
power
sin,
verse
Christian's
(6:
the
10),
from
His
the
so also
realm of sin
release
crucifudon meant
Once
from
/
her
his
Christ
the
again,
sin.
of
realm
release
means
crucifudon with

Paul's language of "death" in relation to believers is objective (positional) and


"death
(cf.
By
God's
6:
2,4).
with
act,
ethical
or
mystical
relational, not physical,
Christ" has brought them into a new status and realm (aorist passive indicative
imperatives).
(present
for
daily
living
definite
hold
that
active
consequences
verbs)
but,
Christ
took
how
this crucifudon with
as
Paul did not say precisely when or
place,
/
the
in
the
it
took
corporate
cross on
place redemptive-history at
above,
argued
/
individual
(baptism)
level
the
personal
on
and at conversion-initiation
representative
level. The latter in light of the former is primarily in view here.
128PaceGodet, Romans, 244; Dunn, Romans, 1:332; and Cranfield, Romans, 1:310.
129Theonly other use of avc-ravp& by Paul is in his own testimony in Gal. 2:19 where it
has
This
indicates
Christ
in
that
tense.
the
enduring
participation
perfect
with
crucified
occurs
2,
Cor.
2:
life.
He
1:
23;
Christ
1
five
times:
it
to
applies o-ravp&
effects; governs one's present way of
8; 2 Cor. 13:4; and Gal. 3: 1.
130Divine agency is reflected in the aorist passive. The parallel in Gal. 5:24 is striking in
[777aOD1
that Christians are the agents of crucifixion whose object is the flesh: ol & -roDXPLOTOD
7V
"
Paul
(aorist
the
IaTa6pwav
tense).
baptism
(conversion-initiation)
to
as
probably
alludes
adpKa
time when this took place.

107
It is, however, 6 7TaAaL&-,
- M& di,wms- that was crucified
- makes this designation
adjective iraAat6-,

distinctive

Christ.
with

The

to Paul and gives it theological

force. 131 The same expression occurs in Colossians 3: 9-10, where it is the antithesis
VvOpoxwl,
in
Ephesians
4:
22,24,
it
is
the
and
antithesis
veov
where
of T&
Behind
dv*w7Tov.
this antithesis
Katv&

of -r6v

is the contrast between Adam and Christ, the

"first" and "last" diAmvos- (1 Cor. 15: 45; Rom. 5: 15-19) and the prototypical

"old

132
/
"new
light
In
"old
this,
the
man"
respectively.
of
man" and
man new man"
metaphor

function
to
appears

levels:
two
at
corporate and individual.

In Romans 6, Paul mentions only the "old man. " On the corporate level, in

light of 5:12-19, the "old man" refers to the solidarity of all those who are "in Adam, "
the prototypical "old man" and representative "head" of the old age in redemptive
history. The corporate "old man" is humanity "in Adam" outside of Christ under the
tyranny of sin and death. On the individual level, the "old man" refers to the person
humanity
is
"in
Adam,
"
is,
in
Adam,
that
outside of
solidarity with
who
a member of
Christ, one who belongs to the old age and lives under the rule of sin and death. In this
these
"old
in
though
the
are
man" engages a multiplicity of sinful practices,
condition
his
in
here.
Thus,
in
"old
is
designation
terms
the
the
or
of
man"
of a person
not view
her identity and relationship to Adam and the powers of the old age in redemptive
history.
Is, then, "our old man" in verse 6 corporate or individual? Some interpreters
"old
here
in
the
man"
understand
a corporate senseas a collective entity that was
131See BAGD, s.
v. vaAaL6S",Seesemann, TDNT, 5: 717-20; Delling, TDNT, 1:486-87;
Haarbeck, NIDNTT, 2: 713-16; also ch. 4,227-28 and ch. 5,269-73. EaAm6s-is commonly used in
secular Greek, meaning "old" in two senses: 1) that which has existed for a long time and thus is
venerable or held in high esteem (cf. Antipho 6.4); and 2) that which is antiquated, obsolete or worn
out and thus is worthless or unusable (cf. Sophocles, Oed. Tyr. 290). The latter negative sense is
the predominant meaning found in both the LXX and the NT. The synonym dpXaFos*has the
predominant sense of "original" or "venerable, " but in the NT the distinction is not maintained (cf
2 Cor. 5: 17). The main antonymns are KaLv6s-and Plos. The significance of the term lies in the
antithesis of old and new.
redemptive-historical-eschatologicaI
132See the discussion in ch. 1,38-41,
and footnote 134 below for supporting arguments.

108
it
in
Christ.
death
Tannehill
three
this
to
and
supports
view
with
advocates
put
(o-61-ta)
133
body
he
"the
First,
then
"our
claims
of
sin"
and
equates
old man" and
ways.
that Romans 7:4 ("through the body of Christ") and Colossians 2:11 ("the body of the
flesh") illuminate Romans 6:6 becausethey use the motif of dying and rising with
Christ in connection with the term o,61-iaand speak of it as a collective entity. Both of
these verses, he argues, refer, at the same time, to the body that died on the cross
body
in
believers
Second,
included.
the
to
corporate sense
corporate
which
were
a
and
9-10,
3:
6:
is
by
its
in
Colossians
in
Romans
6
the
where
shown
similar use
concept
of
it is clear that many individuals have "put off 'the old man and "put on" the new man
just as they have "put on" Christ (Gal. 3:27). But there is only one Christ, not one for
"
"new
be
"old
there
individual
man.
must also only one
man" and one
person, so
each
These, like Christ and Adam, are corporate figures. Accordingly, the "new man"
includes Jew and Greek, circumcision and uncircumcision, etc. (cf. Eph. 2:15; Col.
3:11). Third, additional support is derived from the Adam and Christ parallel in the
has
dpopoilTos.
Romans
5:
12-2
1,
the
special significance
where,
word
preceding section,
The phrase "the one man" (vv. 12,15,17,18,19)

is connected with the phrases "all

"the
(vv.
(vv.
"the
12,18)
15,17,19)
that
to
one man"
and
many"
show
men"
determines and sums up the existence of all people who are related to him. 134

133Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 24-30,45-50,59; also Ridderbos, Paul, 62-64,205-14;


Paul,
Ridderbos,
A.
Harrisville,
Press,
92-93.
R.
Romans,
(Minneapolis:
Augsburg
1980)
ACNT
and
208, states: "Then [in Christ's death] was 'our old man' crucified with him; and 'old man' intended
here not as the individual past of particular believers in their unconverted state but as the supraindividual sinful mode of existence
Thus the "old man" is a corporate figure for the old mode of
...
."
existencein sin that was judged once for all in the death of Christ on the cross. For counter
Gottes.
Ende
Werke
Schweizer,
TDNT,
Bauer,
Leiblichkeit
das
K.
7:
1065
aller
arguments, see
and -A.
Die Bedeutung der Leiblichkeit des Menschenbei Paulus, SNT 4 (GUtersloh: Mohn, 1971) 149-52.
134The use of dv0pojims-in this
Paul
45-49
15:
in
Cor.
1
sense
where
same
also occurs
describes Adam and Christ as the first and the second dpOpojirOL,
in
their
the
share
and
many
nature, whether earthly or heavenly (v. 48), and wear the "image" of the one or the other (v. 49).
This ignores all other men between them. These two are determinative for the many. This passage
also makes clear the connection of dpOpoivoswith a corporate figure since in Rom. 6: 6 "our old man"
is not specifically identified with Adam. Further, &Oponwg can be treated as a distributive singular
with the plural 4MQ, indicating "the old man of each one of us, " or, as a collective singular indicating
"the old man of (including) all of us" (BDF, 139-40; see footnote 126 above). The former option is

109
This interpretation, however, is problematic in this context. Paul clearly
"
"old
is
"
Adam,
the
"our
man, was not
corporate
who
old man was crucified.
says that
"
The
"old
is
Christ,
the
aorist
man.
corporate
who was crucified, not
crucified and
to
believers
than
has
happened
(awco-ravp&A7)
to
to
rather
points what
passive verb
than
decisive
in
God's
It
to
took.
a
they
rather
past event
action a
points
an action
for
death,
His
in
Christ
death
"old
The
to
and
with
man" was put
present experience.
this
baptism,
in
by
faith
be
Christ
to
those who would come
as attested
united with
Adam
the
to
order.
their
old
and
united
with
sin
as
members
subjugation
ended
Even though it has corporate associations here, the "old man" in verse 6
/
"we
The
MtOv
individual
statements
the
our"
to
of
and
other
person.
presence
refers
in this passage,the reference to a6ya in the next clause, the enslavement to sin no
longer in the last clause, and the connection of conversion-initiation (baptism) with
Ernest
interpretation.
individual
in
language
this
Paul's o*, passagesupports an
Best has observed that the "with Christ" motif is more individualistic than corporate
die
to
is
in application. Each believer and not the whole corporate community said
Christ"
"with
Christians
life.
Even
and
though
to
as
regarded
are
of
and rise newness
Believers
them.
between
draws
distinction
"
Paul
"in
Him,
included
a clear
always
are
is
That
it.
help
do
to
but
benefits,
its
they
Christ's
in
create
not
and
experience
share
is
dimension
135
While
does
for
Christ
the
them.
prominent
totally the work
corporate
in
is
dimension
follows,
individual
5
the
Romans
to
in
prominent
and related what
Romans 6, which deals with the intersection of redemptive history, eschatology, and
individual existence.
"Our old man" in verse 6, then, is a reference to individual believers as they
belonged
lived
the
to
the
they
power of sin
under
and
as
when
old
age
slaves
were
once
distributive
does
The
individuation.
though
collective
even
a
singular
not
preclude
preferred
Phil.
3:
21.
be
Pauline
in
Rom.
19-20;
6:
12;
8:
26;
Cor.
6:
1
and
seen
uses elsewhere:
singular can
SeeR. H. Gundry, S5main Biblical Theologywith Emphasis on Pauline Anthropology, SNTSMS 29
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976) 220.
135Best,One Body, 57-58; also Grundmann, TDNT, 7:781-86.

110

(6:17).136That "our old man was crucified with Christ" is a vivid portrayal of the fact
into
incorporation
been
broken
has
through
their
Christians,
for
the
that,
power of sin
Christ's death. It means their release from the realm of sin, and thus it is equivalent
to "we Christians died to sin" (6:2). It also means that they no longer live 1V0apK[(7:5;
8:8-9) and their former identity and status "in Adam" has been done away.137This
for
individual
(position)
in
the
took
at conversionplace
change relational status
initiation.
There is little in this text to support the view that Paul used the words "our old
human
fallen
138
designate
(cf.
Rom.
7:
indwelling
17,20),
to
to
sin
or,
man" personify
"old
is,
the
that
in
the
to
whole person or an aspect of a person,
nature either regard
leads
139
to
This
(new
by
"new
the
man).
nature"
nature" counterbalanced or replaced
(one's
it
because
essential
confusesrelational status with ontological
misunderstanding
being) or ethical categories and tends to ignore the eschatological framework (old / new

136Murray, Romans, 219-20; id., Principles of Conduct (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1957)
First
From
Barrett,
JL
C.
Taufverstdndnis,
74-76;
TDNT,
Frankemblle,
Jeremias,
1:
365-66;
211-19;
Adam to Last. A Study in Pauline Theology (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1962) 98-99; id.,
Romans, 125; KAsemann, Romans, 169; Leenhardt, Romans, 161; Dunn, Romans, 1:318-19;
Fitzmyer, Romans, 436; Moo, Romans, 373-75; Wilckens, Rdmer, 2:16-17. Seesemann,TDNT,
5:719, says that Paul uses the antithesis of old and new "to express the incompatibility between
Paul
that
R.
"In
6
He
begun
life.
"
in
Christian
life
says
the
the previous
also states:
sin and
newly
been
has
he
(v.
is
baptized
Christ's
death
is
baptized
into
3,5);
the
he who
previously was
old man
"
death....
The
the
to
old and
new are mutually exclusive.
crucified and put
137Caird, Language, 44, states: "To be 'in the flesh' is the same thing as to be 'in Adam,' in
the old humanity, enslaved to sin and death. Christians are not, in this sense, 'in the flesh' (Rom.
On the other hand, J. D. G. Dunn, The Theology of Paul the Apostle (Grand Rapids /
8:9)..
.
."
Cambridge: Eerdmans, 1998), 464, appears to mix categories when he states: "Believers are 'in
Adam' and continue to be'in Adam; they have not yet died. But they are also 'in Christ, ' and have
begun to experience life, though they have yet to share in the full experience of Christ's resurrectionin the resurrection of the body."
138PaceJ. Owen, The Works of John Owen, 16 vols. ed. W. H. Goold, reprint ed. (London:
Banner of Truth, 1966) esp. vol. 6; also id., Sin and Temptation, abridged and ed. by J. M. Houston
(Portland: Multnomah Press, 1983). Owen states: "This 'old man' is the corruption of our nature
(Works, 3:222), and, "Indwelling sin is compared to a person, a living person, called 'the old man,'
with his faculties, and properties .. ." (Works, 6:8).
139PaceGodet, Romans, 1:415; C. Hodge,A Commentary
2nd
Romans,
Epistle
to
the
the
on
(Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1980) 177-98; L. S. Chafer, He That Is Spiritual, reprint
ed. reprint
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1967 [1918, rev. ed. 19241) 113-14.

ill

he
discussion.
Cranfield,
for
Paul's
example, makes a confusing statement when
age) of
in
fallen
human
"old
denotes
"the
the
the
that
whole self
nature,
man"
whole of our
says
its fallenness."140 He adds that this doesnot imply that the "old man" no longer exists
becausethe old fallen nature lingers on in the believer. For support, he appeals to
Colossians 3: 9 where he thinks believers are exhorted to put off the "old man. "141
However, Paul makes it clear in Galatians 2: 20 that the pre-Christian

"I" (OVKC-rl
Eya)

is not an aspect (part / nature) of the person but constitutes the whole person in a
"under
(Rom.
3:
9).
sin"
namely,
relationship,
particular

The secondclause of Romans 6:6 gives the immediate purpose Uva)142for


This
dyapTlag.
the cruciffidon of "our old man" with Christ: YvaKaTapMW7
T6uiZpaTsis the first mention of 6papTlasince verse 2, suggesting that this clause and the
line
the
following infinitive clause that also mentions 61-tapTia
of argument
round off
begun in verse 2 and meet the problem posedin verse 1.
dyapTlas-have been understood in four main ways.
The words T6o,*a 7-i7sFirst, some Church Fathers and early commentators understood the phrase
figuratively, without any anthropological reference, to mean "the mass [consisting] of
having
figure
body
the
members
as an organized whole
of a
sin" or sin viewed under
that were destroyed.143This view claims support in the fact that there is no

140Cranfield, Romans, 1:308-9. Barrett, Romans, 125, refutes the view that regards the
"old man" as the nature of the unconverted man; so also Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 52.
141Theimperatival view of the aorist participles in Col. 3:9 is unlikely; see ch. 4,215-22.
Furthermore, believers ("we") are not said to have died to the "old man, " thereby implying "he" still
has
"our
Christ
in
Rather,
His
In
Pauline
death.
to
old
man"
come
an
end
with
usage, the
exists.
"old man" is never personified in an active sensethe way "sin" is. The designation is either the
(Rom.
6:6) or the object of a transitive active verb (Col. 3:9; Eph. 4:22).
passive
verb
of
a
subject
142This rva purpose clause introduces a transaction that
(not
the
time
as
same
occurs at
is
6a
to)
and
an essential corollary to it.
v.
subsequent
143H. A. W. Meyer, The Epistle to the Romans, 2
T. & T. Clark,
vols., KEKNT (Edinburgh:
1881,1884) 1: 289, cites some early Church Fathers and early commentators
among others who
held more or less to this view. See also Hodge, Romans, 197-98; cf. D. E. H. Whiteley, The Theology
Basil
Blackwell,
(Oxford:
Paul,
1974) 42.
St.
2nd
ed.
of

112
body
is
(i.
"our
that
the
personal
of
pronoun with
sin") and
c6pa
possessive
phrase e.,
is
However,
the
there
the
serves
as
subject of
singular and
passive verbKaTqpY77ffl.
little lexical support for such a use of ozOya
in this context (especially 6:12-13) or in the
Testament.
New
whole
Second,more recently some interpreters, especially those who understand
the "old man" in a corporate sense,also understand a6pa in a corporate senseas the
death
in
destroyed
the
those
that
who are under sin's power
collective entity of all
was
Again,
Christ,
"body"of
Christian.
individual
to
the
and not as a reference
of
each
Colossians
Romans
7:
4
2:11 as parallels to Romans 6:6, Tannehill argues
and
using
that the body of sin "is put to death in Christ's death, and the believers are put to
death by means of the death of this body, and so it is understood as a corporate
"the
(Fva)
"144
However,
indicates
"our
the
that
purpose
clause
old man" and
entity.
body of sin" are at least two aspects of the same entity since the former was crucified
in order that the latter might be "destroyed." This suggests that both conceptsmust
be understood in the same way, either both individually or both corporately. We
"the
best
"our
it
is
here
in
individual
to
take
that
sense,so
old man"
an
argued above
body of sin" should also be understood in the same way.
Third, even though the phrase is understood in an individual sense,some
interpreters seek to limit it to the physical body as controlled by sin. 145The body is
in
itself
but
dominated
However,
is
by
regarded
as
evil
while
not
sin.
viewed as easily
includes
body,
it
is
limited
in
Pauline
the
it
to
physical
usage.
a6lia
not necessarily
The frequent parallels between u6lia and words denoting the whole person (cf. 6:12-13)

144Tannehill, Dying
and Rising, 24,45-50,72; also Ridderbos, Paul, 113,229; and
M. Barth, Ephesians, 2 vols. AB 34,34a (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1974) 2: 538 n203-

145Gundry,Sdma, 29-31,57-58, appeals to the distinction drawn in 6: 13 between


Td
ylAq and &uToVs-,Godet, Romans, 416; Murray, Romans, 1:220-21, "the body as conditioned and
by
"
sin;
and R. Jewett, Paul's Anthropological Terms. A Study of Their Use in Conflict
controlled
Settings, AGJU 10 (Leiden: Brill, 1971) 291-92.

113
interpret
in
leads,
broader
This
in
to
sense some places.
a6pa a
provide goodreason
then, to the following option as the best one.
Fourth, many recent interpreters understand "the body of sin" to denote the
146
by
This
include
the
the
as
controlled
person
whole
would
ruling power of sin.
body
in
downplay
the
tendency
to
spite
of
some
of
or even eliminate any
physical
in
Paul's
(e.
Bultmann
).
use of c6pa
g.,
such reference
et al. The o-iOyaconstitutes a
be
/
being
in
his
her
particular environment, one who acts and can
person as a social
by
by
Hence,
is
defined
an
something else.
o0ya often
acted upon
more precisely
3:
21
Phil.
(cf.
11;
Romans
24;
8:
6:
7:
12;
adjective or other modifying genitive phrase
(twice), Col. 1:22; 2: 11). In this case the phrase 7-g dltapTias-is best understood as a
("the
body
belonging
/
/
by
to
to
sin")147
enslaved
genitive of possession
controlled
148
"body
The
held
("sinful
body").
the
than
of
commonly
genitive of quality
rather
his
his
"
is
in
her
bodily
the
then,
the
all
person of
sin,
old age who,
or
existence with
her human capacities (faculties), is under the controlling power and domination of sin.
Such a person-the

"old man'! --is a slave of sin.

1460n this view of c0pa see Bultmann, Theology, 1:192-203; Schweizer, TDNT, 7: 106066; Motyer, NIDNTT, 1:235-45; Ridderbos, Paul, 115-17; specifically, Cranfield, Romans, 1:309,
"the whole man as controlled by sin; " Michel, Rdmer, 155; KAsemann, Romans, 169; Dunn, Romans,
1:319-20; Moo, Romans, 375-76; and Fitzmyer, Romans, 436, "the whole person considered as
earth-oriented, not open to God or His Spirit, and prone to sin. " There is some papyrological
have
"and
if
BC),
(ca.
"slave":
Hibeh
Papyri
54.20
245
that
you
was
aOpa
rendered
e.g.,
evidence
(ca.
Delphi
200
inscription
taken the slave (T6 ud)pa), deliver him to Semphtheus
at
also
an
;"
...
bought
for freedom, a female slave (u6y[aj).
(Dittenberger, Sylloge2, no.
BC), "Apollo
...
...
.
."
845). A. Deissmann, Light from the Ancient East, rev. ed., trans. L. R. M. Strachan (Grand Rapids:
Baker, 1978) 323 n7, states: "The passage in Rom. vi. 6, 'that the body of sin might be destroyed, ' is
'body'
(orOya)
'slave
.......
Though it is unlikely that Paul used
since
may
also
ambiguous,
mean
"slave,
"
does
illumine the meaning of the phrase T6 m5pa 7-g
to
mean
such
a
connection
aiopa
dyapTtas-. The plural m5p= was rendered "slaves" in a wider range of ancient literature (cf.
BAGD, sx. u6pa, 2; Rev. 18: 13).
147Moule, Idiom-Book, 38, "the
sin-possessed body. " Cf. Wis. 1.4, Iv Gr6pan KaTdXpe-q)
dpapTtas-,"in a body indebted (enslaved) to sin. " A subjective genitive ("the body sin controls
rules") is not appropriate since a0ya is not a verbal noun.

148BDF, 165; MHT, 2:440 and 3:213, treat this


because
"Hebraic
phrase as a
genitive"
of the frequent use of the Hebrew construct state in place of an adjective; thus in NT Greek an
frequently
is
in
genitive
used
place of an adjective of quality. The expression "sinful
attributive
body," however, is misleading to the extent that it suggests the physical body is inherently sinful, a
by
Paul
(cf.
Cor.
1
6:12-20).
rejected
notion

114
Understood in this way, "the body of sin" and "our old man" are closely
binding
former
directly
the
the
relationship of
and vividly
emphasizing more
related,
the "old man" to sin. 149If this is so, then "the body of sin" should be understood in the
does
Paul
Though
"old
individual
the
not use a
senseas
man" as argued above.
same
be
the
dpapTlag,
the
as
article -ifjg could understood
personal pronoun with -rg
in
yCjv
the
in
light
body
"
"our
of
of sin, especially
equivalent of a possessivepronoun:
150
following
pdsin
the
clause.
precedingclause and
What happens to "the body of sin" is expressed by the aorist passive verb
Testament,
found
in
New
twenty-seven
times
the
This
occurs
verb,
Ka-rapyqffl.
twenty-five times in the Pauline corpus. It has a broad spectrum of meaning ranging
Rom.
(cf
impotent"
inoperative
ineffective,
from "make
or
powerless; nullify, render
Cor.
1
(cf.
destroy"
"abolish,
bring
Gal.
17)
Cor.
28;
3:
to
1
1:
to
3:3,3 1; 4:14;
an end,
6:13; 15:24,26; 2 Thess. 2:8; Eph. 2:15; 2 Tim. 1:10). In between are a range of uses
"remove,
2,6;
7:
"
Rom.
down
(cf.
"release,
difficult
is
to
pin
whose precise meaning
2:
6;
Cor.
"
1
fade,
"pass
Cor.
2
3:
14;
Gal.
4,11;
"
5:
bring to an end,
away, put away,
13:8 (twice), 10,11; 2 Cor. 3:7,11,13,14). 151Where does Romans 6:6 fit within this
"152
"destroy,
Some
translate
the
the
while others
strong senseof
verb with
range?
149Cranfield, Romans, 1:309, states that apart from a difference in stress, the two
individualized
Adam
"Here
"
Kasemann,
Romans,
the'old
"identical;
169,
man'is
says:
phrases are
from
dyapTlag
the
in
thing
the
of
standpoint
means
same
us
o0ya
Tig
and represented
...
fallenness. The expressions are not collective ......
15ORobertson, Grammar, 769-70; Wallace, Grammar, 215-16; cf. similarly Rom. 7: 25;
16:23; 1 Cor. 5: 1; 2 Cor. 8: 18; 12: 18; Phil. 1:7. Again, the phrase should be treated as a
distributive singular: "the body of each one of us controlled by sin" (cf. footnotes 126 and 134 above).
Note the distributive force of the following plural possessive pronouns: 76 01611a
TS'Ta7retV66ocw 41-OV
in Phil. 3: 21 and & To Ovqo-roby6p a6paTt in Rom. 6: 12; also 1 Cor. 6: 19-20.

151BAGD, s.v. KaTapyeo);


LSJ, s.v.; MM, 331; Delling, TDNT, 1:452-54, "to make
208-210.
Paul,
inoperative,
"
Packer,
NIDNTT,
Ridderbos,
to
1:
73;
or,
put
out
of
use;
and
completely
This verb rarely occurs in classical Greek, where it means "to leave unemployed or idle" (e.g.,
Euripides, Phoenissae,753) and appears only four times in the LXX where it means "to cease,
destroy" (2 Esdr 4:21,23; 5:5; 6:8). Regarding Rom. 6:6, BAGD have the strong sense of "destroy."
The two non-Pauline NT texts are Luke 13:7 and Heb. 2:14.
152E.g., Murray, Romans, 1:221; Schnackenburg, Baptism, 39-40; and Frankem6lle,
Taufverstdndnis, 76.

115
/
/
inoperative,
but
"153
impotent
"render
the
neither
weaker senseof
powerless
employ
body
is
"the
(our)
language
The
fits
6
the
these
of sin"
subject
of verse very well.
of
"
/
"the
the
the
sin.
of
controlling power
person of
old age realm under
understood as
This person is not destroyed nor rendered powerless by God's action in conversioninitiation. Instead, the person is "released" from sin as a controlling power. What is
destroyed is not the person nor sin but the binding relationship between the two. The
fits
discharge"
7:
2,6154
"release,
is
in
Romans
and
clearly evident
remove,
meaning
the argument here even though the construction there (with d74 is slightly different.
it
Romans 6:7 confirms the same thought using the phrase d7T6Tg61-tapTlag
although
follows a different verb. Thus, the crucifixion of "our old man" on the crosswith Christ
has the purpose of releasing sin-controlled individuals from sin as a ruling power. The
believer's solidarity with Adam, which bound him or her to sin as a controlling power,
has ended. The believer's a6pa ceasesto be a "body of sin. " What this means for
Christian existence is spelled out in the concluding clause.
*169 TO
8ovAc6ELP
The third clause presents the climax of verse 6: ToDy77KeTt
dyapT[q.155 This is the goal and result to which the first two clauses point. The
infinitive
genitive articular

final
(explanatory),
be
8ovAc6cip
could
7oD...
epexegetical

(purpose) or consecutive (result) in relation to these clauses. 156 It is preferable to

153E.g., Dunn, Romans, 1:319; Fitzmyer, Romans, 436; and Moo, Romans, 375, who
the
"Paul's
in
this
that
suggests
rather
contexts
of
verb similar salvation-historical
use
states
...
connotation of a power whose influence is taken away" (375 n116).
1541n Rom. 7: 2 Paul speaks of a married woman who, when her husband dies, is
having
law
bound
her
him.
he
Christians
from
In
6
the
to
7:
that
marriage
who,
speaks
of
released
died with Christ, have been released from the Mosaic Law. In both cases dir6 ("from") follows a
passive form of KaT-apylo),and in both cases someone is released from a binding relationship to a
controlling power.
155The
61.1apTIqis a
negative adverb pi7KITt is Paul's answer to ITt in v. 2. The dative I
dative direct object following the verb bovArCw identifying
the master that one obeys and serves
Grundmann,
(BAGD, s.v. 8ovAr6oi, 2. c; BDF, 187,2).
TDNT, 1: 309-13, summarizes how Paul sees
the reality of sin in Rom. 5-8.
156According to Robertson, Grammar, 1067, this
be
infinitive
either
could
ToV
clause
400,
BDF,
its
because
that
this
is
in
or
argue
result.
construction
purpose
usage
epexegetical

116
take this infinitive clause as result in light of 1) the preceding aorist passive verbs (v.
in
61-tap7tq
in
6ab), 2) the emphatic /.t77K!
3)
this
the
7t
clause,
anaphoric article Tj With
this clause, 4) the treatment of dpapT[aas a ruling power in this context along with
believers
have
free
been
from
it (6:18,20,22), and 5) the
that
statements
set
following ydp clause of confirmation in verse 7. Also relevant is the explicit result
by
(introduced
involving
the same verb in 7:6b. The result that comes
cgoTe-)
clause
from what Paul said in the preceding 67Land Yvaclauses of verse 6 is that Christians
(U77KC'71)
/
longer
in
to
the
slaves
sin
as a ruling power
are no
old age realm.
The verb 8ovAd'Wmay denote relationship ("be a slave to, be subjected to"),
157
/
("serve,
The
former
best
in
is
this context.
conduct
obey").
or action
sense
Cranfield, however, adopts the latter senseand believes that this clause refers to the
daily moral life of Christians, that is, they should serve sin no longer in their daily
living. 158Paul certainly stressesthis elsewhere, but to understand this clause on the
his
here
level
is
basis
he
builds
to
the
ethical
undermine
moral
very
on which
later
his
in
Here
is
this
chapter.
concern
exhortations
relational-being

a slave to sin

binding
That
as a power.
relationship has been broken. The Christian's enslavement
to sin has ended. He or she has been liberated. On the basis of this soteriological
believers
(vv.
to
Paul
later
in
12-13)
this
not
and elsewhere
exhorts
passage
reality,
(as
daily
in
living.
2,
in
language
Paul's
their
throughout
this
text
vv.
also
serve sin
is veryloose.MHT, 1:217-18,take it asfinal
relationshipto otherelementsin the sentence
(purpose)
or explanatory(epexegetical)
of the previousFvaclauseasin Phil. 3:10. At MHT,3:141,
however,this infinitive is takenin a weakened
(result)sense.Fitzmyer,Romans,436,
consecutive
it
takesthis infinitive clauseasresult;Moo,Romans,376n123,preferspurpose,but acknowledges
be
could eitherpurposeor result (112n100).
157BAGD, sx. 8ovAe-66);
Rengstorf, TDNT, 2:261,274-76; Tuente, NIDNTT, 3:595-98.
Someclaim that Paul's view of sin as bondage or enslavement is "Hellenistic, " not Jewish or
See
E.
R.
Goodenough
apocalyptic.
and A. T. Kraabel, "Paul and the Hellenization of Christianity"
in Religions in Antiquity. Essays in Memory of E. R. Goodenough,ed. J. Neusner, SHR 14 (Leiden:
Brill, 1968) 23-68; and S. Sandmel, The Genius of Paul: A Study in History (Philadelphia: Fortress
Press, 1979) 8-14. However, Paul's view seemsto reflect the Jewish apocalyptic notion of two ages
(d Sanders, Paul, 553-54; de Boer, Defeat of Death, 235 n33).
158Cranfield, Romans, 1:310. He
appears to miss Paul's intention in Rom. 6:6 when he
claims that Paul is dealing mainly on the moral level. Also, Dunn, Romans, 1:320.

117
4a) is objective (positional), not ethical, although it carries ethical consequences.It is
believer's
Christian
His
is
that
the
existence,
point
relationship, and status.
about
in
from
Christ
brought
the
the controlling power of
crucifixion
of
participation
release
his
her
in
longer
being
or
sin resulting
no
a slave to sin.
2.4.4.3 Romans 6:7. To support the theological argument of verse 6, Paul
6
(6:
&8tKatcaTat
7).
This
ycip
diro0av(bv
Tg
d7r6
apap-riag
explains:
underscores and
illustrates his claim that Christians are no longer slaves to sin. Precisely what this
debated.
however,
is
Some
interpreters
verse means,

"the
6
as
d7ro0avoj'v
understand

[with
Christ],
has
died
"
that is, the Christian (cf. v. 8a), and they give
one who
&8tKa1a)7aLthe meaning Paul usually ascribes to &KaL&), namely, "justify, acquit. "159
This person who died with Christ has been justified from sin, that is, acquitted. The
"old man" has been put to death so the verdict of "guilty" that he deserves cannot be
judicial
God's
The
is
free
from
through
person acquitted and set
passed.
sin's power
judgment on it in the death of Christ. Thus, in verses 6 and 7, Paul brings together
two elements: 1) the one who died with Christ not only has been forgiven and restored
to a right relationship to God (v. 7), but 2) he / she also has died to sin and been freed
from its rule (vv. 2,6). Justification

is at the same time liberation from the tyrant of

(cf.
6:
18,22).
sin
Though this view is attractive, there are several obi ections: 1) Paul's

in
is
2)
this
the
the
the
passage
with
guilt,
of
combination
not
sin;
concern
power,
&KaL6wplus dir6 doesnot occur elsewhere in Paul even though it appears in other New
Testament writings with a different meaning (cf. Matt. 11:19; Luke 7:35; Acts 13:3839); and 3) he doesnot connect the believer's dying with Christ directly with the
159Schrenk, TDNT, 2: 218; Bornkamm, "Baptism, " 85
n1l; Cranfield, Romans, 1:310-11;
Best, One Body, 44; Murray, Romans, 1:222; Dunn, Romans 1:320-21; Fitzmyer, Romans, 437;
Ridderbos, Paul, 208 n7. M G. Kuhn, "Romans 6.7, " ZNW 30 (1931) 305-10, refers to Sifre Num.
112 on Num. 15:31, which speaks of physical death as making atonement. Though Kuhn gives
the verb a forensic rendering, he treats dyapTta as meaning "obligation to the law" which is out of
place in this context. Furthermore, it is unlikely that Paul would have regarded the physical death
(martyrdom) of a person as making atonement for sin.

118
believer'sjustification elsewhere.
As an alternative to the last objection,someinterpreters have suggested
justification
Christ
through
to
that 6 diToOdPo5p
is primarily a reference
who obtained
His death and only secondarilya referenceto the baptizedperson.160But, in addition
to the first two objectionsmentionedabove,this option createsa further problemby
introducing an abrupt, unexpectedchangein subjectfrom verse 6.
like
It is more likely, then, that 6 diToOavojP
in
be
taken
a generalway
should
7
in
be
in
Romans
5:
7:
1,
Mp6krov
translated
that
&Kat6w
with
and
ToV
and
should
-rtsthe less common meaning of "to be free, to be set free. "161 The whole statement is
from
a larger stock of community wisdom.
probably a general, proverb-like maxim
Nevertheless, Paul applies it to the believer who has died with Christ; thus: "the one
in
is
free
from
[with
has
Christ]
been
"
died
This
translation
appropriate
set
sin.
who
this passage where Paul views sin as a power from which the believer has been set
free (cf. 6: 18,22; similarly diT6in 7:2,3,6).

Furthermore,

the perfect passive verb

&8tKatoi-rat indicates that the liberation effected, namely, a change in status and
has
in
believer's
to
the
sin,
enduring
results
present state of existence.
relationship
Paul's point is that "death with Christ" severs sin's claims on a person and frees him
her from its bondage.
The remaining verses of this passage, 6:8-14, will require less detailed
treatment.

Nevertheless, they provide the necessary christological basis and ethical

Paul's
of
affirmations
consequence

in verses 1-7 and thus are worthy of careful

consideration.
160C.Kearns, "The Interpretation of Romans 6,7, " in SPCIC, 1:301-07; R. Scroggs,
"Romans VI. 7," NTS 10 (1963-1964) 104-08; and Frankem6lle, Taufterstandnis, 78-80. For further
Scroggs'
of
various
views,
see
article.
evaluation
161BAGD, sx. &KaL6o),3.c; Schnackenburg, Baptism, 41; Kasemann, Romans, 170;
Leenhardt, Romans, 162-63; Michel, Rdmer, 155; Kuss, R6merbrief, 1:304; and Moo, Romans, 37677. The combination 8tKat6o)drr6 has the meaning "set free from" in Sir. 26:29; T. Sim 6.1; and
CH 13.9. The use of this verb here with reference to the power of sin suggests that, for Paul,
forensic
but
is
only
also transformative (cf. 6:18,22; 2 Cor. 3:8-9,18).
not
righteousness

119
2.4.5 Romans 6:8-10: Union with Christ in His Life
We have already noted that verses 8-10 are structurally parallel to verses
5-7. There is, however, an important shift in Paul's focus. In verse 8 he reiterates
the link between death with Christ and life with Him, which he established in verses
4b and 5b. The significance of this connection is made clear in light of the nature of
Christ's own death and resurrection, which is the unique focus of verses 9 and 10. In
these verses, then, Paul sets forth the christological basis of the indicative
for
his
in
foundation
he
lays
2-7
the
the
time,
made verses
and, at
same
affirmations
imperatival appeal in verses 11-13.
2.4.5.1 Romans 6:8. In verse 8 Paul says specifically that believers died
"with Christ, " but he shifts the emphasis from the believer's participation in Christ's
&162d7T,
death to participation in His resurrection with the words: 671
Orbp
6OdVO1-tFV
XptcTO,7noTc6ope-v

VTWin
the
&iKal cvC&rq1-tcP
The
P
aorist
ab
verb d7TcOdpopet, protasis

died
"we
fact
found
that
in
2
the
the
same verb
verse and underscores
clause repeats
to sin" by virtue of the fact that "we died with Christ. " The former is bound up with
the latter. In fact, a sequenceof aorist verbs in verses 3-6 emphasizes the same
thing using various images: "baptized into His death" (v. 3), "buried with Him" (v. 4),
here
in
[with
"crucified
Him]"
(v.
itself
6).
The
Xpto-ro
occurs only
phrase
and
civ
Romans, but its meaning of "participation" agrees with the o& language already
discussed in verses 4-6 (cf. pp. 90-93 above).
The future tense of cvC4o-q1-tcP
in the apodosis clause gives rise to the same
in verse 5b and should also be interpreted as
discussion as the future tense of eo-6ye-Oa

162The mildly adversative conjunction 61


signals the shift in emphasis from participation
in "death" to participation in "life. " A variant reading has ydp instead of M in P46 and G. The ydp
in
be
this
unsuitable
context
and
seems
can
reading
explained as parablepsis on account of the ydp
that begins v. 7 and the e-1ydp construction in v. 5 (Cranfield, Romans, 1:311 n3). As in V. 5, the
(cl
indicative)
the
asserts a condition that Paul considers to be fulfilled in this context,
and
protasis
thus: "But if (since) we died with Christ. .. " BDF, 372, dvoOvdaKoj,2.b; Wallace, Grammar, 69094; BAGD, s.v. cl, III.

120
163
future.
Once
fulfillment
Paul
to
the
eschatological
again
a genuine
points

of the

begun.
In
light
full
"life
life
Christ"
the
this,
already
of
with
remains
new
revelation of
for the present an object of faith rather than sight. The striking addition of 7TLcTe-601.
t6-v
in verse 8 (the only occurrence of this verb in Rom. 5-8) makes this clear.
Furthermore, Paul goes on in verse 9 to mention Christ's release from physical death
through His resurrection, but this is something believers have not, nor are not yet
Christ"
(cf.
Rom.
8:
10-11,18-25).
At
"life
the
time,
to
with
same
experiencing
regard
blessing
believers
is
life
kind
to
the
not
negate or minimize
of
as an eschatological
new
in
This
life
both
is
in
and
participate
even
now.
a genuine
new
receive
spoken of
future
For
Paul,
life
Christ
and
genuine
sense.
ethical
now and
present
with
future,
life
hereafter
Him
inseparable.
His
the
to
with
are
reference
eschatological
however, resolves the problem of the believer's continued subjugation to physical
death, which was linked with his / her subjugation to sin in 5:21. Release from the
is
by
believer's
the
of
sin
accomplished
power
participation

in Christ's death, a past

based
is
death
for
living.
Release
from
implications
the
power of
event with present
in
fully
but
Christ,
is
the
this
accomplished until
resurrection of
on participation
not
His parousia. Yet, this expectation also has present implications for living because
Paul is setting the stage for the imperatives of 6: 12, where he urges believers: "Do not
(v. 12).
let sin reign (you died to it) in your mortal (still subject to death) bodies.
. ."

2.4-5.2 Romans 6:9. The confidence Christians have that they will share
fully in Christ's resurrection is based on what they know about Him. The initial
Christ's
the
that
cIMTes164indicates
of
nature
participle
something about
163See discussion on pp. 102-04
above. Some, among others, who hold this view are:
Bornkamm, "Baptism, " 78; Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 10-12; Barrett, Romans, 126; Kdsemann,
Romans, 170; Kuss, Rdmerbrief, 1:305; Dunn, Romans, 1:322; Moo, Romans, 377; Fitzmyer,
Romans, 437; and Schnackenburg, Baptism, 41. Both Fitzmyer and Schnackenburg agree that the
future is temporal in 6:8b, though they claim it has logical function in 6: 5b. Pace Cranfield, Romans
1:312-13; and Murray, Romans, 1:223. A few manuscripts (D* F G) replace a6rip with TiPXpla-rP
but the pronoun has much stronger external support.

164The use of the participle C1456TE'ris


in v. 6 and is equally
parallel to yLvoiaKopTes-

121
in
Christian
death
included
in
to
early
preaching.
sin and
was
resurrection relation
Paul and his readers know that it was an irreversible past event that meant a
decisive conquest of death. The life Christ now lives, one inaccessible to death, will be
the samekind of life they will share with Him. This knowledge is the ground and
faith
for
in
8.
their
mentioned verse
motivation
Since God raised Him from the dead,165Christ is never going to die again.166
This, Paul explains, means that "death no longer rules over Him. "167The figurative
(vv.
2,10,
indicates
Paul
death,
that
thinks
the
of
as well as sin
verb Kqpie6w
use of
11), as a ruling power in this context.168BecauseHe is alive from the dead, Christ
has ended the power of death over Himself and has anticipated its defeat for all those
implies
9,
in
Him.
The
belong
twice
to
verse
negative adverb obKftt, which occurs
who
that death did at one time rule over Christ. For a time, the period of His prehuman
identified
life
during
He
Himself
the
race,
with
on earth
which
resurrection
Christ placed Himself under the power of death. But His resurrection from the dead
is the proof that He broke death's power with irrevocable finality, and Paul can say
(introducing
difficult to classify.It couldbeunderstood
a
asa participleof attendantcircumstance
thoughtlogicallyparatacticto a precedingone)andthus simplyPaul'swayof introducinganother
fact relevantto his argument.This usagewouldbetranslated:"Andwe knowthat. . ." (Cranfield,
Romans,1:313;Michel,Rdmer,148). Otherinterpreterstake e-1867-csasan adverbialparticipleof
live
belief
that
(v.
basis
for
8)
introducing
the
the
thus
shall
we
causemodifying7no-re-6opcv and
In
631).
Grammar,
It
be
"
(Wallace,
Christ.
"Since
know
translated:
that
view
would
we
with
...
10,
in
9
the
(v.
Paul
light
fact
8b)
that
the
the
and
vv.
sheds
abT43
on
meaningof o-vC4oqye-v
of
(cf.
is
NIV).
preferred
usage
causal
165TheaoristpassiveparticiplelyrpOetsis understood
as an adverbialparticipleof
The
die
d7roOvdaKet
tense
Christ
the
points
aorist
giving
will
no
more.
modifying
reason
why
cause
that His resurrectionwas
to thehistoricaleventof the resurrection,andthe passivevoicesuggests
Father
(cf.
Eph.
by
Rom.
4:
24-25;
1:20).
the
namely,
another,
effected
166The
is a futuristic presentdepictingan emphaticforce;thus:"Christ
verbd7ro6vdaKcL
is not goingto die again. .. " (Wallace,Grammar,536).
...
167Thegenitivepronounab7oD
functionsasthe directobjectofKvptr6eL,
a verbof ruling
Grammar,510;BDF,177).Theindependentstatementas a wholecanbeunderstood
(Robertson,
(571
(introduced
by
implied
to
the
an
or
ydp)
as
appositional
ascausal
wholepreceding clause.
168Thisverbis alsousedin a figurativesensewith the term dyapTtain 6:14andthe
in 7:1. It shouldbelinkedwith the figurativesenseof paaLAe-6o)
in ch.5 whereit is used
term v6poswith death(5:14,17a),sin (5:21a,6:12),andgrace(5:21b). Paulviewsall of theseasruling
realmsof authority.
powersin their respective

122
that death no longer WK70 rules over Him. He has moved from a condition of
immortality.
to
one of
mortality

The implication is that Christ's destiny is also the

believer's destiny. This confirms the view that Paul's primary thought in the words
in
8b
is
The
believer's
life
is
that
to
verse
a6ro
eschatological.
resurrection
ovC4oropcv
beyond death's power is yet future. Thus, by linking the thought of verse 9 closely
live
8,
Paul
his
Christians
the
that
with
apodosisof verse
supports
claim
with
will
Christ.
2.4.5.3 Romans 6:10. This verse furnishes further proof (Ydp)that "death
169
its
(v.
longer"
has
do
died
Him
9b).
It
death
Christ
to
the
and
no
with
rules over
has
Paul
e0d7w6
To
this
connection with sin, namely, 7f7allapTiq d7TOave7v
point
he
Now
(vv.
Christian's
death
"with
Christ"
2-8a).
is
death
"to
that
the
a
sin"
argued
M&Tae
Christ's
death
death
"to
itself
"
The
that
was a
sin.
adverb
makes clear
decisive
finality
170
death.
His
This
the
once-for-all
uniqueness
and
emphasizes
of
dealing
Christ's
death
highlights
in
definitive
to
the
with
sin
character of
regard
again
Christ
is
discussion
in
Paul's
What
true
that
this
of
marks
sin as a power
passage.
be
died
Him.
the
And,
in
true
those
this,
turn,
answer
of
who
with
provides
must also
to the questions raised in verses 1-2.
The meaning of the expression, 7f7dpapTlq d7T!Oav6v,is debated.
grammatical
believers.

construction
Previously

The

is the same as that used in verse 2, where it was applied to

it was noted (under v. 2) that this dative depicts advantage in

169The ydp links v. 10 with v. 9, explaining why death's dominion has


ended and giving
further confirmation that death has no power over Christ. The constructions 5 ydp and 8 81,
beginning each clause of v. 10, are abbreviated forms of T6v yLip OdPaTovdy
8e CtV#1/
and
77)V
...
the relative pronoun substantizes the verbal idea in d7T1Oav6v
CO(BDF,
where
respectively,
and
...
153-54; Robertson, Grammar, 178-79,47 1; BAGD, s.v. 6g, 7. c; pace Moule, Idiom-Book, 13 1, who
takes it as an adverbial relative). For a similar construction, see Gal. 2: 20 and 2 Cor. 12: 13.

170This adverb may mean "once in time" (1 Cor. 15:6) "once for
or
all time, decisively
BAGD,
lodrrae.
(Rom.
Stahlin,
6:
10);
TDNT, 1:383, states: "In the New Testament
cf.
sx.
unique"
this is a technical term for the definitiveness and therefore the uniqueness or singularity of the
death of Christ and the redemption thereby accomplished.
This same emphasis with d7raeis
..
."
found
in
Heb.
12,26,28;
10:
7:
27;
9:
10; 1 Pet. 3: 18, and with CIS-in Heb. 10:12,14. The
also
"once" of Christ's death distinguishes it from all preceding and subsequent sacrifices offered.

123
the senseof that which has claim on something as a possessorto use for its own
171
Throughout this passagesin is viewed as a master that rules over
advantage.
humankind and to whose advantage people live. But in verse 2, Paul declared that
believers died to sin, that is, they were released from its lordship. Sin's power over
them was broken and they were transferred out of its realm. Is this also the meaning
is
the
same expression applied to Christ in verse 10?
when
While acknowledging that the grammatical construction is the same in both
interpreters
claim that the expression, when applied to Christ in verse
verses, some
10, is used in a different sensethan in verse 2, where it is applied to believers.
Cranfield, for example, takes the phrase "He died to sin" as referring to Jesus' dying
for sin in that He bore its penalty (e.g., Rom. 3:24-26; 5:6-8; 8:3; 2 Cor. 5:21; Gal.
3:13).172But such a view seemsout of place in a context where the leading thought
Jesus'
from
(6:
2-11).
the
It
power of sin
concerns release
misses a crucial aspect of
identification with sinners and the benefit that His victory over sin as a power has for
them. If, for a brief time, death exercisedits power over Christ (v. 9), could not Christ
both
have
lived
for
in
(v.
10)
time
are
since
also some sense
a
under sin as a power
closely connected in this context?
In light of this observation, other interpreters have aptly explained the
died
"He
believers
in
lines
to
the
to
that
verse
sin" along
same
meaning of
as
applied
2. For example, Murray says: "Christ was identified in such a way with the sin which
he vicariously bore that he dealt not only with its guilt but also with its power. So sin
have
be
him
in that his humiliation state was conditioned by
to
said
ruled over
may
the sin with which he was vicariously identified,
"173To be sure, sin did not rule
... .
171BDF, 188,2; pace MHT, 3:238,
and Wallace, Grammar, 144-46, who take it as
simply a dative of reference; see the discussion above, p. 80.
172Cranfield, Romans, 1:314; also Kaye, Thought Structure
of Romans, 49-52.
173Murray, Romans, 1:225; also Michel, Rdmer, 132; Kuss, R6merbrief, 1:306;
Frankem6lle, Taufverstdndnis, 78-79; Dunn, Romans, 1:323; Fitzmyer, Romans, 438; and Moo,

124
human,
He
Though
fully
in
in
it
Christ
the
same sense which rules over people.
over
fully
in
it,
He
(2
Cor.
21)
innocent
5:
to
yet
participated
of sin
and'was not a slave
was
human e.Nistence(Phil. 2:6-8) in order to serve God's redemptive purpose through His
death (Gal. 4:4-5; 2 Cor. 8:9; Rom. 8:3).174He died, however, not becauseof His own
fallen
humanity.
Through
His
death,
because
but
the
not only are guilty
of
sin of
sin,
free
from
forgiven
but
(Rom.
justified
3:
25;
5:
9),
they
their
are also set
and
sins
people
death
His
in
that
broke
It
is
because
Christ
them.
the
power of sin
sin's power over
those united with Him in His death have died to sin's power and thus have become
"dead to sin" (6:2,11).
Though Christ suffered the payment of sin's wages (6: 23, i. e., its penalty) in

His death on the cross, sin did not destroy Him, for God raised Him from the dead and
He entered into life at a level not conditioned by sin or death. For Christ, this transfer
to a new realm was a definitive and final separation from sin and shows why death,
the product of sin, no longer rules over Him (6:9b). The life that He now lives He lives
"to God" (6:10b). The dative construction, which we have already noted in verses 2
lord
denotes
the
dative
in
Again,
10b,
10a,
Oe-0.
the
(j
word
To
namely,
also occurs
and
his
(power)
life
to
the
whose advantage one
and
who
conditions
of
subjects
or master
lives or dies.175Christ died to sin once for all (v. 10a), that is, He effected release from
the sphere of life conditioned by the ruling power of sin and subjugation to death. He
broke sin's power. But (8ej in the risen life He lives, he lives to God (v. 10b), that is,
He lives in the sphere of resurrected life conditioned by the ruling power of God and
Romans, 378-79. Pace Wuest, Victory, 47, who states: "He [Christ] died with respect to our sinful
nature.... in that His death effected the separation of the believer from that sinful nature. " Since
Christ's death to sin did not involve an ontological change in His nature, neither does the believer's
death to sin, if it is viewed as a participation in Christ's death.
174Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 27-28,36-37, demonstrates this by highlighting the
(telic)
Gal.
in
4:4-5; 2 Cor. 8:9; and Rom. 8:3.
constructions
purpose
1757hesame construction using the verb No)
in
dative
the
other
also
with
occurs
passageswhere Paul refers to living for God: 2 Cor. 5:15; Gal. 2:19; 5:25. A connection with the
idea of lordship occurs in Rom. 14:7-9 (cf. Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 18).

125
inaccessibleto death. He broke death's power as well. Verse 10b, then, stands as the
Christ's
10a:
death
life
God.
It
is
to
to
this antithesis that
of
entails
sin
counterpart
Paul applies to the Roman Christians in verse 11.
The fmality of Christ's death to sin and His risen life to God is the basis for
Paul's argument in response to the false inference of verse 1. Those who belong to
Christ have participated in these events by faith, as attested in baptism. For Paul,
dying and rising with Christ means release from the old master, sin, and entry into a
new wdstenceunder a new master, God, in order to live in newness of life now. In this
Pauline sense,a believer no longer lives "in sin" (6:2), and for this reason it is totally
inconsistent for him to continue committing sins on the presumption that where sin is
in
(6:
is
in
1).
abundance,
grace
present
present much greater abundance
2.4.6 Romans 6:11: Dead To Sin /Alive to God
Verse 11 is a crucial hinge between Paul's argument in the preceding verses

his
follow.
in
It
links
indicative
the
that
statementsabout
and
exhortations
verses
Christ and believers-Jesus died to sin (v. 10),believersdied with Him N. 8), they, too,
died to sin (v. 2), and, thus, they are no longer slavesto sin (v. 6)-and imperative
believers-do
to
appealsaddressed
not let sin reign (v. 12),do not presentyour
N.
Such
is
13a),
but
(v.
God
to
13b).
to
sin
members
a connection
present yourselves
Paul
(e.
Phil.
Col.
Cor.
Gal.
2:
12-13;
25;
Rom.
5:
7;
1
5:
8:
9,12-13;
of
characteristic
g.,
2:20-3:11) and is necessaryto his argument here. The introductory phrase oV'TOjS1Ka1
is
but
is
best
problematic
understoodin an inferential sense:"Sothen, or, therefore... ."
As such,this verse draws a concludinginferencefrom the teaching of the passageas a
176
whole.
176BAGD, s.v. o6rws-,1.b; Cranfield, Romans, 1:314-15. Dunn, Romans, 1:323,
and Moo,
Romans, 380, argue for a comparative sense: "Likewise also, or, so also." As such, oft0j.5.Kat sets
up a comparison between the significance of Christ's death and life (v. 10) and the believer's
understanding of his / her Christian existence (v. 11). Though this comparison is conceptually
fundamental to this passage,this view is less likely grammatically
is
there
no corresponding
since
6s-I o5airrpclause (as in 5:15,18,19,21 and 6:4) and Paul moves to the imperative in this verse

126
177Paul summons believers
With the present imperative verb AO-y[C6-UOC,
(emphatic bydig, "you"), based on the indicative facts just presented, to view
is
force
that
tense
God.
"
The
"alive
the
"dead
to
to
themselves as
of
present
sin" and
this "reckoning" should be the abiding judgment of faith in the Christian's life always
influencing his or her attitudes and actions. As a result, the informed reckoning urged
in verse 11 counters the false reckoning mentioned in verse 1. It points in two
directions: 1) back to what believers are to conclude is true about themselves in light
dead
being
demonstration
forward
2)
indicatives;
to
the
of
and
active
of the preceding
for
Paul,
As
following
demanded
imperatives.
in
God
the
to sin and alive to
always
as
178
for
imperative.
basis
the
the
indicative
the
and motivation
serves as
Specifically, believers are to recognize as true and real the fact that they are

"those
(8c),
hand
they
but,
(pip),
that
hand
the
who
"deadto sin" on one
are
on
other
Paul
the
"
On
the
God.
the
predicate
to
uses
exhortation,
negativeside of
are alive
from
believer's
denote
figurative
in
the
to
state of separation
sense
a
ve-Kpo
W'
adjective
(vv.
8a,
for
Christ
/
death
her
his
to sin with
once all
the realm of sin consequentupon
(as
in
involved
denotes
the slavemaster
vv.
10).179The dativeTj dyap7lqonceagain
2 and 10)whosepower and right to rule over the Christian was broken in Christ's
death.

based on the indicatives of 6: 1-10.


177Thisis a strong word meaning "consider as a result of (prior) calculation, reckon,
Rom.
286-88;
TDNT,
4:
Heidland,
"
1b;
BAGD,
the
loytCopat,
see also
reality of;
s.v.
acknowledge
3:28; 4:3-8; 8:18; 14:14; Phil. 3:12. "Reckoning" is not exerting intense moral will to achieve
The
has
been
but
reflexive
achieved.
already
recognizing and acting properly on what
something
the
infinitive
that
the
tavrotq
the
of
emphasizing
serves as
accusative subject
elvat,
pronoun
If
(MHT,
3:
have
the
147-48).
infinitive
the
Aoy1CcaO,
the
same
subject
- and
elvai
governing verb
textual reading without the infinitive r1patis adopted, the construction is a double accusative (MHT,
3:246 and 3:137; see also Wallace, Grammar, 182-87,419). This is the first second person
imperative verb in Romans (ytvdal) in 3:4 is a third person imperative).
178K&semann,Romans, 172-76. See the discussion on the indicative / imperative
construct in Paul, ch. 6,314-22.
179BAGD, s.v. PrKp6g,Lb. Though the figurative
it
in
Paul,
is
use of ve-Kp6s- not common
is used in Rom. 7:8 and 8:10 in antithesis to &4.

127
On the positive side of the exhortation, Paul uses the participle Ct3vmgas a
fact,
in
"died
those
to
those
to
that
who
sin"
are,
who
predicate adjective emphasize
in
being
"
to
God
in
Christ
Jesus,
their
"alive
to
raised walk
consequentupon
are
benefit
(v.
As
life
4b).
the
this
present
exhortation assumes
noted above,
newness of
does
the
it
Christ's
life
cancel
not
resurrection, yet
already as a result of
of new
God
the
dative
future
Again,
to
06-0
the
new
as
points
To
resurrection.
expectation of
"once"
between
the
lives.
difference
believer
The
the
great
now
master under whom
God.
to
life
lies
in
in
believer's
the
"now"
the
the
change of masters-from sin
and
This is a
Paul concludesverse 11 with the phrase evXptoTtO1770-09.180
in
Paul
by
Christ"
is
"in
important
that
motif
used extensively
variation of the
interconnected
181
Three
discussion.
been
has
the
subject of much
several ways and
God's
1)
in
Romans:
accomplished
power
and
purpose
redemptive
prominent
are
uses
(e.
Christ"
"in
being
believers
2,39);
2)
g.,
"in / through Christ" (e.g., Rom. 3:24; 6:23; 8:
Rom. 6:11; 8:1; 12:5; 16:3,7,9,10);

/
"in
through
believers
doing
3)
something
and

Christ" (e.g., Rom. 9: 1; 15:17).

repeated

In this passage,Paul's reference to "in Christ" must be seen in light of his


in
Christ"
language
in
"with
4-10
this
useful
motif was
where
verses
use of

describing the believer's exit from the old realm and its powers and entrance into new
life. In making the transition from the indicative to the imperative, Paul makes the
dead
to
to
died
Christ"
"with
those
that
those
and
alive
sin
are
who are now
who
point
God "in Christ. " This motif emphasizes the new sphere of e2dstenceand relationship
18OThisis the secondoccurrence of this important Pauline phrase in Romans (cf. 3:24).
A variant reading adds the words To Kvptq)yt3pat the end of v. 11, but it is to be rejected on the
is
in
if
longer
Its
11,
23
to
the
original,
v.
where
phrase occurs.
grounds of assimilation
absence v.
harder to explain than its presence. SeeB. M. Metzger, A Textual Commentary on the GreekNew
Testament, 2nd ed. (London and New York: United Bible Societies, 1994) 453-54.
181Extensivebibliographies are given in Oepke, TDNT, 2:534,541-43; Harris, NIDNTT,
Eine
3:1190-93;and BAGD, s.v. Av,I. 5.d; see also F. Neugebauer, In Christus (EN XPI=1).
Untersuchungzum paulinischen Glaubensverstdndnis(G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1961)
18-33; Ridderbos, Paul, 57-62; and A. J. M. Wedderburn, "Some Observations on Paul's Use of the
Phrases 'in Christ' and 'with Christ, "' JSNT 25 (1985) 83-97.

128
in which Christians now live as opposedto their previous existence "in sin" (v. 2) or "in
Adam." In this realm their life is determined by the risen Christ and the benefits of
His saving acts. In this sense they are a "new creation" (2 Cor. 5:17), and even now
new life is a reality.
Verse 11 also relates to Paul's question in 6:2. The new existence of the
Christian means one is dead to sin so that continuing to live in its realm in order that
increase
is
God
in
impossible.
Instead,
Christians
to
clearly
grace might
are alive
Christ Jesus.182For believers to be "in Christ" means to belong to Him as the
inclusive, representative head of the new age / realm with the result that the actions
be
in
decisions
Him
here
is
It
to
to
them
a new
predicated of
and
are applicable
also.
solidarity of life and righteousness "in Christ" as opposedto the old solidarity of sin
(Rom.
Christ"
death
"in
Adam"
Cor.
"in
5:
12-21;
1
Thus,
it
is
that
15:
22).
and
believers are dead to sin (the old master) and alive to God (the new master).
2.4.7 Romans 6:12-14: Do Not Let Sin Reign
Becausebelievers are no longer under sin's lordship according to the
indicatives of grace (6:2-10), they are to manifest this freedom in daily experience
Paul
imperatives
12-13,
(6:
to
the
11-14;
In
1-2).
12:
calls
according
of grace
verses
cf.
on Christians to resist sin, to refuse to obey it, to reject its attempts to reestablish its
lives
for,
in fact, it has no right to rule. His exhortation is supported
their
control over
by the promise in verse 14 that "sin will not be lord over you."
2.4.7.1 Romans 6: 12. In verse 12, Paul gives a general exhortation
believer's
the
sin's
rule
and
regarding
present conduct. The logical inference (o6v)to
be drawn from the preceding discussion as summed up in verse 11 is that believers,
God
has
in
Christ,
them
what
given
made
are able to treat sin differently than they

182jf &

XPLOTO

lquoo in v. 11 is meant to be the antithetical parallel to IV a&7j in v. 2,


then it designates our new existence in the dominion of Christ. See Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 1920; Kasemann, Romans, 220-23; Kuss, R6merbrief, 1:306-307; and Wilckens, Rdmer, 2:19.

129
did before (cf 6:1). The present imperative pauikv-roj with the accompanying
believers
it
to
to
their
to
allow
sin
reign over
not
urges
practice
make
negative p4
them in their life experience.183
Four observations are worth noting in understanding the meaning of this
First,
(v.
11).
it
"dead
God"
to
to
to
those
sin and alive
who are
exhortation as relates
Paul doesnot say, "Do not sin. " He doesnot deny the possibility or the reality of
believer's
life,
but
let
in
he
does
believer
the
to
the
sin gain
command
sinning
not
/
his
her
lifestyle.
that
Second,
tense
the
suggests
conduct
and
present
control over
this command is to be an abiding precept in the Christian's life-it

is to characterize

his / her new way of life. Third, the present tense doesnot imply that Paul's Christian
letting
"stop
to
to
therefore,
they
sin
needed
readers were allowing sin reign and,
Rather,
the
Nor
does
Paul
"
them
to
terminate
the
point of
call on
reign of sin.
reign.
departure for his exhortation is conversion-initiation, and its premise is that sin does
has
(6:
imperative
2-10).
For
them
this
the
validity and
reason
not reign over
present
it
life
184
Sin
be
believer's
have
in
the
to
once
as
now
must not
allowed
control
appeal.
did prior to conversion. Fourth, Paul often baseshis imperative (exhortation) on an
indicative (affirmation) having the same object (cf. Gal. 3:27 with Rom. 13:14). In

183Forthe significance of the present imperative in prohibitions, see BDF, 336-37,


MHT, 3:74-77; Wallace, Grammar, 487,714-17,724-25; IL L. McKay, "Aspect in Imperatival
Constructions in New Testament Greek," NovT 27 (1985) 201-26; J. Louw, "On Greek
Prohibitions, " AC 2 (1959) 43-57; Porter, Verbal Aspect, 350-54; and Fanning, Verbal Aspect, 33037. The difference between the present imperative (vv. 12a, 13a) and the aorist imperative (v. 13b)
is one of aspect, not time. The former is durative in force, and the latter is undefined or possibly
ingressive relating to action that is to be commenced. The context must determine if the aspect has
The
third person imperative (v. 12a; cf. Col. 3: 15-16) expressesa strong
significance.
special
command that something be done (refuse to obey) by someone(the believer) to a third party (sin).
The presence of flamAr6o)in v. 12a is another indication that Paul personifies sin in Rom. 6.
184Murray, Romans, 226-27; pace Cranfield, Romans, 316-17
Romans,
Fitzmyer,
and
n2,
446. Cranfield introduces the word "unopposed," i. e., "do not let sin go on reigning unopposed,"
because,in his view, sin continues to reign and Paul did not think of the Christian's obedienceto
this command as actually bringing to an end sin's reign over his "fallen nature. " All it brings to an
"unchallenged,
is
sin's
unresisted reign. " However, this seemsto overlook the eschatological
end
tension in Paul's ethics, to undermine the force of his argument in 6:2-11,14 (the indicative), and to
invalidate the imperative by urging believers to stop allowing sin to reign over them if in reality they
remain under its mastery.

130
is,
from
declares
believers
have
been
that
he
to
6
that
sin
slavery sin,
released
verse
believer
is
to
(cf.
Consequently,
dominion
14).
has
the
longer
them
obey
not
v.
over
no
it and allow it to reign in his life experience(vv. 12-13). In this way Paul makes clear
that the ongoing life of the Christian is directly and inseparably related to what took
be
imperative
The
indicative
Christ's
in
the
must
and
cross.
saving events of
place
held together in this sequencewithout separation or conflation. The former is the
basis and motivation for the latter.
Paul described the location of the battle against sin as ev nP OvqnPbpt3v
in
has
been
in
1)
185
here
TAya
two
a narrow sense
understood one of
ways:
ccMaTL.
it
in
186
broader
body;
2)
it
to
sense which refers
and
a
which refers only one's physical
ev,
187
The
body.
his
including
to the human person as a whole,
preposition
physical
the adjective &,qT6gand the reference to "its passions" in verse 12, as well as the
in
67TAa
13
the
to
terms
narrow senseof
appear
support
yAqand
verse
parallel
"physical body." However, in verse 13 the term 1.077,as a synonym for ozopa,
&=W'
the
personal reflexive pronoun
alternates with

(cf. v. 16a) and, for Paul, sin

Gal.
5:
191;
7:
Cor.
2
(cf
thanjust
the
physical side of a person
certainly affects more
here, as in 6:6, as a reference to the whole
21). It is preferable, then, to take acOya
body.
including
the
physical
person,

185Theplural possessivepronoun bp6vhas distributive force with the singular dative


150
body
(MHT,
126,134,
"the
23-24;
footnotes
3:
and
cf.
mortal
of each one of you"
noun m6yari,
above).
186E.g., Murray, Romans, 1:227, "The mortal body is without question the physical
dissolution.
Gundry,
holistic
"
Sdma,
to
29-31,
the
as
subject
anthropology
argues against
organism
(monatic unity) of Bultmann and presents a casefor anthropological duality, a unity of parts (body
/
S6ma,
79-84;
201-203,222; and ch. 1,25; and pp. 111-16 above.
spirit),
see
also
soul
and
187E. g., Cranfield, Romans, 1: 317;
Theology, 1: 192-203. Sometimes this
cf. Bultmann,
definition is qualified by treating u0pa as referring to the whole person by metonymy or synecdoche
from the perspective of one's physical body. Kdsemann, Romans, 176-77, is right in noting that the
OvR-r6v a0pa is not simply the u0pa 7-s-dyapTlas- (v. 6, pace Bultmann,
Theology, 1: 197-200) since
believers are no longer "in sin" but still remain in mortal bodies.

131
Significantly, in 6:12 Paul doesnot say your "body of sin" (6:6), or, your
"body of this death" (7:24). Rather, he describes the Christian's u6pa at present as
OM76v("mortal"). The same a6pa that has been released from bondage to sin (6:6) is
is
in
this
that
the
and
age
participates
mortality of
still, nevertheless, a u6pa
Con
2
(cf.
Rom.
Cor.
by
its
influences
1
15:
53-54;
8:
10-11;
and powers
confronted
4:11; 5:4).188This will continue until the future redemption of the body (Rom. 8:23)
life
(1
immortality
Cor.
believer's
15:
53-54).
Even
it
though
the
new
when puts on
his
Christ,
he
in
in
is
"dead
God"
"alive
is
to
to
or
or she
sin" and
existence one which
her present corporeal existence is still a mortal one in a fallen world, and this is the
does
in
Nevertheless,
to
this
not mean a
very arena which sin seeks gain control.
believer must submit to sin becausesin is not inherent in the u6pa but operates
through control of it from without (influences of the present evil world) and from
let
believers
to
desires).
(one's
Thus,
Paul
thoughts
sin
not
own
and
exhorts
within
reign over them.
Verse 12 concludes with an infinitive clause that states the consequenceof
189
in
body:
inTaKo6CL
to
reign
one's mortal
cls- T6
allowing sin
V T, Ie
d-9

7TtoVY [at S'

avro

V.

The result is that believers yield to and carry out the passions that belong to the
(Phil.
Paul
in
body.
AlthoughOTIOqptaL
(plural)
have
may
a neutral meaning
mortal
1:23; 1 Thess. 2: 17), they often are aligned with sin or "the flesh" and have a sharp
been
lured
desires
(cravings)
have
lusts,
desires
that
away
or
negative sense of evil

1880n this distinction, see Beker, Paul, 288, and Moo, Romans, 491-92 n104. Fitzmyer,
Romans, 446, who does not make this distinction, states: "Christians may still be in the 'sinful
body'(6: 6) and may be seducedor swayed by'its cravings.' Thebody of sin'denotes the state in
baptized
Christians
find
themselves; with such a body they too can still be subject
even
may
which
to the dominion of sin. .. ." This view seemsto confuse the objective accomplishment of freedom
from sin (the indicative) with the subjective experience of it (the imperative).
189The cis- T6 plus the infinitive could
express purpose but is probably result here. See
BAGD, s.v. cis-, 4. e; Wallace, Grammar, 592-94; pace MHT, 3: 143, who claim that this construction
is almost always purpose in Pauline usage. The words TaFgImOvlltaLs- serve as the dative direct
biraKo6civ,
1).
a verb that often takes a dative object (BAGD, s.v. 67TaKo6w,
of
-r6
object

132
from obedienceto God (e.g., Rom. 1:24; 7:7-8; 13:14; Gal. 5: 16-24).190
is disputed textually.
The presence of the possessivepronoun a&ToD
However, it is the preferred reading. 191If accepted,it qualifies o-c6panand indicates
that sin channels its attack through the desires of the n0pa. Sin-dominated desires
becomea driving force in one's a6pa, seeking their own gratification (Gal. 5:16). If
these sinful desires capture a believer's attention and he / she yields to them (i.e.,
intentions
/
best
/
her
him
her
his
they
that
them),
may soon enslave
so
even
obeys
in
the
its
by
The
is
them.
that
rule
sin reasserts
result
and actions are controlled
believer's present life experience, something Paul urges his Christian readers not to
allow to take place.
2.4.7.2 Romans 6:13. Following a general exhortation in verse 12, Paul
to
in
13
that
two
one
are antithetically parallel
specific commands verse
gives
imperative
first
by
The
introduced
the
in
present
one
another structure and content.
begun
Paul's
the
exhortation
continues
negative side of
prohibition yi78eTrapto-rave7c
by
the
introduced
in
12,
the
fiaatktAToj
secondcommand
while
verse
with y
forth
the
imperative
dAAd
side.
the
positive
sets
irqpac7'o-aTe
and
aorist
adversative
The interpretation of verse 13 is governed partly by the interpretation adopted for
but
including
in
If
to
the
12.
to
the
not
world,
oz3parefers
whole person relation
verse
limited to the physical body, then yA77("members") in this verse must refer to one's
human faculties and natural capacities (cf. 7:5,23) rather than simply the physical

190BAGD,
is
sx. linowta, 3; Bachsel,TDNT, 3:171,"Theessentialpoint in ITnOupta
that it is desireasimpulse,as a motionof the will (cf.Eph.2:3)."
191Theexternal evidence is split along textual family lines geographically between 1)
(mostly
Alexandrian
61-tapria
to
to
RBACL
2)
support,
m6yaTt
abToD,referring
vg);
aCTO,referring
(mostly Western support, DG it, plus p46); and 3) abTj
(mostly
both
to
abToV,
referring
...
Byzantine support). The third reading appears to be an attempt to conflate the other two readings.
We might consider a67j alone as original since a6roOmight arise because m6yaTLis nearer than
dpapT[aor becausesome copyists with ascetic notions felt that lusts belong to the body. However,
this latter observation may account for the absenceof a&"7-Uin an attempt to clarify the sense. Thus,
has
because
it
is
early and weighty external evidence, and internally it makes good
preferred
aToD
sensein that the result (infinitive clause) of sin reigning in Vv) one's mortal body is that the person
desires.
See
(the
body's)
Metzger,
its
Textual Commentary, 453-54.
sinful
obeys

133
192
body.
the
parts of
has a broad
The transitive verb7Tqptc-rdPo)(a later form of7Tqp10777/_U)
(twice),
but
in
it
in
13
16,19
this
where
context,
occurs
verse
spectrum of usage,
(twice), it has the general active meaning: "put at the disposal of, " or, "give in service
to. "193 Regardless of whether the imagery is that of a military

(67TAa
as
commander

195or
king
lwaKo6w
in
16,19),
"weapons" in v. 13),194a slave-owner (86DAosa
and
vv.
*o-tAe-W'Min v. 12 andKqpte6ac-Lin v. 14),196the basic sense of the verb here is the
"acknowledgment
the
the
to
of
a
superior
whom
power
and
authority
namely,
same,
(dative,
is
"197
In
this
7f7
case, sin
only proper response submission and obedience.
198
believers
to
is
to
the
are not
which
submit.
power
illjqTtq)

The word &Aa (plural) has both a general meaning of "instruments or tools"
"
The
former
"weapons.
meaning gains some
and a more specific military meaning of
(6:
6,
from
in
to
the
to
the
this
chapter
references
service of slaves a master
support
16-20,22). 199However, the latter meaning is common in early Greek literature,

192The basic meaning of plAq (plural) is "parts of the body, " i. e., "limbs" or "organs, " but
the word is also used by Paul in a wider sense of all human faculties and in the metaphorical sense
(cf.
"members"
Cor.
1
best
12:
it
is
individuals
12-27),
translated
as members of a community
so
of
(BAGD, s.v. ylkg, 1; Horst, TDNT, 4: 555-62, esp. 561). For more on Td Plklb see ch. 4,202-05.
193BAGD, s.v. Trqp[Mpt; Bertram and Reicke, TDNT, 5: 838-39. This verb governs an
(67TAa)
(Td
here
(Wallace,
Grammar,
182-87).
construction
pIA71)-complement
object
194E.g., Kdsemann, Romans, 177, who cites Polybius, Historia
C-II.
LSJ,
s.
v.
7wpta7pt,
also

3.109.9 in support; see

195E.g., Cranfield, Romans, 1:318, who appeals to the service of slaves in this
chapter
(vv. 6,16-20,22) and to 67TAaas "instruments" or "tools" in v. 13.
196E.g., Moo, Romans, 384 n168, who appeals to the idea
of "reigning" or "ruling" in the
LXX use of this verb (e.g., 1 Kgs. 10:8) and in this context (vv. 12,14); thus: "Our natural capacities
'offer
in
to
'weapons'
to
the
tyrant sin" (384).
that
service'
are
not
we
are
197Dunn, Romans, 1:337.
198The dative of advantage in the sense of
a possessor has occurred several times in this
Again,
dpap7ta
is
(see
11).
6:
2,10a,
not merely a series of separate acts of transgression,
passage
but
diabolical
a
power that claims obedience from people.
nor an abstract principle,
199BAGD, s.v. &Aop, 1; Cranfield, Romans, 1:318;
also Murray, Romans, 1:228; and

134
in
Paul
it
in
(Rom.
the
13:12; 2 Cor. 6:7;
where
occurs
only
elsewhere
plural
appears
10:4; cf. Eph. 6:11), and is appropriate in verse 13.200Thus, the meaning "weapons
is preferred. Sin is regarded as a ruthless commanding officer who uses a person's
"members" as weapons for the purpose of doing unrighteousness (d8tKias.
).201The
in
d8tKia
that
represents
all
stands
opposition to God's righteousness (cf. Rom.
word
1:29). By comparison with dyap-ria,it describesmore forcefully the outward, visible
characteristics of one who stands under the power of sin. In verse 13a, then, Paul
believers
it
to
their practice not to submit their human capacities
make
commands
("members") to sin as weapons for doing unrighteousness as they once did.
In verse 13b by contrast (dAAdj,Paul sets forth the positive counterpart by
believers
to give themselves in service to their new master, God. As in the
exhorting
in
12
from
13a,
is
to
the
the
there
given
verses
prohibition
and
general
movement
in
13b
In
the general positive command, Paul uses the aorist
verse
also.
specific
followed by the reflexive pronoun &vrot'y as the object and 7(5
imperative 7Tapam-4o-a-re
Ocoas another dative of advantage (cf. vv. 2,10a, 11,13a). Given the fact that the
is
imperative
here
in
used
contrast to the present imperatives in the negative
aorist
12
13a,
departure
that
the
is conversionof
verses
and
and
commands
point of
initiation in this context, it is best viewed in an ingressive and yet urgent sense.202
NRSV,
NEB, NAS, NIV.
translations:
modem
2000epke, TDNT, 5:294, Kdsemann, Romans, 177, Dunn, Romans, 1:337, Fitzmyer,
Romans, 446-47; and Moo, Romans, 384. The word 60t6vLain v. 23 refers primarily to the wages of
a soldier.
201This genitive could be taken in several ways: 1) an
objective genitive expressing
"tools
for
[doing]
"
BDF,
166; Cranfield, Romans, 1:318; 2) a
or
weapons
unrighteousness,
purpose,
"unrighteous
Oepke,
TDNT,
5:294; Michel, R6mer, 157 n2; or 3) a
quality,
weapons",
of
genitive
by
"weapons
genitive,
employed
unrighteousness," Horst, TDNT, 4:561; Schrenk, TDNT,
subjective
1:155-56. The first option is preferred.
202BDF, 337; MHT, 3: 76, "start yielding
yourselves to God; " Fanning, Verbal Aspect,
Cranfield, Romans, 1: 318;
485-86,719-20;
358-61; Wallace, Grammar,
cf. the use of the aorist
Romans,
in
Pace
Murray,
6:
4.
1: 228, and Morris, Romans, 258,
subjunctive
who suggest a "once-forall" connotation here; and Porter, Verbal Aspect, 357, who sees the aorist as less important
than the
Aorist,
"
See
F.
Stagg,
"The
Abused
JBL 91 (1972) 222-31,
present.
who effectively argues against
the "once-for-all" idea but who occasionally overstates his case in arguing only for the "unaffected"
from
i.
its
the
tense,
apart
e.,
use
aorist
relevant factors in a contextual environment.
of
use

135
The pronoun eavrot'T("yourselves")203encompassesthe whole person and indicates
that u6jia and yA77(vv. 12-13a) should not be limited to the physical body as shown
in
direct
61-Lap7tv
in
The
identifying
Oco
to7f7
13a
contrast
words
Tip
are
verse
above.
God as the ruling Lord in opposition to sin. It is God to whom believers are "enslaved"
(vv.
"slaves
"under
living
14-15)
as
grace"
of obedience" (v. 16) and "slaves of
when
(vv.
18-20).
righteousness"
Connectedwith this general positive exhortation is a key clause depicting
the believer's new status as a result of union with Christ in His death and
6U61
Xvras-- This clause recalls the thought of 6: 11 where the
CKWKP(Ov
resurrection:
believer's new position is described as being "dead to sin" and "alive to God" and may
for
Iavrow'
here
instead of a6pa as in verse 12. In light of verse 11,
the
use
of
account
the connective d5acl,though formally a comparative, has a causal ("since you really
204
basis
It
("as
than
if
force.
the
and
a comparative
gives
are") rather
you were")
for
Paul's
exhortation.
motivation

As in verse 11, this clause points to the judgment

(cf.
been
faith
have
Aoyl(e-u0c,
11),
believers
in
Christ
that
v.
which understands
of
have
/
from
(deadness)
death
the
moral spiritual
and
under
ruling power of sin
rescued
been made alive to God who now has claim on their life. In this sense they can be
described as "those who are alive from the dead" in this life (cf. Eph. 2: 1).205 It is not
bodily
future.
is
to
that
resurrection
still
a reference

203In the plural, the 3rd person reflexive


is
pronoun
used for the 2nd person in Koin6
Greek (MHT, 3:42).
204The particle a')act is often interchanged with d), (BAGD,
s.v. o3act). When (bs-is used
it
6act
is
in
6:
13b,
as
gives the reason for an action (BAGD, s.v. 6g, Ill. Lb).
a
participle,
with
However, BDF, 425,3; BAGD, s.v. 65art, and Robertson, Grammar, 1140, list 65art in this verse as
fact,
in
"the
"as
if.
"
Robertson,
that
claims
a comparative:
use of (Lue-t... is limited to condition or
in
(1140).
Nevertheless,
this context the causal use of 6art is preferred, "submit
comparison"
from
God,
dead;
"
the
to
alive
since
you
are
so Cranfield, Romans, 1:318; Y%Asemann,
yourselves
Romans, 177; Moo, Romans, 385; pace Wilckens, R6mer, 2: 21-22.
205In light of this
w5artclause and vv. 4b and 11, one could argue that a "moral
believer
ftom "moral / spiritual" death under sin's power
the
that
rescues
spiritual" resurrection
and
God
has
life
/
her
in
to
him
service
of
already taken place (cf Col. 2: 12; Eph. 2: 6); see
a new
puts
Beker, Paul, 224; footnotes 85 and 119 above; and ch. 4,197 n6.

136
The last part of verse 13 contains a more specific positive command.
is to be understood from the previous clause and is
Following Kai, the verb 7Tqpaa7-4ua7r
followed by a carefully formulated antithetical parallel to the negative command in
The
"members"
be
13a.
that
to
are not
verse
put at sin's disposal as "weapons" for
the purpose of doing unrighteousness (v. 13a) are, instead, to be submitted to God (-rco
Ocovs. 7-j 61-tap-r[q)
as "weapons" for the purpose of doing righteousness (&Katoo*qsThis
is
first
d8wlas-).
four
the
8tKatoo-6vq
but
5:
21,
it
occurrence
of
vs.
since
appears
in
(vv.
6
16,18,19,20).
the
times
rest
of
chapter
more

In these verses it is

&TraKoL'W
(v.
(v.
16)
is
with
and
and contrasted with d8wtag 13),
associated
w'amg
(v.
6yqpT[q(vv. 18,20), dKaOaputa
dpopta
19).
This
indicates
here
&KaLouk
that
and
has an ethical meaning denoting conduct that is well-pleasing to God.206Even though
the meaning shifts here from its usage in chapters 1-5, particularly with reference to
the forensic act ofjustifying sinners, "these two 'righteousnesses,"' as Moo points out,
"are inextricably bound, for it is only the righteousness attained 'before God' that
introduces the sinner into a new state from which he is able to be obedient to the
life
God
demands.
"207
that
righteousness of
By accepting an ethical use, one doesnot overlook the fact that, like apapTia,
Paul also personifies &KaLou6n. He views it as a power from which a person can be
free or to which one can be enslaved (vv. 18-20) and places it parallel with Oc6s.
(V. 18
However,
22).
like
61-tapTla,
its
it
v.
also
with
ability to refer to specific acts of
retains
(cf.
in
19,
v.
put
conduct
contrast to "uncleanness" and "lawlessness"). Thus, without
denying that 8tKatoo*,77is God's power to save and keep the believer in His service, in
this context it is the outward manifestation of one's obedienceto God N. 16).208
206BAGD, sx. &Katoavv7l,3; Seebass,NIDNTT 3:362-65;
Ridderbos,
Paul, 260-61.
and
This ethical meaning is attested elsewhere in the Pauline corpus (cf. 2 Cor. 6:7,14; 9:10; Phil. 1:11;
Eph. 4:24; 5:9; 1 Tim. 6: 11; 2 Tim. 2:22; 3: 16; 4:8). See ch. 5,282-83.
207MOO,
Romans, 386-87.
208Ibid., 386 n182. For righteousness
as a power, see Kdsemann, Romans, 177; and

137
2.4.7.3 Romans 6:14. Following the imperatives of verses 11-13, Paul
indicative
in
to
the
verse 14 to conclude this paragraph. He summarizes the
returns
indicatives of 6:2-10 and at the same time supports the imperatives of 6:11-13 in the
' 6209ovKqpte-6act.The negative obwith
initial explanatory -yapclause: dyqp7-layetpVV
the future indicativeKqptevuetserves as a categorical prohibition regarding the
Christian's relationship to sin as a ruling power.210The introductory ydp and the
in
believer's
freedom
from
the
the
the
chapter on
status of
emphasis of
power of sin
this life indicate that the future tense should be understood as a logical future
"sin
"211
This
assurance:
shall
certainly
not
rule over yoU.
expressing
applies to the
future course of the believer's present life becausea change of lordship has already
taken place at conversion-initiation (6:2-3). With the assurance that this change
believer
in
the
effect,
can confidently wage war against sin.
remains
Paul expressed this assurance in the negative to emphasize that, for
believers, the ruling power of sin has been broken and it will not be lord over them.
This doesnot mean that Christians will never again yield to sin and fall under its
Dunn, Romans, 338-39, who argues that &KaLoo-6pildoes not so much denote concrete acts as a
(believer)
"the
God
individual
to
the
superhuman
agency,
namely,
under
power
of
personified
retain
his sway" (339).
209The pronoun byOv serves
as a genitive direct object following KVPtr6aeL,a verb of ruling
(BDF, 177; Robertson, Grammar, 510).
21OBDF, 362; Foerster, TDNT, 3: 1097. The
verb KVP1660)is also used with OdVaTos.
(6: 9) and v6pos- (7: 1). The verb flaaLAcV'O)is used with OdYaTog (5: 14,17a), dpapTta (5: 21a; 6: 12),
(5:
There
Apts21b).
in meaning between these two
distinction
seems to be no significant
and
lexical
Paul viewed all of these as ruling powers that determine the
a
variation.
verbs-merely
destiny
and
of all those under their control.
existence

211Murray, Romans, 1:228; Moo, Romans, 387. Here,


as in 6: 2, the future tense builds
definitively
in the past (death to sin) that its consequences can be
that
so
an
event
occurred
on
holding
from
true
that point onward into the future. The future tense here has
always
viewed as
been taken in three other ways: 1) an imperatival sense, "sin is not to have sway over you" (e.g.,
Fitzmyer, Romans, 447), but this is unlikely since it would destroy the force of the first ydp and be a
weak repetition of v. 12; 2) a conditional sense, ". .. granted that you dedicate yourselves to God;
then sin will have no hold over you" (e.g., Dodd, Romans, 114), but there is no conditional particle
here; and 3) an eschatological future sense, "sin will one day have no control over you" (e.g., Dunn,
Romans, 1:339, "a promise of what will certainly be for believers when they fully and finally share in
Christ's resurrection"), but this is unlikely since it would destroy the force of the second ydp clause
(v. 14b) and weaken the emphasis of 6: 2-10.

138
Paul's
daily
in
their
exhortations are
experience,otherwise
control periodically
believers
for
212
is
to
it
Through
serve sin again
possible
acts of sinning
meaninglesS.
in their conduct (6:16). They may submit themselves to the dethroned master, but if
they do, it is by choice and not by necessity (compulsion) as was once the casewhen
they were under the lordship of sin. Now, however, believers, as subjects of God,
the
its
free
from
thus
to
free
with
attacks
resist
sin's ruling power and are
stand
lord
(v.
be
has
14a).
them
to
that
over
no
right
sin
assurance
The secondand concluding ydp clause gives the reason for the promise made
in the initial ydp clause. Sin will not be lord over believers ever again because(causal
is
(IW6
213
&7r6
The
latter
Oki
xdpw)
they
concept
XdpV.
P61-top
ov
V7T6
are
now
ydp)
...
is
former
(ob
bTr6
in
the
6:
15-23
v6pov) expanded and
while
expanded and explained
inclusion
its
but
in
14b
is
The
to
in
7:
1-6.
unexpected,
reference v6pos- verse
explained
here confirms that Paul is discussing the believer's present existence from the
death
the
linked
Law
Romans
the
5:
12-21,
as
was
with sin and
where
perspective of
dominant powers of the old age that rule over humanity (5:13,20-21). At the same
in
Law
the
the
is
time, this reference one of several statements about
negative role of
134:
13-15;
5:
(cf.
in
7
3:
19-20,21,27-28;
history
that culminates
chapter
redemptive
14,20). In light of this, v6pos-refers, as in all these references, to the Law given by
God to Israel through Moses at Sinai. 214 Even though it plays a largely negative role

212Conzelmann'sstatement that 6: 14a means that "it is impossible to sin" is a


New
Theology
An
here;
Conzelmann,
Outline
the
H.
Paul's
the
teaching
of
of
see
misinterpretation of
Testament, trans. J. Bowden (London: SCM Press, 1969) 229. The imperatives of 6:12-13 imply
that the Christian still can sin; otherwise, if sinning were not an option, the imperatives would be
irrelevant. On the other hand, these imperatives indicate that the Christian need not sin;
imperatives
if
the
the
option,
would be impossible to obey.
only
otherwise, sinning were
213The omission of the article before v6yos- and XdPLSiS
(BDF,

252,
stylistic
probably
258,2; Robertson, Grammar, 793) in connection with their function as objects of 6r6 (BDF, 255).
The lack of the article does not generalize v6pog to mean any law Muss, R6merbrief, 2: 384; pace
MHT, 3: 176-77), nor does it give the words qualitative force since both are viewed as ruling powers
(cf. 5:20-21). Paul frequently uses iw6 plus its object to denote the power / control under which one
exists (see Rom. 3: 9; 7: 14; Gal. 3: 22,23,25; 4: 5; 5: 21).
214Dunn, Romans, 1:339; Moo, Romans, 388;
Barrett,
228,
1:
Murray,
Romans,
and
pace

139
in redemptive history, it still remains God'sholy, just and good Law (Rom. 7:12,14).
These texts provide the context for interpreting the cryptic, much-debated
lw6
For
it
is
v6pop.
our purposes,
sufficient to treat this phrase along
phrase ob ...
its
inT6
"law"
Paul
that
antithetical
counterpart
Xdpip
with
and observe
and
views
"grace" here as contrasting ruling powers that exercise authority over people.
Several lines of evidence support this view: 1) the use of biT6with the connotation
"under the rule / power of' (cf. 3:9; 7:14) and the prominence of slavery language in
fits
Romans 6; 2) the strong contrast (dAAd)between &7T6v6pot,
the
b'Tr6
Xdpip
and
"transfer of realm" language that is prominent in Romans 5-8; 3) the v7T6
phrases
ec-rl,
introduced
by
the
tense
and
present
verb
ydp, explain why "sin will not rule over
(v.
Paul's
14a);
4)
b7T6
denote
the
the objective
other
uses
of
phrase
you"
v6povall
Gal.
23;
3:
(cf.
Cor.
being
"subject
Mosaic
Law"
9:
20;
1
the
the
to
rule of
situation of
4:4,5,21; 5:18); and 5) here as in other texts in Romans noted above, Paul speaks of
the Law as God gave it in redemptive history, not as Israel or anyone else
215
it.
misunderstood or misused
For Paul, then, b7r6v6popand 1w6Xdpipare abbreviated ways of depicting the "old
"new
Gal.
1-7)
bondage
(cf.
Gal.
freedom
(cf.
4:
3:
25)
the
age" of
age" of
and
in
history.
redemptive
respectively

To be inT6v6pov is to be subject to the sin-

dominated regime of the old age;216but to be tw6 XdpLvis to be subject to the SpiritRomans,129,who claim it refers here to "law" in general. The absenceof the article with v6pog
doesnot underminethis view. The presenceor absenceof the article is of little help in determining
the meaningof v6yos-in Paul; see D. Moo, "'Law,''Works of the Law,' and Legalismin Paul," WTJ
45 (1983)73-100;and S. Westerholm,"Torah, nomos,and law: A Questionof 'Meaning,"' SR 15
(1986) 327-36.

215SO
Moo,Romans,388-89;seealsoS.Westerholm,
Israel'sLaw and theChurch's
Faith:Paul andHis RecentInterpreters(GrandRapids:Eerdmans,1988)205-09.In light of the
evidence
citedabove,it is unlikelythat in v. 14bPaulis referringto 1)the legalisticabuseof the
Lawby makingit a meansof salvation(e.g., Barrett,Romans,128-29);2) the condemnation
or
of inevitablefailureto obeyit (e.g., Cranfield,Romans,1:320);or 3) the
curseof the Lawbecause
Jewisheffortto turn the Lawinto their own"nationalguardianangel"(e.g., Dunn,Romans,1:339).
For further discussionon Paul andthe Law,seech.3,172-74.
216de

Boer,Defeatof Death,167,summarizesPaul'spolemicalreappraisalof the Law:


"Tobe 'underthe Law' (6.14-15;cf. Gal.3.23;4.5,21; 5.18),therefore,is for Paul to be 'undersin'

(3.9; 7.14; cf. Gal. 3.22), an equation that, as 6.14-15 demonstrates, is a presupposition

of the

140
dominated regime of the new age in which there is freedom from the power and
lordship of sin and the law. The Christian is ov... bw6v6pov, meaning he / she has
been released from the bondage of the old realm and transferred to the freedom of the
Because
Mosaic
has
Law
the
new realm.
a sin-producing and sin-intensifying
function in salvation history (3: 19-20; 4: 15; 5: 13-14,20; 7: 5,8) and is even called "the
U
Cor.
15:56), Paul can point to release from the Law (Rom. 6: 14b) as
power of sin"
the reason (or, basis) for the Christian's freedom from sin's power (6: 14a). Although
most of the Christians in Rome were Gentiles and had never actually lived "under the
[Mosaic] Law, " Paul apparently used the situation of the Jews under the Mosaic Law
"as representative of the situation and need of all people" in the old realm (cf. 7:46).217

In a striking way, verse 14 is also part of the answer to the question posedin
"under
Paul
believers
1.
the
the
that
verse
are
concludes
passagewith
assurance
liberated
from
but
"
Law,
its
they
the
grace, where
where
are not only
sin and
ally,
they are also made alive to a new master, God. Because of their new status of
freedom from sin and life from God (6:11), they are obligated to wage war against sin
and live in obedient service to God (6:12-13,19,22).
2.5 Concluding Observations on "Our Old Man! '
diOpamos-occurs rather abruptly in
As noted above, the designation 6 TraAat6sRomans 6:6 for the first time in the Pauline corpus. Since it is not a pre-Pauline
metaphor in early Christian tradition or other sources, it appears that Paul is the
originator of the figure in his missionary preaching prior to Romans (cf. p. 105). In
this passage he deals with the Christian's present status and its implications from
the perspective of Romans 5: 12-21, where he sees humanity divided into two groups.
wholeargumentfound in the precedingsection(6.1-7.5).11
217MOO,Romans, 388; see 4 Ezra 7:37; 8:60;
and 2 Bar. 15.5; 48.40,46-47, which
suggest that the Law was meant to apply universally.

141
Each group is conditioned and determined by its solidarity with two divinelyfigures:
Adam
Christ,
"first"
"last"
dpOpw7TOS'
the
and
and
appointed, representative
(1 Cor. 15:45). Those in solidarity with Adam belong to the old order of human
is
in
bondage
law,
death;
in
that
to
the
those
ruling
powers
of
wdstence
sin, and
while
Christ
belong
its
freedom
in
to
the
with
new
order
of
eidstence
with
solidarity
life.
The
"old
is
Adam
aligned
man"
with
and the old order of
righteousnessand
by
him.
e.Nistenceestablished
In 6:1-10 Paul argues that Christians have died o*, Xpic-ro to sin as a
for
"
its
Once
in
(Trorel
"lived
they
rule.
sin,
master, which precludes remaining under
they were slaves of sin (6: 17), but now WO) they no longer (P77KHL)live under its
Paul
because
"died
6,
(6:
In
2,11).
they
to
and
controlling
power
sin"
authority
verse
in
forth
its
"our
Christ
this
order
old man" was crucified with
result:
and set
amplified
that believers in their bodily existence might be released from sin's controlling power
longer
that
it.
they
the
to
are
no
enslaved
result
with

In keeping with the language of the passagein its context, the "old man"
/
belongs
the
to
the
to
the
corporate structure of
person who
old order realm
refers
that was established by Adam and is dominated by the power of sin and death. This
has:
figure,
"founding
father"
1)
inclusive
in
the
a
corporate structure
representative
(fallen) Adam, the prototypical "old man" (5:12-14); 2) a "solidarity group" comprised
belong
Adam,
life
humanity
(5:
to
15-19);
those
the
3)
that those
who
old
of
a way of
"in Adam" pursue (6:19b, 21); and 4) a destiny to which they go-eternal death
(6:21b, 23). Given these corporate associations, the "old man" metaphor functions at
level
as a reference to human existence in Adam.
a representative, corporate
However, Paul did not lose sight of the individuals who make up the corporate
/
Consequently,
the
the "old man" also functions at a
old order realm.
solidarity of
level.
individual
personal,

142
In verse 6, Paul uses the designation "our old man" in reference to individual
/
belong
to
the
the
corporate structure of
old order realm and who,
persons who
through dying with Christ and rising to walk in newness of life, are released from it
/
the
to
the
transferred
corporate structure of
new order realm "in Christ. "
and
Several factors in the passage support this "individual" view: 1) the connection of
life
(baptism)
Paul's
language
Xpto-r(3
to
the
with
a1v
points
conversion-initiation
history of the individual believer (vv. 3-8); 2) much of the language throughout the
individual
done
to
or received (vv. 1-8); 3) "our old man" and
actions
passagerelates
"the body of sin" are two designations that relate to the same person (v. 6); 4)
believers are enslaved to sin "no longer" (pi7K-n)as a result of the crucifixion of "our
(v.
from
6);
5)
the
transfer
the corporate structure of the old order to that of
old man"
the new order in Christ requires personally receiving His grace and the gift of
faith
by
(5:
involves
the
1-2;
17);
6)
the
the
and
argument of
passage
righteousness
intersection of redemptive history and realized eschatologywith individual Christian
experience.
Prominent in Paul's discussion is the movement from indicative statements
(6:
believers'
1-10)
Christ
Him
to
incorporation
into
and
participation with and
about
imperative appeals to believers who walk in newness of life (6:4b, 12-13). The
"our
in
to
old
man" occurs the indicative section. In making the transition
reference
from indicative affirmation to imperative exhortation, Paul makes the point that
those who died "with Christ" are those who are now "dead to sin" and "alive to God in
Christ Jesus" (6:11). The great difference between "once" (7roTc)and "now" (PDV)in
the believer's life lies in the change of masters-from

sin to God-and the transfer

from the old realm of existence, where one is under the power of sin and death to the
is
the
where
one
under
power of righteousness and life. This definitive
new realm,
break with sin as a ruling power took place in redemptive history in Christ's death
is
/
individually
personally
applied
and
and resurrection
at conversion-initiation.

143
The "old man" is associatedwith slavery to sin and refers to one's existence
in its realm. But the crucifixion of "our old man" with Christ (6:6) on the individual
level at conversion signals a person's release from sin's power, and thus this action is
functionally equivalent to "we died to sin" (6:2). Believers no longer belong to sin's
brought
"old
At
there
their
to
time,
the
man"
was
an
consequently,
end.
same
realm;
is a basic difference between the believer's death to sin and the crucifixion of "our old
/
his
Christian's
death
does
it
"
The
to
to
sin
not put an end sin, rather severs
man.
her relationship to sin as a ruling power / authority. Sin continues its existence as a
humankind
its
the
the
of
authority.
of
old
realm,
and
rest
remains under
ruling power
It also remains a threat to the Christian, and thus there is a need for the
imperative-putting

sin to death as an ongoing duty (Rom. 8:13; Col. 3:5).

By contrast, "our old man was crucified with Christ, " indicates that the "old
for
designation
longer
Christians
has
is
to
applicable
and such a
come an end
no
man"
to them. Their solidarity with Adam has ended; they now belong to a new solidarity
"1
6:
14,
Gal.
(cf.
does
"we
Paul
Christ.
to
the
were crucified
old man"
not say,
with
have been crucified to the world"), or, "we died to the old man; " otherwise, we could
/
death
to
the
the
old man.
as
simply
severance
of our connection
speak of crucifudon
Furthermore, unlike his treatment of "sin, '.'Paul doesnot personify the "old man" as
from
have
does
"self.
"
"old
Nor
the
an
agent
separate
man"
one's
an acting
like
human
terms
the
of
contact
point
with
other
anthropological
person
ontological
(e.g., body, flesh, heart, mind, soul, spirit). In this regard, the "old man" is unique. The
factors
itself,
factors
dpOpo)Trosdistinguishing modifier TraAat6-,
to
that
- refers
outside of
than
and
eschatological
rather
redemptive-historical
are
anthropological.
There is also no indication in this passagethat the "old man" refers to fallen
human nature. The metaphor operates in relational (status) rather than ontological
(constitutional) or ethical categories. Throughout the indicative section (6:1-11)
"old
in
to
the
the
man"
reference
surrounding
verse 6, Paul's language concerns

144
Christian existence,relationship, and status with respect to sin and God-not human
Believers
"old
free
to
the
to
conduct.
are
not
exhorted
crucify
man" or
nature or moral
themselves from the "old man. " With various imperatives, Paul exhorts believers to
battle against sin, not the "old man, " and he describes the location of the battle as
their "mortal body"(6: 12), not their "body of sin" (6:6).
In this text, then, the "old man" is a metaphor for the person who belongs to
the corporate structure of the old order of human existence established by Adam,
through whom sin as a ruling power entered into the world of humanity. When this
free
from
dying
is
God
to
through
and
made
with
sin as a master
alive
person set
Christ and rising to walk in newness of life, he / she enters into and belongs to the
by
the
new order of e2dstence-the new creation-established
corporate structure of
Jesus Christ. This person is no longer designated an "old man" in Adam but a "new
Christ.
in
man"
Later we must consider whether this view of the "old man" will hold up in the
is
"old
Colossians
Ephesians
4:
3:
9-10
22-24
the
man"
and
where
ethical passagesof
"
But
"put
"new
is
the
the
the
the
off.
concept of
man" and
verb
object of
coupled with
first, we must investigate a reference to the "new man" only in Ephesians 2.

CHAPTER 3
EPHESLANS 2: 15
ONE NEW ALAN CREATED
The words "in order that in himself he [Christ Jesus] might create the two
into one new man" occur in Ephesians 2:15. This text is a primary reference to the
"new man" in the corpus Paulinum and the only one to mention the "new man"
"old
"
In
light
its
text
this
the
this,
counterpart,
man.
of
of
an
exegetical
study
without
is important to our investigation. We shall speak of the author as the Apostle Paul.
Despite some difficulties, we hold the view that he wrote Ephesians as a general,
Asia
including
letter
Minor,
"open"
to
several churches of western
circular or
Ephesus.1 This chapter contains a brief discussion of the historical setting of
Ephesians (3.1), the literary context of Ephesians 2 (3.2), the structural form of
Ephesians 2:11-22 (3.3), and the conceptual background and structural form of
Ephesians 2: 14-18 (3.4). This sets the stage for an exegesis of Ephesians 2:14-18
(3.5) and concluding observations on the "one new man" (3.6).
3.1 Historical

Setting of Ephesians

The general, circular nature of Ephesians makes it difficult to determine


its
from
the
the
of
readers.
occasion
or
purpose
circumstances
certainty
any
with
Having accepted Pauline authorship as noted above, we are left to ascertain these
things from the circumstances of Paul and the content of the letter. We assume that
his
Christian
is
know.
hear
he
Many
to
what
wrote
readers
needed
and
refined
what
literary, historical, and / or liturgical statements of occasion,genre and purpose have
been proposedfor Ephesians-some more helpful and illuminating than others.2
1Seethe discussion and support for this view in
ch. 1,11-22.
2For a survey of various proposals and their advocates,
see M. Barth, Ephesians, AB 34,
34A (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1974) 1:56-69, and A. T. Lincoln, Ephesians, WBC 42 (Dallas:
Word Books, 1990)xxxv-xlviii, lxxiii-lxxxvii; and, more recently, E. Best, Ephesians, ICC (Edinburgh:

145

146
Since the document exhibits epistolary traits, it seems best to treat it as a
because
from
letter.
It
be
he
the
that
could
argued
of
report
received
general pastoral
Epaphras regarding conditions in the Lycus Valley (cf. Eph. 6:21-22 with Col. 1:6-9;
2:5-8; 4:7-8,12), Paul envisioned the need for a more general letter than Colossiansto
be sent to various other churches of western Asia Minor, especially if these had been
(cf.
from
his
in
Ephesus
Acts
be
19:
1-10).
It
in
ministry
accord with
would
spawned
the circular letter hypothesis that there are no references to specific problems or
false teaching. Without the tension of a specific threat or crisis weighing on his mind,
Paul had time to reflect on God's purposes in Christ involving the Church. As the
Gentiles,
he
had
been
insight
into
God's
to
the
the
plan and
given
mystery of
apostle
had been commissioned to make it known to all people (Eph. 3:3-11, cf. 1:9-10). With
language
fresh
his
Colossian
letter
Paul
the
and
on
mind,
still
used similar
elements of
Christians
his
instruct
Gentile
to
their
readers concerning
new status as
concepts
before
Christians,
Jews
Gentiles
Church,
in
to
the
put
and
alike,
united with all other
them the ethical implications of all this for living in the world, and to urge them to
"the
devil.
"
important
firm
This
the
against
strategies
of
statement of
stand
Christian truth was no doubt needed in more than one first-century location in Asia
Minor.
3.2 Literary

Context of Ephesians 2

Most interpreters have observed that Ephesians has two main parts:
in
21
framed
1:
3-3:
in
4:
1-6:
22,
by
(1:
the
and
exhortation
address 1-2) and
exposition
the closing blessing (6:23-24). In part one (chs. 1-3), Paul gives praise to God for all
the spiritual blessings believers have received in Christ (1:3-14). Cast in hymnic
form, this opening "berakah" provides a sweeping insight into the eternal plan of God
for humankind, with the focus of attention centered on Christ who is the agent

T. & T. Clark, 1998) 63-75. See ch. 1,20 n57, for Best's plausible proposal.

147
through whom God'splan is to be realized. Ultimately, His plan is to bring all
headship
in
heaven
Christ
Jesus
the
on
earth,
and
under
of
creation, everything
(1:10). In 1:15-23 Paul prays that his readers would comprehend the significance of
God's plan, especially as it related to the surpassing greatness of His power in raising
Christ from the dead and exalting Him as head over all things, even the Church,
body.
had
direct,
for
His
Paul's
is
God's
readers
personal experience of
power,
which
by it they had been rescued from the spiritual deadness of their sinful past to be, by
God's grace, His workmanship created in Christ Jesus for good works (2:1-10). Jew
have
been
in
His
life
Gentile
Christ
in
the
alike
given
a share
new
of
and
and
forces.
supremacy over evil
Throughout 2:1-10 Paul views human beings from the standpoint of what

he describesthe preGodhas donefor them in Christ. In verses1-3,using TWT,


Christian existenceof his Gentile ("you," blids-,2:1) readersand all humanity ("we all,"
Mds-7rdvm-in 2:3 includesJews). The "old humanity" living in the "old age/ realm"
"
Their
by
forces
"this
"
devil,
"flesh.
dominated
the
the
the
of
world age,
and
was
Left
2:
13).
Col.
(cf.
bondage,
death
condemnation,and
existencewas characterizedas
in this fallen condition,they deservedand were liable to God'srighteousjudgment.
In verses4-7 following the contrastiveconjunctionM (implying PDvin
Paul
in
2-3),
forth
his
Jewish
Gentile
to
vv.
vo-rl
sets
readers' present
and
contrast
Christian existence. He focuses on God's gracious, decisive action in Christ that
from
This
Christ
their
involved
them
them
plight.
making
alive with
rescue
rescued
(cvvc&o7Tot77o-cP
70 Xpto-ro, v. 5), raising them and seating them (avv4yctpe-vKal
in
heavenly
Him
6)
What
the
God's power accomplished
v.
with
realms.
ovP,EKdOto-cv,
for Christ in those events (cf. 1: 19-21) it accomplished for Him as the representative
is
humanity
Him.
that
to
Believers
have been transferred to
related
vitally
a
new
of
by
Christ's
inaugurated
"new
resurrection in which they enjoy new life and
realm"
a
liberation from the powers that previously enslaved them. All this demonstrates the

148
(v.
God's
7).
grace
surpassing richness of
In verses 8-10 Paul summarizes the gracious nature of salvation.

By God's

(vv.
1-3)
from
delivered
been
have
their
his
previous state
personally
readers
grace
through faith. Salvation comes from God as a gift that excludes human merit, effort
His
is,
be
God's
that
Believers
to
the
boasting.
new
work,
product of
are said
and
in
life
Christ
Jesus
in
(KTLo-O!
unto a
of goodness expressed
vrcs-)
creation, created
design
for
humanity.
God's
deeds,
original
which was
specific

This new way of living

in
living
the
10)
the
(ev a&TbL-g
old way of
contrast with
v.
completes
7TaT4o-o)1-icv,
ITCPL
Paul's
faith,
By
2).
through
Vv
trespasses and sins
v.
grace
aTgTro-reiTrptc7TaT4uaT6-,
Christian readers enjoy a privileged relationship with God-they

have been raised

from spiritual death to new life in Christ.

is
Christian
The contrast between their pre-Christian past and their
present
Gentiles
him
It
in
2:
11-22.
to
discussion
Paul's
of
important
to
remind
enables
also
Jew-Gentile
it
in
to
the
and
their
relationship
as
relates
situation
change
another
"one
designation
The
Christians.
in
the
newly created community of
membership
We
because
it
this
importance
is
in
2:
15
relationship.
clarifies
of particular
new man"
turn to this text in the context of 2: 11-22.
3.3 Structural

Form of Ephesians 2: 11-22

feature
important
The contrast schemavoT
structural
an
provides
PVP
...
here
implicit,
in the thought of this pericope.3 Whereas in 2:1-10 the POP
element was
both temporal elements are explicit. The pre-Christian past (i. e., the period prior to
the coming of Christ) is signaled by iroTCinverses 11 and 13 and by its equivalent
3P. Tachau, "Einst" und "Jetzt" im Neuen Testament. Beobachtungenzu einem
in
der
Vorgeschichte,
Briefliteratur
Predigtschema
neutestamentlichen
seiner
zu
und
urchristlichen
FRLANT 105 (G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1972) 79-85,133-43, concludes that this
between
is
the
depicts
Christian
the
pre-Christian
usually
and
a
contrast
past
present
and
schema
but not always expressedby TroTIand v9p. He suggests that it was often used in early Christian
(133).
Pauline
following
He
in
the
this
conversion-initiation
with
associated
sees
preaching
contrast
Eph.
11:
30-32;
2:
1-22;
7:
5-6;
Cor.
6:
15-23;
1
Rom.
4:
3-7,8-10;
5:
8-11;
6:
9-11;
Gal.
23;
1:
passages:
5:8; Col. 1:21-22; 2:13; 3:7-8; PhIm. 11; 1 Tim. 1:13-14; Titus 3:3-7 (79-85,94).

149
It
in
in
12.
Christian
(i.
!
the
to
verse
stands
contrast
Ke-1Pq)
present
e., the
Katpig,
by
inter-advent
in
by
13
its
81
period)
signaled
vvvl
verse
and
negative
present
key
beginning
19,
This
verse
ouke'n
in
a
summarizing
verse
with
ovv.
apa
counterpart
Paul's
Gentile
deprivation
Gentiles
their
of
reminds
readers
past religious
as
contrast
in
Christ's
Jews
behalf
to
their
to
order
emphasize
with
reconciling work on
compared
the
to
them
this
they
and
situation
grant
privileges
now enjoy.
change

As noted by Andrew Lincoln, "some aspects of the contrast are completed in


before
but
intervene
14-18
11-13,
the
verses
other
aspects
pre-Christian
of
verses
in
have
been
The
12
in
19.1'4
to
verse
are shown
reversed
verse
past mentioned
follows:
be
contrasts could arranged as
Pre-Christian Past

Christian Present

1. Xo)pls- Xpta7oD (v. 12)

y
Xpto-r4j
tv

2. aTTAAo7ptO)1l!
VOL Tg
(v.
12)
Topa4A
TrokTclas- ToV

o,vpTroA-tTaL TIOV

3. ebvt T6v &077K6v


(v.
12)
7s- CiraMA[as-

v,
owe'ri

777uoD (v. 13)

(v.
19)
ay1cov
Kal

eoT

eivol

(v.
19)
7TdpoiKot

4. &Tt8a lu ! Xovrcs-(v. 12)


5. dOcot EV 70 K&pj (v. 12)

(V.
19)
0600
OIKETOL700

6. oF 7To-re&7cs- liaKpdv (v. 13)

eycP46rc
ae
pvpl
c'yyL*r
...

13)

These contrasts emphasize the separation and alienation that existed between Jews
5
last
indicates
QuaKpdk,
The
Gentiles.
that
contrast
spatial
categories
and Cyyzl5-)
and
(vor!
6
temporal
interwoven
be
ones
with
and VDV).
can

4Lincoln, Ephesians, 125; also Best, Ephesians, 236; and R. Schnackenburg, Ephesians.
A Commentary, trans. H. Heron, EKKNT 10 (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1991) 105; pace Barth,
Ephesians, 1:275, who puts v. 13 with vv. 14-18 rather than vv. 11-12.
5SeeW. D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism: Some Rabbinic Elements in Pauline
Theology, 4th ed. (Philadelphia: Fortress Press) 113-15, for a discussion of the significance of the
Heb.
19a;
(v. 19; Heb. MI-1))to Jews.
VIM) and 7TdpotKot
(vv.
12b,
elvot
terms
6It should be noted that the temporal antithesis has
not been collapsed into a spatial

150
These contrasts relate directly to the readers Paul addressed. The second
("you")
in
11-13
19
in
verses
and
plural
stands
contrast to the third person
person
Christ)
first
("he,
"
("we")
begins
the
that
and
person
plural
and concludesthe
singular
in
14-18.
He
identifies
his
Gentiles
in
11
verses
readers
as
and as
material
verse
("to those far"-Gentiles)
Christians in verse 13. In verse 17, Tots-1-taKpdv

are referred

to as bpEv("to you"), but Tdg c" * ("to those near"--Jews) are not referred to as /_dv
("to us"). Rather, "we both" in verse 18 refers to Jewish and Gentile Christians.
Thus, in this context, "you" refers to Paul's Gentile addressees,and "we" refers to all
Christians, Gentiles and Jews, including the author. 7 The contrasts are between his
Gentile readers'pre-Christian past in relation to Israel's privileges and their own
Christian present. On one hand, they oncewere "far"-alienated

both from Israel and

from Israel's God. Now, on the other hand, through the death of Christ and in Him
they are "near"-at peaceboth with God and with Jewish Christians in the Church.
The purpose of the contrast schema and of this paragraph as a whole is to
(Ai6
Gentile
11)
former
deprived
these
their
yo7pove6e-re-,
v.
readers of
religious
remind
Christian
their
the
present
privileged
position
as members of
community.
status and
They now participate in God's salvation through Christ's death on an equal basis with
Christian Jews (cf. 3:6).8No longer do they have an inferior status when compared
in
God's
the
Israel
It
important
is
to
present
outworking
of
plan.
recognize that
with

Vetzt,
"Einst"
"
C.
E.
Tachau,
143.
Arnold,
Ephesians:
(Grand
Power
Magic
und
and
one; pace
Rapids: Baker, 1992) 150-51, recognizes the spatial emphasis in Ephesians but demonstrates that
it does not displace the author's use of the Jewish two-age concept: present (2:2) and future (2:7).
7Best, Ephesians, 236,251,270; also D. B. Wallace, Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics:
An Exegetical Syntax of the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996) 397-98.
8E. Percy, Die Problemeder Kolosser-und Epheserbriefe,ARSHLL 39 (Lund: Gleerup,
1946) 278-86; also Lincoln, Ephesians, 132. This passageis not meant to be an argument for
Mitton,
The
Epistle
C.
L.
Ephesians:
to
Authorship,
the
Its
Origin
pace
unity,
and
ecclesiastical
purpose (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1951) 101; nor an argument against the arrogance of Gentile
Christians and their feelings of superiority toward Jewish Christians, pace E. Ildsemann,
"Ephesians and Acts, " in Studies in Luke-Acts, ed. L. E. Keck and J. L. Martyn (London: SPCK,
A
Reconciliation:
P.
Martin,
Study
R.
291;
1968)
also
of Paul's Theology, rev. ed. (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan, 1989) 160-67.

151
it is the soteriological status of Gentiles (and Jews) that has changed, not their ethnic
historical
Christ
9
Israel
but
into
incorporated
into
Gentiles
along with
are not
status.
Jewish Christians (cf. v. 15).
In light of these observations, the overall structure of thought in 2:11-22 can
be divided into three sections. First, in verses 11-13 Paul uses the contrast between
(Pvvl
Christian
their
their pre-Christian past as it relates to Israel OToTe)
present
and
81)to remind his Gentile readers that through Christ's death they have come "near."
Verse 13 describestheir present situation in spatial language (paKpdv/ EYY49)as well
So,
hTo7c)for
(pup[
What
language
this
temporal
an explanation.
all
means calls
as
is
how
"near"
Paul
in
14-18
this
made possible
coming
explains
second, verses
through Christ who embodiespeaceand reconcilesJews and Gentiles in "one new
dpa
begins
for
both
19
Father
Third,
the
"
to
with
alike.
verse
man, providing access
In
from
13.
follows
logical
introducing
that
the
verses
verse
naturally
conclusion
ow
19-22 Paul summarizes the Gentile readersnew privileged position in the new
in
building
described
God's
household,
Church,
the
which
a
as
variously
community,
Christ is the cornerstone, a holy temple in the Lord, and God's dwelling place.10
Our main interest lies in verses 14-18 because they contain the reference to
debate
have
"
focal
These
been
"one
the
the
verses
point of considerable
new man.
brief
We
background
history.
turn
to
their
tradition
a
conceptual
and
regarding
these
matters.
of
consideration

9Schnackenburg,Ephesians, 109, states: "the author is concernedwith the Church made


(cf.
the
Gentiles
in
distinctions
11)
Jews
former
and
which
earlier
as
circumcision
v.
and
such
up of
Law (cf, v. 15) have lost their meaning, and he is concerned about their proper relationship, the unity
in
Church
Gentile-Christians
the
the
Judaism
to
Jewishthe
not
outside
and
with
relationship
of
...
Church" (italics his). The word "former" could be misleading in an otherwise lucid comment.
10I. H. Thomson, Chiasmus in the Pauline Letters, JSNTSup 111 (Sheffield: Sheffield
Academic Press, 1995) 84-115, argues that the structure of 2:11-22 is best portrayed as a chiasmus
beyond
by
the
"one
Verse
the
15,
chiastic
material
pattern.
new
mentions
which
supplemented
indicating
the
it,
that
"the
"
is
the
14-18,
pattern
of
center
at
contains
central
along
vv.
with
man,
Lincoln,
See
(86).
Ephesians,
the
126, for a critique of chiastic patterns.
passage. . ."
point of

152
3.4 Background

Form
Ephesians
2: 14-18
and
of

Since verses 14-18 contain several unusual elements (e.g., hapax legomena,
Ephesians),
interpreters
have
have
that
they
to
a
number
of
argued
unique
concepts
but
Jewish
fact
background,
At
Gnostic
time,
the
the
see
others
antecedents.
same
a
that these verses form a distinct unit within 2:11-22 leads many to contend that they
11
deny
hyrnn,
but
based
this.
tradition,
allegedly a preformed
on existing
others
are
What warrant is there for these claims and what contribution, if any, do they make to
this
of
passage?
understanding
our
3.4.1 Conceptual Background

of 2:14-18

3.4.1.1 Gnostic Background.

In 1930, Heinrich Schlier published a

detailed study of the relationship of Gnostic texts to Ephesians in which he


interpreted
Ephesians
the
the
thought
against
of
consistently and systematically
backdrop of a Gnostic cosmological myth. 12 Subsequently, other scholars accepted
Schlier's view and expandedor modified it by expressing their own ideas of its
including
13
However,
the
these,
pressure of criticism, some of
under
significance.
Schlier himself, modified their views to allow for a broader range of traditional
11For a summary and assessmentof these debates, see C. Colpe, "Zur Leib-ChristiVorstellung im Epheserbrief," in Judentum, Urchristentum, Kirche, ed. W. Eltester, BZNW 26 (Berlin:
Upelmann, 1964) 172-87;W. Rader, The Church and Racial Hostility: A History of Interpretation of
Ephesians 2: 11-22, BGBE 20 (TUbingen: J. C. B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1978) 177-96; and M. S.
Moore, Tphesians 2:14-16: A History of Recent Interpretation, " EvQ 54 (1982) 163-68.
12H. Schher, Christus und die Kirche im Epheserbrief, BHT 6 (TUbingen: J. C. B. Mohr,
1930, reprint 1966) esp. 18-37, where he discusses several Gnostic sources behind &Oponws-that he
Patmos(Diisseldorf.
He
Der
Brief
Kommentar
Eph.
15.
die
Epheser.
Ein
2:
to
also
wrote
an
applies
Verlag, 1957,19717) as well as other articles on Ephesians. He assumes that the creation of the
"one new man" comes from an already developed Gnostic myth and that the "new man" is to be
identified with the Urmensch-Redeemer (Epheser, 133-36), all of which the author (Paul) adapted.

NE. g., E. Ksemann, Leib und Leib Christ!, BHT 9 (Tbingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1933), 15658; id., "Das Interpretationsproblem des Epheserbriefes," in ExegetischeVersucheund Besinnungen,
3rd ed., 2 vols. (Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1970) 2:253-61; G. Schille, Frhchristliche
Hymnen, 2nd ed. (Berlin: Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, 1965) 24-31; K Wengst, Christologische
Formeln und Lieder des Urchristentums (Gtersloh: Gerd Mohn, 1972) 181-86; and K M. Fischer,
Tendenzund Absicht des Epherserbriefs (Gttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1973) 131-37. In
Urmensch-Redeemer
the
to
Fischer
Schlier
place
attempts
of
and Ilasemann on
view
particular,
firmer footing in light of the Nag Hammadi texts (Tendenz, 132).

153
14
from
various sources.
materials
Schlier argued that the closeproximity of several images in Ephesians 2:1122-such as the dividing wall, the one body, the one new man, the building-could only
be explained on the basis of an underlying Gnostic myth that combined these images.
According to him, such a myth was that of the cosmic Urmensch-Redeemer.15 He
line
Ephesians,
in
focused
Pauline
that
the
that
tradition
author of
with
on
claimed
the cross,reinterpreted and adapted this myth to proclaim the abolition of the enmity
that divided Jews from Gentiles and humanity from God becausethis imagery was
his
the
conceptual
world
of
audience.
part of
In recent years, however, the Gnostic Redeemer myth as a possible
background for this and other New Testament passageshas been thoroughly
discredited.
Numerous
have
it
is
that
and
scholars
concluded
postexamined
Christian and cannot legitimately be treated as background material for the New
Testament. 16 In studies based on the Dead Sea Scrolls, other scholars have found
in
language,
between
Ephesians
thought
style,
and
patterns
and the
similarities
Qumran literature that, for them, is strong evidence against Schlier's Gnostic

14For example: Schlier, Epheser, 122-23; Kdsemann, "Ephesians and Acts," 288. Under
the pressure of criticism, Schlier modified his position in his commentary to allow for someJewish
Jewish
Gnostic
the
behind
Ephesians
(a
Jewish
the
ideas
he
character
of
and
saw
sources
Gnosticism). However, his attempt to integrate Jewish and Gnostic backgrounds has been criticized
by J. T. Sanders, The New Testament Christological Hymns (Cambridge: The University Press, 1971)
90.
15Schlier formulated his theory based on the work R. Reitzenstein who described the
of
Gnostic Redeemermyth in Das iranische Erl6sungsmysterium (Bonn: Markus, 1921). This
has
been
in
the
Die
C.
Religionsgeschichtliche
Colpe,
questioned
seriously
work
of
reconstruction
Schule, FRLANT 60 (G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1961) 199-208. See also Sanders,
Christological Hymns, 88-89.
16For example: C. Colpe, Die Religionsgeschichtliche Schule, FRLANT 60 (G6ttingen:
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1961) 199-208; Sanders, Christological Hymns, 88-90; M. Wolter,
Rechtfertigung und zukiinftiges Heil (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1978) 62-73, who criticizes Fischer's
(Tendenz,
Redeemer
Gnostic
131-37).
Recent data from the Nag Hammadi Library
myth
refurbished
has given no positive evidence of a pre-Christian Gnostic redemption myth.

154
thesis. 17 Furthermore, Gnostic cosmology is not congruent with Paul's view of

heaven and earth in Ephesians (cf 1:20-21; 4:9-10; 6: 12).


3.4.1.2 An Old Testament / Jewish Background.

Strong opposition to a

d-1-

background
from
for
/
Testament
Jewish
Old
comes
scholars
who
argue
a
GrLostic
background to this passage.18 Proponents of this view often point to the Isaiah texts
in
(Isa.
52:
7;
57:
Jewish
19),
discussions
this
passage
echoed
of Adam, and the Old
Testament concept of "corporate solidarity" as a more probable background than the
Gnostic Urmensch-Redeemer.19 Ernst Percy, a strong advocate of this concept in
the interpretation of Ephesians 2:14-18, states that the idea of representation, that
in
for
the
feature
the
is
the
acts
place
and
person
of
sake of others,
one
crucial
Gnostic
in
1120
"parallels.
the
myth and other pagan religions or philosophical
missing
Franz Mussner believes that the parallel between the Jewish concept of new

"new
Ephesians
2:
15
is
the
to
the
and
reference
man"
of
one of the most
creation
impressive evidencesfor a Jewish background.21 He uses material gathered by Erik
Sjbberg in which Jewish texts speak of the Gentile proselyte as "formed anew" and of
Israel herself as "created into a new being."22 Just as individual Gentiles were

17F. Mussner, "Contributions Made by Qumran to the Understanding of the Epistle to


the Ephesians," in Paul and Qumran. Studies in NT Exegesis,ed. J. Murphy-O'Connor (Chicago:
priory Press, 1968) 159-78; and K G. Kuhn, "The Epistle to the Ephesians in the Light of the
Qumran Texts," in Paul and Qumran, 115-31.
18E. Percy, Der Leib Christi (S6ma Christou) in den
paulinischen Homolegoumena und
Antilegomena (Lund: Gleerup, 1942); S. Hanson, The Unity of the Church in the New Testament
Colossians and Ephesians (Uppsala: Almquist & Wiksells, 1946); F. Mussner, Christus, das All und
1968); J. J. Meuzelaar, Der Leib des Messias
die Kirche, 2nd ed. TTS 5 (Trier: Paulinus-Verlag,
(Assen: Van Gorcum, 1961) 59-101; J. T. Sanders, "Hymnic Elements in Ephesians 1-3, " ZNW 56
Hymns, 14-15,88-92; and Barth, Ephesians, 1: 261-62.
(1965) 214-32; id., Christological

190n the concept of "corporate solidarity" see


ch. 1,40-42; on rabbinic thought about
humanity in Adam, see W. D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism, 36-57.
20Percy, Der Leib Christi, 41-43.
21Mussner, Christus, 88-96.
22E. Sjberg, 'Viedergeburt
(1950) 44-85. See, eh. 1,51-52.

und Neusehpfung im palstinensischen

Judentum, " StTh 4

155
brought "near, " incorporated into Israel, and given access to the worship of Yahweh,
Gentiles
in Ephesians 2: 13 are said to have been
by
the
extended application,
so also
brought near by the blood (death) of Christ and made real fellow-citizens, members of
the household of God with the Jews (2: 19-20; cf. 3: 2-6).
3.4.1.3 A Diversified

Background.

Several scholars have suggested a

between
a Gnostic and an Old Testament / Jewish background for
mediating position
Ephesians 2: 14-18.23 They are convinced that its background cannot be limited to
Judaism
first
had
become influenced by
the
the
other
since
of
century
one or
Hellenistic and Gnostic ideas and Adam had come to be viewed as a cosmic figure
filling the universe. This suggests a milieu where Christianity

was more readily

influence
Hellenistic
Jewish
to
the
of
exposed
speculation.
Joachim Gnilka acknowledges with appreciation the interpretation

of

Schlier, the hymnic investigations of Schille, and the Jewish parallels offered by
Percy, Mussner and others. As a result, he believes that the author of 2: 14-18
interprets
and adapts a cosmologically oriented Christian hymn about
critically
"peace and the redeemer" by aligning it with Christ's redemptive work on the cross
24
it
between
Gentiles.
Jews
Peter
to
then
the
relating
relationship
and
and
Stuhlmacher claims, however, that Gnilka's analysis is not satisfactory because he
"Gnostic"
understanding of the text and gives little attention to the
still maintains a
interpretation
christological

of the Isaiah texts reflected in this passage. 25

23E. Schweizer, "Die Kirche als Leib Christi in den


Antilegomena, " in
paulinischen
(ZUrich: Zwingli-Verlag,
1963) 293-316; D. C. Smith, "The Two Made One: Some
Neotestamentica
Observations on Eph. 2: 14-18, " OJRS 1 (1973) 34-54; C. Burger, Schdpfung und Versdhung: Studien
Epheserbrief,
Gut
Kolosser-und
WMANT
im
liturgiSchen
46 (Neukirchen-Vluyn:
Neukirchener
zum
Verlag, 1975) 117-57; and J. Gnilka, Der Epheserbrief, 2nd ed. HTKNT 10.2 (Freiburg: Herder,
1977) 147-52.

24Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 147-52.


25p. Stuhlmacher, "'He is our Peace'(Eph. 2: 14). On the Exegesis
and Significance of Eph.
2: 14-18," in Reconciliation, Law, and Righteousness: Essays in Biblical Theology, trans. E. R. Kalin
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1986) 182-200, esp. 184-87.

156
After examining the Gnostic material cited by Schlier as well as relevant

traditions in Greek philosophy, Hellenistic Judaism and rabbinic literature, Derwood


Smith concluded that the background of Ephesians 2:14-18 was not a unified Gnostic
but
was actually composedof a variety of Jewish and Greek concepts that
myth
He
they
to
the
each
are
other
when
combined
express
message.
reinterpret
author's
background
be
found
Jewish
in
that
the
this
of
passage
can
argues
simultaneously
traditions about proselytes, in Greek philosophical traditions about overcoming
divisions, and in Jewish cosmologicaltraditions. 26 He paid particular attention to the
"many"
"one"
in
Greek
the
the
and
problem
of
philosophy that often involved
classical
the idea of bringing unity out of duality. He argues that this idea was taken up by
Hellenistic Judaism and early Christianity, and from it one finds the background for
the idea of "the two being made one" in Ephesians 2, especially the statement in
Christ
27
duality
Ephesians
14
For
that
the
the
made 76 dyOoTcpaC"V.
author of
verse
is occasionedby the Mosaic Law that separates Jews from Gentiles, and ultimately
both from God. Through Christ and the cross the "two" become "one new man. "
Interestingly, the idea of overcoming duality and establishing unity is not
from
Jewish
It
is
in
thought.
the
reflected
various
prophecies
concerning
missing
North
South
kingdoms
following
Israel
the
the
that
of
and
of
were separated
reuniting
death of King Solomon in Jewish history (cf. Jer. 3: 18; Ezek. 37: 15-28; Hos. 1: 11). In
Ezekiel 37, the uniting of two sticks of wood, symbolizing Judah and Ephraim,
God
land
Hos.
in
(cf.
the
the
and
restoring
reuniting
as
single
people
a
nation
pictured
1:11).28 But this passage is a remote parallel, if one at all. In Ephesians 2: 14-15, the
Aaos,,or ga(YLAciathat are
term "one new man" is used instead of terms such as eOvos-,
26Smith, "The Two Made One, " 46-47. He
argues that "there is not simply one unified
thought system lying behind Ephesians but rather that the author has brought together traditional
in
his
to
theological concerns" (34).
order
express
origins
various
of
materials

271bid., 36-37.

28Martin, Reconciliation, 190, discussesthe


possible link between Ezek. 37 and Eph. 2.

157
used in LXX Ezekiel 37. Furthermore, the Ephesian text is concerned with unity

between Jews and Gentiles, not Jews with Jews.


In our view, the most relevant and helpful background for Paul's
terminology and imagery in this passage comes from the Old Testament and Jewish
antecedents as mentioned above.29 Along with the discussion of the conceptual
background, however, scholars have also given attention to the form
analysis of these
verses to which we now turn.
3.4.2 Structural

Form of 2: 14-18

The literary structure of Ephesians 2: 14-18 is also


a subject under debate.
Is the passage a preformed hymn written in celebration of cosmic peace,
which the
Ephesians
author of
used, either completely or with suitable modifications, in this
context? If so, what is the extent of this traditional

material-verses

14-18 or verses

14-16 only? Or, is there no redaction of traditional, liturgical material at all, and has
the author simply formulated an explanation that stands in direct continuity with
Pauline teaching (e.g., Rom. 3:30-31; 12:5; 1 Cor. 12: 13; 2 Cor. 5: 17; Gal. 3:26-28;
6: 15)?
3.4.2.1 A Quoted Hynm.

Following the lead of Ernst Ydsemann, 30who

claimed there was quoted liturgical material behind 2: 14-18, Gottfried Schille made a
form
critical analysis of this passage.31 He drew attention to several
pioneering
literary
features
in
the passage that indicated to him it was a quoted
unusual
hymn
drawn
from
confessional
early Christian literature.

He accepted Schlier's

thesis about the presence of language from a Gnostic Urmensch-Redeemer myth, but

29See pp. 154-55 above


and the discussion on conceptual background in ch. 1,46-52.
30Kdsemann, Leib und Leib Christi, 1933;
and later, "Epheserbrief, " in RGG, ed.
K. Galling et al., 3rd ed., 7 vols. Mibingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1957-65) 2: 517-20,
esp. 519.
Frhchristliche
177-86.31Schille,

Hymnen, 24-31,47-52;
also Wengst, Christologische Formeln,

158
he claimed that the early church used it first in composing a hyrnn about Christ
God,
to
and then the author of Ephesians adapted it to proclaim
reconciling people
between
Gentiles
Jews
and
as well.
reconciliation
Since Schille's work, other scholars have attempted to understand
Ephesians, or portions of it, by connecting it with the liturgy of the early church. On
the basis of similarities to Jewish liturgy, especially that of Qumran, J. C. Kirby
developed the thesis that Ephesians is actually the substance of a Pentecost worship
by
Ephesus
in
it
the
to
used
church
with
some
put
into
epistolary
additions
service
the form of a letter. 32 Within this liturgical framework, he sees Ephesians 2: 11-22 as
distinct
form
having
independent,
15
the
at
unit,
of
an
elaborate
chiasm with verse
an
the center. Thus he rejects Schille's thesis that only verses 14-18 are an
independently composed piece.
Markus Barth agrees with the view that Ephesians 2: 14-18 is a hymn. He
hymnic
five
in
the
that
traits
these
verses are more obvious and complete
claims
than in most other hymnic passages of Ephesians and he goes on to mention seven
briefly
hymn
After
describing
Schille's
traits.
the
theory
the
concerning
origin of
such
Barth
it,
hymnic
it
is
that,
that
though
concludes
preformed
evaluating
probable
and
diverse
14-18
do
disprove
2:
the
elements
was
used,
of
a
not necessarily
material
Pauline origin. 33
Against those who include verses 17 and 18 in the borrowed hymnic
34
Andrew
Lincoln
argues that these two verses were formulated by the
material,
32j. C. Kirby, Ephesians, Baptism
and Pentecost: An Inquiry into the Structure and
Press, 1968) 150-61.
Purpose of the Epistle to the Ephesians (Montreal: McGill University
33Barth,

Ephesians, 1: 261-62. Others who acknowledge the use of hymnic material that
has been reworked are Schlier, Epheser, 122-23; Schille, Frahchristliche
Hymnen, 24-31; Fischer,
Tendenz, 131-37; Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 147-52; Burger, Sch6pfung, 117-33; Wengst, Christologische
d'Eph. H, 11-22, " NTS 16 (1969-70) 209-11;
Formeln, 181-86; G. Giavini, "La structure litt6raire
Reconciliation,
168-71.
Martin,
and

34E.g., Schlier, Epheser, 123; Schille, Friihchristliche Hymnen, 24-31; Gnilka, Epheserbrief,
147-52; Fischer, Tendenz, 132; Burger, Sch6pfung, 128-33; Barth, Ephesians, 1:276.

159
writer himself, and therefore the extent of traditional material is limited to verses 1416.35 He associates this material with the hymn to the cosmic Christ that may lie
behind Colossians 1: 15-20, the last part of which deals with cosmic reconciliation.
Several striking points of contact with this Colossians passage lead him to conclude
that "the original hymnic material behind Ephesians 2: 14-16 also has a cosmic
context, and that the two entities mentioned (Td qpOoTcpa,"both, " v. 14; Toiy 66o, "the
two, " v. 15; Toi)s-apOoTcpous-,"both, " v. 16) are the two parts of the cosmos, heaven
"36
The
and earth.
writer of Ephesians, then, adapts the idea of Christ as the bringer
of cosmic reconciliation to his theme of how Christ overcame the barrier that existed
between Gentiles and Jews and brought Gentiles near. The adaptation has left its
mark in the form of several glosses and cumbersome syntax (e.g., vv. 14-15) in the
form
of the material.
present

Verses 14-16, then, constitute the final form of the

traditional material in its new context.


3.4.2.2 Not a Quoted Hynm.

Although there is a growing consensus that

Ephesians 2: 14-18, or at least part of it, is a hymn, some scholars have disagreed and
criticized the view. Reinhard Deichgrdber does not think that these verses form a
separate quoted hymn and even questions whether they ever had independent status
Schille
37
He raises several text-based objections. Furthermore,
and
others claiM.
as
the parameters of the hymn as well as the identification

of the author's omissions and

/ or additions continue to be disputed. No two reconstructions agree. Similar


have
been
by
made
others. Helmut Merklein develops and widens
criticisms
Deichgrdber's critique in his treatment of Ephesians 2: 11-18.38 Peter Stuhlmacher
35Lincoln,

Ephestans,
behind this section" (127).

128. He lists several indications

that "hymnic

material

could lie

361bid., 128-29.

37R. Deichgrdber, Gotteshymnus


und Christushymnus in der friihen Christenhelt, SUNT 5
(Gbttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1967) 165-69.
38H. Merklein, Christus und die Kirche: Die
theologische Grundstruktur

des Epheserbriefes

160
is
liturgical
because
there
traditional,
no
redaction
of
material
claims
at all
all of 2: 1418 should be viewed as a Christian exegesis of several Isaiah texts (9:5-6; 52: 7;
57: 19).39 In his recent full-scale commentary, Ernest Best presents the case for an
hymn
tradition
such
as
piece
a
of preformed
alleged
underlying these verses and offers
some general criticisms.

Then he sets forth several points that militate against such

issues
involved
that
the
are explicable in context as the work of the
a view claiming
40
author.
In light of the above discussion on form, we take the view that this passage
is the explanatory composition of Paul himself as author and is not based on an
hymn.
In
Paul
does
addition,
not use Gnostic language or
underlying, pre-Pauline
imagery to express his ideas. Since we do not see an underlying hymn here, there is
from
Paul's
for
to
to
tradition
meaning in our
no need sift redaction
possible clues
It
is
to that exegesis that we now turn.
the
of
passage.
exegesis
3.5 Exegesis of Ephesians

2: 14-18

The flow of thought in Ephesians 2:11-22 moves naturally from exhortation


description
(vv(vv.
(vv.
In
11-13),
19-22).
14-18),
to
to
explanation
and
conclusion
Paul's
Gentile
Christian
11-13,
In
he
in
light
in
readers are view.
of what
said
verses
he
1-10,41
in
them
to
the
exhorts
remember
religious condition
which they once
verses
SBS
(Stuttgart:
Katholisches
Eph
2,11-18,
66
Bibelwerk,
nach
Komposition von Eph 2,14-18, " BZ 17 (1973) 79-102.

1973) 38-40; id., "Zur Tradition und

39p. Stuhlmacher, "'He is our Peace'(Eph 2: 14)," 187-91; and Schnackenburg, Ephesians,
106-07,112, who, agreeing with Stuhlmacher, concludes that "vv. 13-18 are a christological exegesis
(112).
Lincoln,
Ephesians,
52.7;
57.19"
difficult
Is.
9.5f.;
127,
it
is
to substantiate the claim
says
of
that v. 14 refers to Isa. 9: 5-6 and thereby provides the link between a reference to Isa. 57: 19 in
Isa.
52:
7
in
its
Rechtfertigung,
17;
Wolter,
13
62-73, esp. 72;
with
v.
combination
see
also
and
v.
Christus,
100-03, who argues that these verses should be viewed as an explanation in
Mussner,
and
which Isa. 57: 19 plays a subordinate role.
40Best, Ephesians, 247-50; also Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 107,
the
who states:
have
been
made to reconstruct an underlying hymn seem superfluous and
which
various attempts
hardly convincing. "
41Verse 11 begins with the inferential
conjunction &6 (BAGD, s.v. &6; BDF, 451,5)
that links vv. 11-22 with vv. 1-10. What Paul has already written concerning the change God has

161
lived. He contrasts their past alienation from God and from Israel with their present
far
that
they
who were once
off have come to be near through
situation, stating
Christ's death. In verses 14-18 he explains how this took place. Then in verses 19-22
he concludes that in Christ his Gentile Christian readers are no longer strangers and
fellow-citizens
Christians
but
Jewish
with
aliens
and members of the household of
God. Both together have now become "the temple" in which God dwells. The
in
verses 19-22 connect most naturally
concluding pronouncements

with verses 11-

13, but in between verses 14-18 provide an important explanation of verse 13. We
will examine these verses and the meaning of "one new man" in verse 15.
3.5.1 Ephesians

2: 14a: Christ

Himself

Is Our Peace

IIII/I
The passage begins with the words: A vm's-yap
This
ctp771,
qpt5v.
co-Ttv77
i7

programmatic statement sets the stage for the following discussion because: 1) it
forges an explanatory link (yap) with the preceding context; 2) it designates Christ as
the doer of the following action; 3) it identifies the recipients of His action, namely,
Christian Jews and Gentiles; and 4) it introduces the topic of discussion, namely,
peace.
The connecting word ydp42indicates that Paul intends to give an explanatory
confirmation

his
of
statement

in verse 13, especially in reference to the words el, TO

Xptu-roD
that conclude the verse. In the Old Testament
aya-rt roD

the Gentile nations

described
"far
"
belong
did
God's
Israel
those
to
as
sometimes
off,
who
not
were
people,
(e.g., Deut. 28: 49; 1 Kings 8: 41; Isa. 5: 26; Jer. 5: 15), while Israel was described as
"near" to God (e. g., Ps. 148: 14). Paul used the "far off'language
Christian

to sum up the pre-

(before Christ) existence of his Gentile readers and to remind

them that

becomes
departure
lives
the
in
their
for further reflection on the pre-Christian
point
of
wrought
from a wider redemptive-historical perspective.

state

42The conjunction ydp is taken in an explanatory


rather than a causal sense here; see
A. T. Robertson, A Grammar of New Testament Greek in the Light of Historical Research, 4th ed.
(Nashville, TN: Broadman Press, 1934) 1190. Barth and others make no special mention of it.

162
through what Christ had accomplished on the cross they who once (7oTC)were "far
off' (paKpav)have now (PvP0been brought "near" (eyyw') to God and His salvific
blessings. Their position relative to God and His people had changed. For the "far" to
come "near, " peace needed to be made not only between God and humankind but also
between Jews and Gentiles.
This, Paul explained, is where Christ enters the picture-He

Himself

(avTos-)

is "our peace." The emphatic pronoun aTOSI


' picks up the referen Ce to Jesus Christ in
He
becomes
13,
the major actor and focus of attention
and
verse
This pronoun emphasizes the fact that peace is to be identified
He is its source, or, even stronger,
He procured it (cf. 1: 7,20).

in verses 14-18.43
with Jesus ChriSt44-

He embodies peace because at the cost of His life

Because He embodies peace and bestows it as a salvific

blessing OTot6v c'tpq'vRv, v. 15), it can be said that He is "the Peacemaker. " This

identification of Christ with one of the salvific blessings He brings occurs elsewhere in
the Pauline corpus also (cf. 1 Cor. 1:30-wisdom,

righteousness, sanctification,

redemption; Col. 1:27, hope; 3:4, life).


The word ciIP77
vqis qualified by 77/1
, (v. To whom does this first person pronoun
In
Paul
11
identifies
the second person pronoun UP
' c7is-("you") as Gentile
verse
refer?
Christians (cf 2: 1-10); thus one might argue that first person pronouns ("we /
our")
Jewish
Christians,
to
but such an identification
refer
would

is not made. In verse 17,

' iv ("to you"), there is no


where the "far" (Gentile Christians) are referred to as VP
corresponding reference to the "near" (Jewish Christians) as ), TV("to us"). In verse
18, the first person pronoun "we, " embodied in the construction JXqycv
01
...

431n each of the three


preceding sections of this letter (1: 3-14; 1: 15-23; 2: 1-10) God the
Father has been the major actor with Christ as His agent. Here Christ is the
major actor. This
hymn at this point (cf. Lincoln, Ephesians,
change in subject may be due to the use of a christological
140), but the hymnic structure is not very clear and the content itself
need not be confined to a
hymnic form.

44Barth, Ephesians, 1:262, adds the


words "in person" three times in his translation of
vv. 14-16 N. 14a, 15b, 16b) to bring out the emphasis a6T6,5,has; see also Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 138.

163
both
Jewish
Gentile
y
Christians.
to
refers
and
qyoorcpot,
verse 14 also refers to all Christians,

Jews and Gentiles alike, including

(cf. 1:3-9 where "we" refers to all Christians).


pronominal
through

inclusio encompassing

This suggests that 77'1-U7jV


in
Paul himself

45 These first person pronouns form a

verses 14-18: Christ

is our peace (v. 14) and

Him we have access to the Father (v. 18).

The presence of the article 7)with ctiP77vq


("peace") strengthens av'Tos-,gives
added emphasis to cip7j'PRas a quality,

in verse 15. The term is appropriate

("hostility")

One who abolishes hostility

in
a political
especially

or military

involving
semantic
range
wide

oltj, which in the Old Testament

several nuances such as fulfillment,

harmony,

texts anticipate

In the Greco-

sense. In the LXX, the term acquired a positive

security, and prosperity

messianic

on the context

Numerous

peace as an eschatological

9: 5-6; 52: 7; 53: 5; 57: 19; Mic. 5: 4-5; Hag. 2: 9; Zech. 9: 10). Drawing
New
Testament
of usage,

writers

wholeness, reconciliation

God
with
and others, and even salvation

has a

completion,

depending

(cf., e.g., Judg. 6: 24, nivjmrr, "Yahweh is peace / salvation").


Testament

to

signified the absence of war or the cessation of conflict,

usage. It is often used to translate

wholeness, well-being,

here because Paul is referring

and reconciles two estranged parties.

Roman world, e7tp77Vq


primarily

religious

and sharpens the contrast with 77VXOpaV

Old

blessing (cf. Isa.


on this wide range

also use c1pijpq to express ideas of well-being,

depending on the context. 46 The peace of Old Testament

in its fullest sense

expectation

exists now.

In this context, Christ in His person is the embodiment of peace (v. 14), the
One who makes peace (v. 15) and the One who proclaims peace (v. 17). He is the
45R. A. Wilson, "'We'and'You'in
the Epistle to the Ephesians" in Studia Evangelica 2,
Akademie-Verlag,
TU
(Berlin:
L.
Cross,
F.
87
1964) 676-80, argues that in Ephesians "we"
ed.
"you"
baptized
Christians
to
to
newly
and
all
converts, Jewish or Gentile. His identification
of
refers
"you, " however, does not reflect the evidence in this context correctly (e. g., 2: 11) even with the
Gentiles.
that
The fact that "us" is missing in v. 17b indicates
converts
were
most
new
qualification
that Paul does not see himself as a representative
of the Jewish Christians
only.
46BAGD, s. v. cip4vn; von Rad, TDNT,
2: 776-83.
Brown, NIDNTT,

2: 402-06; Foerster,

TDNT,

2: 406-17; Beck and

164
Peacemaker reconciling hostile parties. As such, cip4vq here denotes primarily

the

hostility,
the bringing together of separated groups, and the resultant
overcoming of
harmony
relationship of
and unity. He who embodies and mediates peace has
overcome the alienation (vv. 12-13) and hostility (v. 15) that exists between Jews and
Gentiles. While peace between these two groups is mentioned first, it is based on
between
God
peace
and humankind as shown later in the passage (vv. 16-17; cf Rom.
5: 1). Verse 14a is likely too general for the claim that Paul refers to Isaiah 9: 5-6 or
Micah 5:4-5 directly here or that, through the catchword citP77
jvq, they provide the link
between an allusion to Isaiah 57: 19 in verse 13 and its combination with Isaiah 52: 7
in verse

17.47

In explaining the contrast between the present status of his Gentile


Christian readers and their past alienation from God and Israel, Paul declares that

Jesus Christ is "the peace" between Jews and Gentiles who have become Christians.
Now he moves on to state what has taken place and how it came about.
3.5.2 Ephesians

2: 14b-15a: The Means By Which Christ

Is Our Peace

Both the syntactical arrangement and the punctuation

of the clauses in

these verses are diff icult. Three participial clauses, 6 7Tot


Avluas771oasKaTapyquas...
.
carry the thought along, but they are not precisely parallel in form or function.
The main problem is whether the words 7-PJxOpaV,
V77 'ToD(v. 14c) are to be
j uqpKtav
in verse 14 as an elaboration on the
connected 1) with the preceding participle Av'uasbreaking down of the dividing wall, or 2) with the following participle KaTqpyr1juasin
15
verse as an elaboration on abolishing the law of commandments with regulations.

47A. T. Lincoln, "The Use of the OT in Ephesians, " JSNT 14 (1982)


26; id., Ephesians,
127; pace Stuhlmacher, "'He is our Peace'(Eph. 2: 14)," 187-91; Wolter, Rechtfertigung, 72; Barth,
Ephesians 1: 261 n36; and Best, Ephesians, 251-52.

165
Syntactical considerations favor the second option. The article 6 governs
48
linked
by
both 7TovjousAv'aas-,
together
which
are
and
Kat'. As such, both (articular)
participles as noun units are placed in apposition to a6TOSin the preceding statement
(i. e., aT65-serves as their subject). Its referent, Jesus Christ, is thus the subject of
these participial clauses. The third participle, Ka-rapn'o-as-,without a connecting word
(like Kat')present, modifies the AvVas-clause and functions as an adverbial participle of
49
It
better
both
to
Av'o-asseems
syntactically
regard
means.
as
and K-aTapyq'ous" ap (v. 14c) is in
occurring at the end of the clauses they govern. Consequently, 77p40P
apposition
previous
connected

with

the following

Top Popop in verse 15 (rather

Av'aas- clause in v. 14) and both words


with

In
light
15.50
Ka-rapn'uas- in verse

be
translated
could

follows:
as

"For He Himself

the One who] made both [to be] one in that


is, the fence [separating
death

and their

Law of commandments

with

regulations

T6 p6-0107otx0p in the

accompanying

of this arrangement,
[Jesus Christ]

by abolishing
[between

14-15a

verses

is our peace.

in His flesh

are

phrases

(Kat') He broke down the dividing

Jews and Gentiles],

on the cross] the [source ofl hostility

than

He [is
wall, that

[through

Jews and Gentiles],

His

namely,

the

......

48The use of one article (6)


with two singular substantival
participles OTw4uac. .. A6oas-)
Granville
Sharp rule for the use of the article in Greek grammar; see
the
an
example
of
qualifies as
MHT, 3: 181-82; C. F. D. Moule, An Idiom-Book of New Testament Greek, 2nd ed. (Cambridge:
Press, 1959) 109-10; Wallace, Grammar,
Cambridge University
270-77, esp. 275.
49Wallace, Grammar, 628-30; Eadie, Ephesians, 174-75; C. C. Caragounis, The Ephesian
Mysterion: Meaning and Content (Lund: Gleerup, 1977) 71, holds that KaTapy4uas- expresses either
to
both
A6uas
addition
gives
an
epexegetical
or
and
means
clauses express the means for the action
The
the
resultant step parallelism
clause.
7Tot4uasrelates all three participial
of
clauses
"He
is our peace. "
the
to
clause:
main
grammatically
50j. A. Robinson, St. Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians, 2nd
ed. (London: James Clark &
Co., 1904) 161; F. F. Bruce, The Epistles to the Colossians, to Philemon, and to the Ephesians,
NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1984) 298; Lincoln, Ephesians, 124; pace Eadie, Ephesians, 17374; Thomson, Chiasmus in the Pauline Letters, 103-04; and Best, Ephesians, 257-59, who discusses
and evaluates several options and prefers to take 7-v -'XOpav with A6oas- (v. 14) and T6v v6pov with
ev
(v.
15),
treat
to
But this seems less likely
7- oapKt' at)ToO as parenthetical.
and
KaTapy4o,assyntactically.

166
3.5.2.1 The 6 voi4oas- Clause (2: 14b). This clause states what Jesus
Christ has done: He has made "the both" to be "one. "51 Here the substantival

adjectivesTd cip06-rcpa
and e"vare in the neuter gender denoting entities, while in
both
in
15-18
This
forms
the
masculine.
words
appear
verses
sudden use of neuter
be
intrusion
in
because
to
this
in verses 11-13 and 15-18
awkward
an
context
seems
Paul speaks of two groups of people, namely, Jews and Gentiles. 52
Markus Barth points out that the neuter adjective qpOoTcpais probably used
like the neuter substantival adjectives "the foolish, the weak, the strong, the ignoble,
the despised, and the 'not being... mentioned in I Corinthians 1:27-28, where Paul
distinct
"people"
"things"
Cor.
22,
(cf.
Gal.
3:
1
3:
8;
categories
of
and not
means
also
28; Col. 3: 11).53 So it appears that here "the two things made one" refers to two
general categories of people: the uncircumcision and the circumcision (v. 11), those
"far" and those "near" (vv. 13,17), that is, Gentiles and Jews. Following the
in
(v.
2:
1-10,
&
(v.
13),
ev
),
14a),
XptuTt5
777oob
the
the
771-L
words
vvvi
statements
word
(LP
and the sentence e"Xopep... ot' dyOOTepot(v. 18, "we both have.
are even more narrowly

defined as Christian

"), the two categories


..

Gentiles and Christian

Jews in this

context.

51'Ev functions as a double accusative object-complement following the


participle
(ev)
The
first
the
second
accusative
asserts
something
about
accusative (7d dyOftcpa) in
7rooaas-.
connection with the action of the participle; see Robertson, Grammar, 480; and MHT 3: 246-47. The
participle vot4ous- alludes to a creative act by Jesus Christ in bringing peace (cf. Eph. 2: 10,15).
52The use of neuter forms is one of the items in this
passage that prompted Schlier,
Schille and others to see the Gnostic Redeemer myth behind these verses. Both "things" here are
heavenly
the
to
spirit world that is in conflict with the earthly material world
viewed as a reference
from
by
"wall.
"
But,
Barth,
it
Ephesians,
1: 262, points out, the context,
a
as
separated
and
linguistic evidence, the meaning of "the wall" (v. 14), and Col. 1: 20 do not support this theory.

53Barth, Ephesians, 1:262; Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 114;


also Abbott, Ephesians, 6061, and BDF, 138,1; 263,4; and 275,8. Lincoln, Ephesians, 128-29,140, believes that the
best
forms
explained as a remnant of traditional hymnic material that originally referred
are
neuter
to the two parts of the cosmos, heaven and earth; also Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 139,148. While this
does
it
be
the
not explain why these forms were retained in the final form of the
case,
may
traditional material used in this context (cf. Deichgrdber, Gotteshymnus, 165-67).

167
Paul anticipated a twofold thrust in his explanation: the reconciliation of
Jews and Gentiles and the reconciliation of humankind and God. Since he is
division
between
Gentiles
Jews
to
the
the
explain
overcoming of
and
concerned
on one
hand, and the overcoming of the separation between humankind and God on the other
hand, the neuter words TciapOoTepa6"Pmay well serve as a general expression to the
has
Christ
division
As
that
the
overcome
and
established unity.
effect
we shall see,
however, Paul speaks about reconciling people to God, not about uniting them with
God in the sense of merging humanity into divinity.

Similarly, Jews and Gentiles do

does
into
54
Thus, the
the
triumph
the
merge
one
or
other,
nor
one
not
over
other.
both
to
term Td qyOoT6-pa
must refer
categories of people: the Jews, "those near, " and
the Gentiles, "those far, " who are now in Christ Jesus (v. 13).
Jesus Christ made the two groups, Christian Jews and Christian Gentiles,
into one new group-a

both
longer
distinctly
unity where
are no
what they once were

in relation to God (cf. vv. 15-18). In so doing, He abolished one of the major religious
divisions of the ancient world, a prototype of all human hostility.

This is what has

taken place. Now Paul goes on to state how it took place.


3.5.2.2 The [61 A6aas- Clause (2: 140.

This clause, introduced by an

55
("in
He
how
Christ
"the
both
"
that"),
Kat'
explains
generally
made
one.
epexegetical
54Pace Wilson, "'We' and "'You, "' 678,
who says: "St. Paul is describing the salvation of
his hearers in terms of their incorporation into Israel; " and Barth, Epheslans, 1:314, who concludes
that "God's household" (v. 19), to which both Jews and Gentiles belong, is "the community of
Israel. " On the contrary, A. T. Lincoln, "The Church and Israel in Ephesians 2, " CBQ 49 (1987)
615, rightly concludes: "the Gentiles' former disadvantages have been reversed not by their being
incorporated into Israel, even into a renewed Israel of Jewish Christians, but by their being made
transcends
Jew
Gentile,
the
which
community
a
new
categories
of
of
and
an entity which
members
is a new creation, not simply a merging of the former groupings. "
55Kai here appears to be epexegetical (explanatory)
in function since the thought of the
first
the
supports
and
clause
explains
participial
one. For this function of Kai, see BAGD,
second
Grammar,
442,9;
Robertson,
BDF,
1.3;
1181; MHT, 3: 335; Moule, Idiom-Book,
172-73;
s.v. Kai,
Cor.
3b,
Rom.
1
3:
5;
11:
1:
5;
2;
15:
38;
2 Cor. 2: 9a; Eph. 1: 1; 2: 14; 4: 24; 5: 1-2; and
examples:
and
6: 10. See also J. A. Eadie, A Commentary on the Greek Text of the Epistle of Paul to the Ephesians,
T. & T. Clark, 1883) 171; and T. K. Abbott, A Critical and Exegetical
3rd ed. (Edinburgh:
Commentary on the Epistles to the Ephesians and to the Colossians, ICC (Edinburgh:
T. & T. Clark,
1897) 61; Schlier, Epheser, 124; pace Best, Ephesians, 253. See ch. 1,21 n58 on Eph. 1: 1, and
24.
Eph.
4:
5,278
on
n99
ch.

168
has broken down "the dividing wall, that is, the fence" separating Jews and Gentiles.
The compound pcL70TotXov
is an architectural term not found elsewhere in the New
Testament. The adjective ye'uos-meaning "middle" along with the noun To-tXos-,
a
for
"wall,
"
dividing
that
this
to
suggests
compound
a
word refers
common word
wall,
fence
between
houses
two
as
a
privacy
or a partition
such

between two rooms inside

56
house.
The
in
thought
this context is separation. This idea is
conveyed
primary
a
by
the word OpaypOSI,
which means a "fence" or "enclosure" that was set
strengthened
57
for
The
juxtaposition
or
protection
separation.
either
up

of these two words yields

the sense of a barrier that prevents people from entering a certain area and, as such,
it is a dividing wall of separation. The genitive noun Tob Opaymobis probably best
". the dividing wall, namely, the fence
"58 The
taken in apposition to pe-010-rotXov:
..
....
has
being
"demolished"
Av'aasthe
sense of something
rather than
participle
"breached" in this context (cf. John 2: 19; Acts 27: 41; also 1 Esdr. 1:52). 59
The aorist tense of Aucas-suggests that Paul spoke of a historical, completed

destruction of the barrier separating Jews and Gentiles. This has given rise to various
identify
"the
dividing
"60
For
the
to
meaning of
and explain
our purposes,
attempts
wall.
four
First,
the
these
most
mention
common
will
simply
puzzling
views
of
words.
we
in
interpreters,
this century, took the words as a reference to the
mostly
earlier
some
feet
balustrade
(4-5
high)
Gentiles
Court
from
that
the
the
the inner
separated
of
stone
56BAGD, s.v. pe-u6TotXot-,Schneider, TDNT, 4: 625; Hillyer, NIDNTT,
57BAGD, s.v. Opayp6s-;Hillyer, NIDNTT,
Ephesians, 1:263.

3: 948-50.

3: 950-51; Abbott, Ephesians, 61; Barth,

58BDF, 167; MHT, 3:215; Robertson, Grammar, 498; Wallace, Grammar, 95-98;
also
Abbott, Ephesians, 61; Schlier, Epheser, 124; Lincoln, Ephesians, 141; Schnackenburg, Ephesians,
113; and Best, Ephesians, 257.
59BAGD, s.v. AMU,3; Biichsel, TDNT, 4: 335-38; Brown, NIDNTT, 3: 181-89. The
destruction
for
the
was
used
of the temple (Matt. 26: 61; 27: 40; Acts 6: 14) and
compound KaTaA6&)
demolishing
for
the
Jewish
the
of
understanding of salvation (Gal. 2: 18).
metaphorically
60Various options are discussed and evaluated by Barth, Ephesians, 1:283-86;
Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 113-14, and Best, Ephesians, 253-57.

169
courts and sanctuary of the Jerusalem temple and carried inscriptions in both Greek
Latin
death
Gentile
61
However, none
beyond
threatening
to
it.
trespassed
any
and
who
for
terms
the temple or its surroundings are used here (e.g.,
the
of
usual architectural
Specifically,
Paul uses I-Le-goTotXop
(v. 14) for the wall
8p6oaKTOS).
W05', 76-pto6AOS',
tCPOV,
instead of 8p6oaKTos-,
the term found in the warning inscriptions and the references in
Josephus. Conversely, no known document uses pcOIOTotXov
to refer to the temple
balustrade. 62 Furthermore, it is unlikely that Christians in Asia Minor would have
recognized and understood such an allusion.
Second, a number of interpreters see a Gnostic derivation for these words
and view them as a metaphorical reference to a non-material,

impenetrable barrier

that separates two opposing cosmic regions, the heavenly and the earthly sphere. 63
However, the evidence set forth for this view is often late (post 1st century) or not
is missing from all the literature
directly applicable, and the key word McUOTot)(ov
in
Furthermore,
does
fit
heaven
Paul's
this
not
with
and earth
view
concept of
cited.
Ephesians (cf. 1:20-21; 2: 2; 4: 9-10; 6: 12), nor with the "wall, " "fence, " and "law"
linkage in this passage, and it is not an illuminating

Jew-Gentile
the
explanation of

61Robinson, Ephesians, 159-60; Abbott, Ephesians, 61-62; Mussner, Christus, 82-84;


and
Mitton, Ephesians, 106. If our pre-70 AD dating of Ephesians is correct, then this wall was still
Ant
See
Josephus,
15.11.5
[4171
and War 5.5.2 [193-941; 6.2.4 N124-251 for mention of
standing.
Two such notices in Greek have been discovered, one in
the stone balustrade and its inscriptions.
1871 and the other in 1934. For references see Bruce, Epistles, 297 n115. The 1871 inscription
ILet]
no one of another nation enter within the fence and enclosure around the temple
reads:
And whoever is caught will have himself to blame that his death ensues" (Robinson,
[sanctuary].
Ephesians, 60).
62Madvig,

NIDNTT,
3: 795; Best, Ephesians, 254. A few interpreters
in the past took the
Jerusalem
in
the
the
to
temple that was torn from top to bottom at the time
veil
a
reference
word as
But
(cf.
Mark
38).
15:
Jesus'
this curtain (not a wall) separated the holy of holies from
crucifixion
of
In fact, it excluded both Jews and Gentiles.
the holy place in the sanctuary, not Jews from Gentiles.

63See pp. 152-54 above; also Schlier, Epheser, 113-14,124-33;


and Fischer, Tendenz,
133. In addition to Gnostic texts, the metaphor of a wall between heaven and earth also appears
in a few Jewish apocalyptic writings (cf 1 Enoch 14.9; 3 Bar. 2.1-2; 2 Bar. 54.5), but these are not
exact parallels.

170
64
relationship.
Third, in light of verse 15, many interpreters see "the dividing wall, namely,

the fence" as a metaphorical reference to the Mosaic Law viewed as a barrier


from
Jews
Gentiles
65
hostility
between
The idea
the
them.
and
source of
separating
that the oral tradition of the elders provided a fence around the Law was a familiar
66
but
Law
itself was also viewed as a protective fence around Israej. 67
the
one,
Jewish adherenceto the Law, then, created the barrier between Jews and Gentiles.
doesnot appear in the sources cited and this view seems
Again, the word pcOI07otXoP
to describe the Law itself as the "enmity / hostility, " which is problematic. 68
Fourth, other interpreters, who find none of the above views entirely
dividing
"the
for
division
between
the
wall" as a general metaphor
satisfactory, see
Jews and Gentiles without reference to any specific literal or theological barrier. 69
Much on both sides kept Jews and Gentiles apart and fostered many personal and
70
This
fit
in
the
to
this
complex
antagonisms
ancient
world.
view
seems
social

64See criticisms in Schnackenburg,


40; and Best, Ephesians, 254.

Ephesians,

113; Merklein,

Christus

und die Kirche, 38-

65Barth, Ephesians, 1:264; Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 140; Bruce, Epistles, 296; Martin,
Reconciliation, 185-87; Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 114; and Lincoln, Ephesians, 141.
661n the rabbinic document Pirke Aboth,
which probably contains elements from the NT
"make
is
the
to
there
command
a fence around the law" (m. Abot 1.1-2; cf. 3.17). CD 4.12,19;
era,
"builders
(Pharisees?
to
) of the wall" but not in reference to the Law itself. See
8.12,18
refer
and
further the material in Str-B, 1:693-94; 3: 587-88.
67The Letter of Aristeas (2nd century BC), 139, states: IMoses, the lawgiverj
surrounded us OTcptopaecvpds-) with unbreakable palisades and iron walls to prevent our mixing
in
the
any matter. . .," and 142 says: "to prevent our being perverted by
peoples
of
other
with any
hedged
in
(4jidshe
us
others
7rcptopaecv)
sides
on
all
with
strict
observances
contact with
... Law. " The Greek
...
verb noted here comes from the same root as Opayllos,in
after the manner of the
2: 14. Similar sentiments are found in 1 Enoch 89.2; 93.6 and 3 Macc. 3: 3-4.
68See criticisms in Best, Ephesians, 256.
69Best, Ephestans,
term well-known
architectural

256-57, takes this view. He notes that Pco,6TotXoV was an ordinary


in Asia Minor and sometimes
(257).
used metaphorically

70See Str-B, 1:359-63; 3: 139-46; and 3: 588-91, for


hostility
Jewish
toward
of
examples
Gentiles, and Tacitus, Historiae, 5: 1-13, for an example of Gentile hostility and prejudice toward

171
passage best and to raise the fewest problems. In and of itself "the dividing wall" is

for
division
between
Jews and Gentiles. It derives
the
general
metaphor
simply a
theological significance from what follows.
Thus, the Av'oa,,
(v.
14c) is a general statement requiring further
- clause
Christ made "the both" to be "one" in that (Kat')He broke down

clarification.

(destroyed) the dividing wall, a general reference to the long-standing division between
Jews and Gentiles. The following KaTapy7jaasclause (v. 15a) states more specifically
how
this took place.
when and
3.5.2.3 The KaTapy4aas- Clause (2: 15a). As argued above, this clause
begins

with

7-v JXOpav (v. 14c) and provides

functions
As such, Ka7qpY77'ua,
5which

Christ

has the strong

is that Jesus Christ


that

as an adverbial

broke down the dividing


"destroy"
of

meaning

is connected

abolished

with

further

consists

Pauline

the hostility

between

as made clear by Top vojiop that

expressed

in the form

the thought

Jews and Gentiles


stands

Law about which

of authoritative

by

verb Kampyca)

in this context. 72 Thus,

'oas-. 73 The Mosaic


to rv XOpav, the object of Ka-rap Y77
of commandments

the means

expressing

71
The distinctively
wall.

or removed

the Law,

participle

or "abolish"

of the Avaa,5-clause.

clarification

in apposition
Paul speaks

decrees

or

Jews. Also, see "P. Lond, 1912, A Letter of the Emperor Claudius to the Alexandrians, AD 41, " in
C. K. Barrett, The New Testament Background: Selected Documents, rev. ed. (San Francisco: Harper
& Row, 1989) 47-50; N. J. McEleney, "Conversion, Circumcision and the Law, " NTS 20 (1974) 31941, esp. 337-40; and L. H. Feldman, Jew and Gentile in the Ancient World (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 1993) 84-176.
7lWallace, Grammar,

628-30.

72For references and comments, see BAGD,


sx. Karqpye'o);Delling, TDNT, 1:452-54;
Packer, NIDNTT, 1:73. In 2 Cor. 3: 6-15 Ka-rapyo)is used several times of doing away with the Old
Covenant (cf. vv. 7,11,13,14), though the term v6mos-itself is not used. See ch. 2,114-16 for the
Rom.
6:
6
7:
2,6.
in
this
and
of
verb
use
73Pace S. D. F. Salmond, "The Epistle to the Ephesians, " in Expositor's Greek Testament,
5 vols., ed. W. R. Nicoll, reprint (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1983) 3: 295; and Abbott, Ephestans, 62,
both of whom mention that jXOpav is not an appropriate object for Ka-rapy4uas-;however, note a
Cor.
in
1
15:26 where the object is concrete: "the last enemy. "
similar connection

172
74
These
regulations.
revealed the differences between Jews and Gentiles and created
hostility.
is parallel

But the removal of this hostility

took place V Tj oapKL'abTob, a phrase that

in form and content to EP 7q-)aFpaTL TODXPLOITOD


in verse 13, and &6 ToD

in
It
16.
TavpoD
o,
verse
refers to the crucifixion of Christ's physical body on the cross
(cf. Col. 1:21-22). 75 In His death, Christ abolished the hostility between Jews and
Gentiles by doing away with the basic cause of it, namely, the Law consisting of
commandments expressed in specific regulations such as circumcision, the Sabbath,
and food laws among others.
In what sense and how much of the Law has been abolished in Christ's
death? This issue continues to be debated. Some claim that it was only the
Law
the
that was annulled. 76 Others believe that it was
and
not
ceremonial
moral
only those regulations that separated Jews from Gentiles that were removed. 77
Others insist that it was the legalistic (mis)use of the Law that was abolished. 78
74The

words 76P evToAtip v 66yyaotv taken together modify T6V P611op,with iv-roAt5v
considered as a genitive of apposition denoting the contents of the Law, and the descriptive dative
phrase 6,66ypautv viewed as a reference to the legal form in which the commandments
were given
(cf. Col. 2: 14); see MHT, 3: 242,265; Robertson, Grammar,
589; Moule, Idiom-Book,
45,79. The
phrase ek, 86yyautv, omitted in p46, is probably not a later gloss as argued by C. J. Roetzel, "Jewish
Christian- Gentile Relations: A Discussion of Ephesians 2: 15a, " ZNW 74 (1983) 81-89. The piling
up of phrases is characteristic
of the style in Ephesians and in this case may convey a sense of the
burdensomeness of all the Law's commandments.
The Mosaic Law is mentioned only here in
Ephesians, although see OT quotations in 5: 31; 6: 2-3; and note ch. 1,16.
75Christ's "flesh" is
The parallel with Col. 1: 22, "in
mentioned only here in Ephesians.
the body of his flesh, " suggests that Paul refers to Christ's death by the same but shorter phrase in
Eph. 2: 15. It does not refer to Christ's incarnation,
pace J. Calvin, Sermons on the Epistle to the
Ephesians, rev. trans. (London: Banner of Truth Trust, 1973) 195-96, nor to "what he
said and did"
(pace Mitton, Ephesians, 107), nor to the Gnostic idea of the Redeemer overcoming the
power of
(pace
KAsemann,
Leib,
140-41). Paul likely used adpe here instead of a6ya in
matter
view of his
distinctive use of u6pa in v. 16.
76E. g., Calvin, Sermons
on Ephesians, 196-97; W. Hendricksen, Exposition of Ephesians,
NTC 11 (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1967) 133-35. The distinction
between ritual and moral laws was
by
Law
itself
Church.
the
the
nor
early
made
not
77E.

g., K. Snodgrass, Ephesians. NIVAC (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996) 133; P. Balla,
"Is the Law Abolished According to Eph. 2: 15? " EuroJTh
3 (1994) 9-16; and many interpreters.
Nothing in this passage indicates Paul is referring only to
Sabbath-keeping,
circumcision,
or
food
and ritual purity.
about
regulations

78E.g., Schlier, Epheser, 126. Paul


clearly rejects any idea of salvation through (Law-

173
A"

this
to
the
traditions
that
Law.
Still others
to
the
refers
were
added
Apparently
believe that only the Law in its divisiveness, not the Law itself, was done away. 79
What was abolished are the regulations that cause divisiveness.

While this context

warrants drawing a close link between the Law and its divisiveness, to make the
divisiveness
that
the only aspect of the Law that was abolished
regulations
cause
overlooks the emphasis of verse 15. The language of this verse indicates the Law
itself and all its regulations are in view. 80 As suggested above, divisiveness and
antagonism were produced by the fact that Israel possessed the Law, which served
as a wall of separation dividing Gentiles and Jews. Thus, in order to remove these
Christ
had
to deal with the cause, namely, the Law itself. In His
effects,
negative
death, He abolished the Law, breaking its condemnation and power (cf. Gal. 3: 13;
Rom. 7:4-6; 10:4) and removing it as a barrier to harmony between Jews and Gentiles
between
God
as
as well
and humanity.
Paul's view of the Law is a complex and highly disputed issue that is beyond
the scope of our discussion. 81 For our purposes, it is sufficient to note that his
keeping) works in Eph. 2:8-10, and nothing in this passage indicates he is concerned about legalism
or added traditions.
79E.g., Barth, Ephesians, 1:287-91; Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 115. This distinction is
difficult to maintain since Paul points to the whole Law itself as the source of the problem and not
simply how it was used.
80E.g., Eadie, Ephesians, 170; Abbott, Ephesians, 64-65; Best, Ephesians, 260-61;
and
Lincoln, Ephesians, 142. Lincoln, "The Church and Israel, " 611, points out that some interpreters
from
interpreting
this clause as a statement about the abolition of the Law, motivated by
away
shy
"harmonize"
desire
to
this view of the Law with that in the undisputed Pauline letters, or to avoid
a
See ch. 1,16.
an alleged antinomianism.
81The subject of "Paul and the Law" has been the focal
point of renewed interest in
Pauline studies in recent years sparked by the work of E. P. Sanders, Paul and Palestinian Judaism
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1977). A good orientation to the historical background
and various
issues in the modern debate is provided by S. Westerholm, Israel's Law and the Church's Faith:
Paul and His Recent Interpreters (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988). For surveys and
evaluations of
the critical discussion, see N. T. Wright's discussion in S. Neill and T. Wright, The Interpretation of
the New Testament, 1861-1986 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988) 403-30; J. M. G. Barclay,
"Paul and the Law: Observations on Some Recent Debates, " Themelios 12 (1986) 5-15; D. J. Moo,
"Paul and the Law in the Last Ten Years, " SJT 40 (1987) 287-307; H. HiIbner, "Paulusforschung
kritischer
Literaturbericht,
Ein
"
ANRW, 11.25.4:2649-2840, esp. 2668-2694;
1945.
seit
and
D. Luciani, "Paul et la Loi, " NRT 115 (1993) 40-68.

174
language
here
in
line
his
is
with
emphasis on discontinuity regarding the
unqualified
Law's validity for the new people of God made up of Jews and Gentiles that is found
Gal.
Rom.
6:
14;
7:
(cf.
2:
3:
24-25;
4-6;
19;
10:
The
Mosaic
4).
Law as such no
elsewhere
longer governs life in the new realm of Christian existence. The dividing wall between
Jews and Gentiles has been broken down and the hostility between them removed by
the abrogation of the Law. 82 This has cleared the way for something new in
history,
believing
Gentiles
in
believing
Jews
something
which
redemptive
share with
basis
benefit,
equal
with
equal
and something not present prior to Christ's
on an
death and resurrection but now established, namely, the Church.
To this point Paul has been explaining

the negative side of the action by

his
Gentile
Christian
readers, who once were "far off'from
which

Israel and Israel's

God, have now, in Christ Jesus, come to be "near. " Now he turns to the positive side
of the process.
3.5.3 Ephesians

2: 15b-16: The Purpose

For Which Christ

Is Our Peace

The t"vaclause introducing these verses consists of two parts with Kai' at the
(v. 16).
beginning of verse 16 linking the verbs KT[cT (v- 15b) and d7ToKaTaAAde?
,7
Grammatically, this clause is to be connected with the immediately preceding
Q'va)
behind
the
Mosaic
the
the
stating
purpose
KaTapn'gasabrogation of
participle
Law and the removal of the hostility between Jews and Gentiles. But, conceptually,
the clause relates to all of verses 14-15a, especially to what was said about Christ
being "our peace," confirming and defining it more precisely in positive terms.
3.5.3.1 Purpose:

To Create the Two into One New Man (2: 15b). In

form
identify
Jews
14,
Gentiles
the
to
-rd
qyoo-rcpa
was
used
neuter
and
verse
as two
82See the discussion of Rom. 6: 14 in ch. 2,137-40.
The abolition of the Mosaic Law as
OT
"ruling"
the
is
the
of
authority
and
era
not to say that Christians
a system
are not subject to
"commandments"
at all, or have no obligation to any of the commandments
of the Law as may be
Covenant
Old
from
the
system as a whole and caught up in New Covenant ethical
separated
demands. See T. J. Deidun, New Covenant Morality in Paul, AnBib 89 (Rome: Pontifical Biblical
1981) 204-10; and ch. 1,16 n46.
Institute,

175
distinct categories of people. Here, Jews and Gentiles are viewed as two individuals,
one of whom represents the Jews (the "near") and the other the Gentiles (the "far")
and thus the masculine form -robs766'o
occurs. Out of these two formerly alienated
"individuals, " Christ has created e7vaKatv6P
dvOpmTov.The adjective e"vaemphasizes
numerical oneness in contrast to -roix- 86o and is picked up again in verses 16 and 18
83
In contrast to the old situation denoted by Ex
" Opa,the adjective
with other nouns.
KatPOPstresses the qualitative

(and temporal)

new situation

that has come about by

the death of Christ. 84

The verbK7t'Cr

with Christ as its subject indicates that His purpose in

hostility
by abolishing the Law was to bring about a new creation. This
the
removing
back
in verse 10 where believers were described as God's work those
verb was used
have
been
who
created in Christ Jesus (cf. also 3: 9; 4: 24). Here, Christ is said to be
the one who has created "one new man" in Himself or "in His person. "85 The 6VallT(t)
involves
86
textual
phrase
a
problem, but regardless of the variant reading adopted, it
functions as a reflexive since Jesus Christ is the subject of the verbal action. It is to

83Paul
used various word pairs to convey this unifying work of Christ: "many-one" (Rom.
12:4-5; 1 Cor. 10: 17a; 12: 12); "all-one" (1 Cor. 10: 17b; 12: 13; Gal. 3: 28); "both-one" (Eph. 2: 14,16,
18); "two-one" (Eph. 2: 15); or, simply, "one" (Eph. 4: 4-6; Col. 3: 15).
840n the term
Katv6s-,see BAGD, s.v. KatVOS;Behm, TDNT, 3: 447-51; Haarbeck, Link,
NIDNTT,
Brown,
2:669-74; and further discussion in ch. 4,227-32, and ch. 5,278-84. Also, see
and
R. A. Harrisville, The Concept of Newness in the New Testament (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1960) 1-11,
62-91; and W. Barclay, "The One, New man" in Unity and Diuersity in New Testament Theology, ed.
R. A. Guelich (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978) 73-81. p46 FG read K0tv6v ("common") for Katv6v
("new") but the latter has much better external and internal support.
85See BAGD, S.V.
KTI&; Foerster, TDNT, 3: 1028-35; Esser, NIDNTT, 1:383-87.
References to creation in the Pauline corpus can be placed in two groups: 1) those concerning the
first (old) creation begun with Adam (e.g., Rom. 1:20,25; 8: 19a, 20,22), and 2) those concerning
the new creation begun in Christ (e.g., 2 Cor. 5: 17; Gal. 6: 15). Paul usually speaks of God as the
creator with Christ as the mediator of creation both "old" and "new" (cf. Col. 1:16). See further
discussion in ch. 4,233-39 and ch. 5,280-84.
86The Majority Text tradition has
c'auT)with Ac DGKL
and most minuscules, a scribal
interpretation designed to make the reflexive sense clear. The reading of p46 AABP is av-n5, which
,
(Tischendorf,
UBS4,
NA27)
(Westeott-Hort, UBS2). The
some editors write aTt,i
and others aVTq-)
former is preferred since in Hellenistic usage av'Tt,
5 could also function as a reflexive, see BDF, 564;
Wallace, Grammar, 324-25, esp. 325 n22.

176
be understood in a local (sphere) rather than an instrumental

87
here,
sense
and as

brought
it
that
the
unity
such affirms
about out of the "two" by the creation of the
"one new man" was founded in Christ Himself. He is the source and basis of its
existence and continuance.
The reference to Christ as creator in a mediatorial

sense sets up a contrast

first
first
involving
Adam.
Christ, the last Adam, has
the
the
creation
man,
with
Himself
"one
"
This
idea
is related to Paul's Adam christology
in
new man.
created
that views Christ as an inclusive, representative figure of the new age and the idea of
believers being incorporated into Him (cf. 1 Cor. 12: 12-13; 15:22,45-49; Gal. 3: 27-28).
Through His death, Christ is the creator of a new humanity viewed as a corporate
entity.

This leads to several observations: 1) the nature of Christ's redemptive work

bring
to
about the creation of something new through the participation
was

of

believers with Him (Eph. 2:5-6,10; Gal. 3: 28; 2 Cor. 5: 17); 2) the "new corporate
divisiveness
He
between
Jews
bringing
Gentiles
the
transcends
created
and
entity"
"a
later
be
third race"-Christians-in
called
about what would

the new creation (Gal.

6: 15; 1 Cor. 10:32)88 without erasing the ethnic distinction between Jews and Gentiles
(cf Rom. 1: 16; 9: 24; 1 Cor. 1:24; 12: 13; Gal. 2: 14-15); 3) this creative work is not a
because
Christ
"peoples,
"
Jews
Gentiles;
nihilo,
ex
used
existing
namely,
and
creatio
level,
human
4)
the
this new creation embodies the summing up of all things in
on
and
Paul's
is
a major part of
concern in Ephesians (cf. 1: 10).
unity, which
Among several suggestions offered for the meaning of the "one new man, "
the following views are the most common. First, the "one new man" is Christ

87Best, Ephesians,
58, esp. 145.

263; pace F. Biichsel,

"'In Christus'

bei Paulus, " ZNW 42 (1949) 14 1-

88Lincoln, Ephesians, 144; pace Barth, Ephesians, 1:310. The Preaching


of Peter, quoted
in Clement of Alexandria, Strom [6.5.39-411 has the words: "we who worship God in a new way, as
' 0, are Christians. " This is not to deny any sort of continuing validity for
the third race (-rpiTa)YCVC
I
Israel as an ethnic, national people as Paul himself affirms in declaring that God's election of Israel
future
be
for
her
in fulfillment of OT promises (cf. Rom. 11).
there
a
and
will
still stands

177
Himself,

the prototypical

"new man. "89 In this view, Christ

demonstrates

His life of total obedience and His victory over death in resurrection,
man, the real image of God in contrast to the first Adam
Christ
calls

"the firstborn

over all creation"

dead" (Col. 1: 18) and "the firstborn

Christ Himself.
righteousness

He is the true

However, elsewhere, Paul

(Col. 1: 15), "the firstborn

among many brothers"

not created, creates the "one new man. " Thus it is difficult
creating the "new man" in Himself

that, by

from among the

(Rom. 8: 29). He, who is


to conceive of Christ

(Eph. 2: 15) if the "new man" is simply and only

This also applies to the creation of the "new man"


KaTd OcOVin
holiness
and
of truth in 4: 24.

Second, the "one new man" is the "new nature"

of the Christian

in contrast

to the "old sinful nature. "90 In this view, Christ, by abolishing the Law and introducing
a new principle of spiritual life, has given to both Jew and Gentile the "one new
nature" of the Christian person. In light of 4: 24, the "new man" is viewed as the "new
nature, " which is the foil of the "old nature, " the referent of the "old man. " However,
in the context of 2: 15 there is no basis for describing the "new man" as a "new nature"
or capacity belonging to an individual person. Furthermore, this view does not reflect
the reconciling emphasis in this passage. The "one new man" is formed by the
reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles in Christ, not by the implanting

of a "new nature. "

Third, the "one new man" is the individual Christian person. 91 In this
view,
the "new man" is a qualitatively

new kind of person, previously unknown, and

recognized as neither a Jew nor a Gentile but a Christian.

Ernest Best discusses this

by
noting that in Ephesians 2a genuinely new man is formed in verse 15 that is
view
89Schnackenburg,
Ephestans, 116; however, he qualifies his
view: "The new 'man' is
Christ insofar as he represents and realizes the Church in himself. " This
may put him more in line
with view 4 below.
90J. A. Allen,
91Salmond,

The Epistle

to the Ephesians,

"Ephesians, " 3: 295-96; Mussner,

TBC (London:
Christus,

SCM, 1959) 87.

87,94-96;

Mitton,

Ephesians,

108; E. Best, One Body in Christ: A Study of the Relationship


the Church to Christ in the Epistles of
of
the Apostle Paul (London: SPCK, 1955) 152-54; id., Ephesians, 261-63.

178
no longer described with the neuter gender, as in verse 14, but with the masculine.
Though he acknowledges that this may signify two peoples-Jews

and Gentiles-who

have become one new corporate person, that is, the Church, he prefers the view that
this denotes two types of individuals-the

Jew and the Gentile-who

have given way

to a third type, the "new man, " namely, the Christian. 92


In favor of this view, Best argues that: 1) the identification

"one
of
new

(v.
"one
15)
body" (v. 16) is not certain because the "one" of verse 15 could
man"
with
back
"one"
in verse 14, which could be understood as a reference to "a
to
the
refer
individual;
"
2) the phrase, the "new man, " occurs again in 4: 24 and in
single
Colossians 3: 10, and in these two places the interpretation

is individualistic

in that it

does not mean to "put on" or enter a "corporate solidarity" but to adopt a new
character or status; and 3) the contrast of "two" and "one" (v. 15) suggests that each
of the two, the Jew and the Gentile, is made into the "one new man" who is the same
type for both. The -robs-660 of verse 15 is masculine, that is, two different "men" are
being
each
made into the same kind of "new man. " Thus Best concludes that the "one
is
new man"
not a corporate entity but a genuine Christian individual.
However, the "one new man" of 2: 15 is created in Christ (P a6765)and is the
both
Jewish
Gentile
(-roi)s66o) being created into (FL'S-)
of
this
outcome
and
persons
"one new man. " Indeed, the individual Christian is a new creation in one sense (2 Cor.
5: 17), but he is not created by the reconciliation of Jew and Gentile into one new
it
is
this reconciliation that forms the "one new man" here. In 4: 24 the
and
entity,
"new man" is contrasted with the "old man" of 4: 22, whereas in 2: 15 the "one
new
"old"
is
two
contrasted with
man"
groups, Jews and Gentiles; therefore, the key
"one"
(&a)
in 2: 15 is perfectly natural.
addition of

The & of verse 14, which states

that the two groups were made one, appears to be a reference to "one new group"

92Best, One Body, 152-54; id., Ephesians, 261-62.

179
later
"one
body"
(v.
16).
More
to
than just the individual
as
referred

Christian was

here.
This
leads,
finally,
to the most likely view.
created
Fourth, the "one new man" is the Church as the new humanity. 93 In this
Church
is the new creation in Christ. The formation of one people consisting
the
view
of Jews and Gentiles suggests that the "one new man" is by origin and constitution a
community of many persons, both Jews and Gentiles together, reconciled to one
God
by Jesus Christ who has come and died to redeem both. The "new
to
another and
man" is not merely an individual, though he includes individuals, both Jews and
Gentiles. Nor is he an amalgamation of identical individuals since Jews do not
become Gentiles and Gentiles do not become Jews, although both become Christians.
Nor are Christ and the Church identical, for Christ creates the "one new man" (2: 15),
is the Head of the Church, His Body (1: 22; 4: 15; 5: 23), and remains the Church's
foundation (2:20) as well as the source of her life and growth through the Spirit (2: 18,
22; 4:4a, 13-16). This is in harmony with later references in Ephesians where
believers collectively are depicted as growing into "a fully mature man" (cts-dv8pa
into
the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ (4: 13), and where the
-rActov),
Church is described as the "bride" of Christ (5: 25-27,32).

Equally supportive is the

"one
the
apparent equivalence of
new man" with 6"Pu6ya (4: 16), that is, the Church.
This view of the "one new man" also garners support from the uVP-Ianguage
distinctive
imagery
of verses 19-22: 1) Gentiles and Jews are now fellow citizens
and
(uvwToAi-rat)and "members of the household of God" (v. 19); 2) they are built on the
foundation of the apostles and prophets and in Christ, the cornerstone, "the whole
building" being joined together (ovPqp1-LoAoyovy'
)
6-Vqis growing "into a holy temple in the
Lord" (vv. 20-21); and 3) in Christ also, Gentiles and Jews are being built together
06-)"into a dwelling place of God in the Spirit" (v. 22).
(o,vPotKo6qy6--to,

93Eadie, Ephesians, 168; Barth, Ephestans 1:


309; Robinson, Ephesians,
"'He is our Peace' (Eph. 2: 14), " 190; and Lincoln, Ephesians, 143-44.

65; Stuhlmacher,

180
Additional support can be derived from other Pauline passages. In Galatians
3: 21-29, for example, Paul deals with some of the same themes that occur here, even
though the context and emphasis are different.

According to verses 23-24, the Mosaic

Law served its purpose until Christ came. Since that time the essential thing for all
people is faith in Christ, for through faith in Him all become sons of God (v. 26). All
those who were baptized into Christ and now are "in Christ" have "put on Christ" (v.
27); and these are all one (c[5-,"one new man"? ) in Him, whether Jew or Greek, slave or
free, male or female (v. 28). One element not found in the Ephesians 2 passage is the
clothing imagery in the statement, "you have put on (or, 'clothed yourselves with')
Christ. " Another example occurs in 1 Corinthians

12: 12 where Paul declares that as

the physical body is one Vv) and has many members, oV"T6jSHere
"Christ"
XPL017Q;
K-al
-.
by metonymy is a shortened form for "the body of Christ" and refers to the Church.
These passages support the view that the "one new man" of Ephesians 2: 15 is not
simply to be found in Christ as an individual but in Christ as an inclusive person in
believers,
Jew and Gentile alike, are united in a new creation.
whom all
In summary, the reality of Christ as a representative and inclusive person
incorporates
in
Himself
interprets the "one new man" concept the best
others
who
here. 94 This view recognizes that Jews and Gentiles together are united in Christ who
is their peace. We might say that the "one new man" is prototypically

Jesus Christ,

the source, standard, and goal of new life for all believers, but not exclusively Jesus
Christ because He includes all those He represented in His redemptive work and they
(individually)

form
Him
the new humanity (corporately).
with

94Percy, Der Lieb Christi, 41-43, is


one of the chief advocates of the OT "corporate
(solidarity)
concept against the Gnostic redeemer myth in the interpretation
personality"
of Eph.
2: 11-22. On this concept in the OT and on rabbinic thought about humankind
in Adam, see R. P.
Shedd, Man in Community: A Study of St. Paul's Application
of Old Testament and Early Jewish
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1964) 132-38; C. F. D. Moule, "The
Conceptions of Human Solidarity
Corporate Christ, " in The Phenomenon of the New Testament: An Inquiry into the Implications
of
Certain Features of the New Testament, SBT 1,2nd series (Naperville,
IL: Allenson, 1967) 21-42;
Epistles,
See
discussion
299-300.
Bruce,
the
and
of this concept in ch. 1,40-41.

181
The new creation has removed the old hostility and in so doing peace has
been made. The concluding participial clause of verse 15 7mtto-v
ct'p77'mqv
qualifies KTL'c7

declares
95
In
this
and
result.
contrast to the three previous aorist participles, this
present participle indicates that at the same time that Jesus Christ created the "two"
into "one new man, " He brought about a condition of peacebetween "the two" old
Jews
enemies,
and Gentiles, which is the opposite of enmity in this context (v. 15).
Thus, in the abrogation of the Law, the removal of enmity, and the creation of the
"one new man, " Jesus Christ made peace,or brought about reconciliation, an idea
that is taken up immediately in verse 16.
3.5.3.2 Purpose: To Reconcile

Both To God (2: 16). The second half of

the t"va clause (v. 16) is linked to the first half (v. 15b) by Kat', indicating

that

Y
is coordinate with K77t'o7 rather than a consequence
96
d7ToKa-raAAde?
it.
This
of
verse,
,
.7
,I

then, expresses the second part of Christ's purpose in making peace. Up to this point
the emphasis has been on establishing peace on the horizontal, sociological level
between Jews and Gentiles e'pXpto-r 777o-oD
(v. 13). Now this is related to peace or
reconciliation on the vertical, theological level of both Jews and Gentiles to God. This
comprehensive understanding of peace as (double) reconciliation is a basic
contribution of this passage. The fact that Paul mentioned reconciliation between
Jews and Gentiles before reconciliation with God simply reflects the sequence of
thought he set up in verses 11-13 in terms of the contrast between Gentile and Jew.
He treated that issue first and now shows that it is fundamentally

bound up with

God.
Lincoln
to
states correctly that it is going too far to argue that
reconciliation
this order reflects "a mai or theological distinctive of Ephesians, whereby ecclesiology

9511016vis considered an adverbial


participle of result; see Robertson, Grammar, 1115;
Wallace, Grammar, 625-26,637-39.
96Pace Abbott,

Ephesians,

65, who suggests


a consecutive

or resultative

force for Kai.

182
absorbs soteriology. "97
The double compound verb d7ToK-aTaAAdoaw
is found only here and in
Colossians 1:20,22. Since it is not found prior to Paul, it is probably
a word coined by
him. Its meaning and use are basically the same as those of the simpler form
though with perhaps added emphasis. 98 Paul is the only New Testament
Ka-raAAduua),
writer to use these terms, and in every instance they have the sense of "to reconcile, "
or "to be reconciled" (passive). 99 Though not used frequently, these terms provide one
of the basic concepts of his theology. To reconcile is to end a relationship of enmity
and replace it with one of peace and goodwill. 100 For Paul, reconciliation has been
by
the work of Christ and usually relates to the restoration of sinful
effected
humanity to a favorable relationship with God both from an objective
and a
sub ective standpoint (Rom. 5: 9-11; 2 Cor. 5: 18-20). 101
In this passage, Paul applies the term to Jews and Gentiles.

Through

His

death on the cross, Christ reconciled both (-row dpOOTEPOW)to God in


one ('Pt) body.
Three items call for further

97Lincoln,
The theological

comment.

First, Christ, rather

than God (as usual in

Ephesians,

144; Arnold, Ephesians, 162-65; pace Merklein, Christus, 62-71.


to God from Eph. 1 has not been forgotten in Eph. 2.
aspect of reconciliation

98While the prefix d7T6


may denote the idea of "again, " it is probable that it simply
strengthens the basic meaning of the verb here without suggesting that there is restoration of an
earlier state of peace with God (Abbott, Ephesians, 66; Barth, Ephesians, 1:265).
99The verb
Ka-raAaooa)is used of the reconciliation of people with one another (1 Cor.
7: 11) and with God (Rom. 5: 10 [twice]; 2 Con 5: 18-20; and in Col. 1:20,22 and Eph. 2: 16
using
The noun KaTaAAdn is also found in the sense of reconciliation
d7roKa-raAAdamo.
only in Paul (Rom.
5: 11; 11: 15; 2 Cor. 5: 18,19).
100BAGD, s.v. d7roKaTaAAduato
and KaTaAAdooo);Biichsel, TDNT, 1:255-59; Vorldnder
and Brown, NIDNTT, 3: 166-74. Positively, this verb means "to make peace," while negatively, it
means "to remove enmity. " The latter clears the way for the former in effecting reconciliation.
1010n reconciliation in Paul,
see J. A. Fitzmyer, "Reconciliation in Pauline Theology, " in
No Famine in the Land, ed. J. W. Flanagan and A. W. Robinson (Missoula, MT: Scholars Press,
1975) 155-77; 1. H. Marshall, "The Meaning of 'Reconciliation, "' in Unity
and Diversity in New
Testament Theology, ed. R. A. Guelich (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1978) 117-32; P. Stuhlmacher,
"The Gospel of Reconciliation in Christ-Basic
Features and Issues of a Biblical Theology of the New
Testament, " HBT 1 (1979) 161-90; Martin, Reconciliation: A Study
of Paul's Theology, 160-67; and
S. E. Porter, Katallass6 in Ancient Greek Literature with Reference to the Pauline Writings (C6rdoba:
Edici6nes El Almendro, 1994).

183
Paul), is the One who reconciles. As the one who brings peace, He effects
reconciliation with God through the cross. This is not a problem in view of the high
christology of this letter and the fact that Christ is the agent of the Father. 102 He is
also the subject Of KTL'07in the previous clause (v. 15b), indicating that the
,7
Jews
Gentiles
"in one ('Pt) body" is a parallel thought to the
reconciliation of
and
creation of the two groups into "one (&a) new man" resolving the situation of hostility
between them.
Second, the phrase V CVL'
uqia-rt preserves the horizontal perspective of the
previous clause and is best taken as a reference to the Church as the Body of
Christ103 rather than the physical crucified body of Christ104 or a combination of both
ideas. 105 This is supported by the qualifying adjective 6'Pt (cf. Eph. 4: 4; Col. 1:18; 3: 15)
instead of a6Toband the accompanying phrase &td -rov-o'Taupov, a reference to Christ's
death that was the means by which the reconciliation took place. Also, the entity
called "one" (& / et's-)in verses 14-18 refers to the Church and, throughout Ephesians,
the Church is often referred to as the Body of Christ (1: 23; 4: 4; 12,16; 5: 23,30).
Third, the reconciliation of both Jews and Gentiles to God (T Oco)adds a key
Paul's
to
argument.
element

It is clear from verse 12 that the Gentiles were

from
God
from
Israel. But verses 12-13 give the impression that
as
well as
alienated
Israel is near to God and not alienated from Him. Nevertheless, in verse 16, Paul

102Barth, Ephesians, 1:266.


103Abbott, Ephesians, 66; Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 143-44; Merklein, Christus
und die Kirche,
45-47; Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 117; Gundry, S5ma, 239; Lincoln, Ephesians,
144-45; and Best,
Ephesians, 265. For a helpful discussion of the Church as the Body of Christ, see Schweizer, TDNT,
7: 1067-80, Best, One Body, 83-159; and J. D. G. Dunn, The Theology of Paul the Apostle (Grand
Rapids / Cambridge: Eerdmans, 1998) 548-61.

104Pace E. Haupt, Die Gefangenschaftsbriefe, 8th


ed., KEKNT 8-9 (G6ttingen:
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1902) 85-87; Percy, Problerne, 280-84; and Barth, Ephesians, 1:297-98,
This
297
n194.
view picks up on Tt,j arpaTt (v. 13) and Tresp.
j uapKi (v. 14), but these words are
by
Xpto-ToD
and auTou respectively.
ToD
qualified
105Pace Schweizer, TDNT, 7: 1073,1077-78; Schlier, Epheser,
135-36; and Stuhlmacher,
"'He is our Peace'(Eph. 2: 14)," 190.

184
speaks about the reconciliation of both to God through the death of Christ. This
Christ's
death and resurrection not only affected the Gentiles'
that
makes clear
(v.
13) but also put Israel's status in a different light.
status

Paul has already

declared that all humanity, both Jews and Gentiles alike, are under God's wrath (v. 3).
The same Law that was like a wall separating Gentiles from Israel and Israel's God
also confirmed Israel's sinful separation from God as Paul pointed out elsewhere (cf.
Gal. 3: 10-22; Rom. 3: 19-20; 9: 30-10: 4). Both Jews and Gentiles, then, were in a state
of enmity not only with each other but also with God. Christ, through His death, has
both
to God, and at the same time, having reconciled them to each other,
reconciled
He created a new humanity, the "one new man. "
The concluding clause of verse 16 containingTv

reinforces the same


e"XOpav

thought found in the 777'p


I'XOpav ... Ka-rqpM'oas- clause of verses 14c-15a, and reiterates
in the preceding clause (v. 15b). The aorist
the negative side of iTottove-t'p77'PRP
participle
instrument

d7TOKTCL'Pasis fitting
of death.

following

a reference to the cross, which is an

It probably expresses antecedent

reconciled both ... to God ... after putting


Himself. " Though personified

to death (i. e., killing)

hostility.

between humanity

Nevertheless,

the hostility

here, 7-PX6av is to be understood

14c,
namely, as a reference to the hostility
verse
hostility
than
rather

"He
time to d7ToKa-raAAde7,7:
in

as it was used in

between Jews and Gentiles106

107
God,
or a reference to both kinds of
and

the enmity between Jews and Gentiles is removed by their

God.
The e-Pa6T6 phrase could refer to the cross, the
status
of
peace
with
common
108
but,
keeping
in
antecedent,
closest
with the use of ab-rw as masculine

in its various

106Lincoln, Ephesians, 146; Best, Ephesians, 266.


107Pace Haupt, Gefangenschaftsbriefe, 85-87;
and Barth, Ephesians, 1:264,291. This
fact
the
that the aorist participle, dvoKTcivag, refers back to Christ's action before He
overlooks
view
both
body
God.
in
to
one
reconciled
108Robinson, Ephesians, 65; Gnilka, Epheserbrief,
144; Bruce, Epistles, 300 n127; Best,
Ephesians, 266. This view takes the dative pronoun a6Tt5as neuter rather than masculine, but this
is unusual in christological texts without further warran.

185
forms in verses 14-16, it is better to understand the phrase reflexively as a reference
to Christ Himself as the One who killed the enmity and brought reconciliation by His
death on the cross. 109 At this point, Paul proceeds to present the results of Christ's
reconciling activity.
3.5.4 Ephesians

2: 17-18: The Results of Christ

Being Our Peace

Not only does Christ embody peace and not only has He secured it for
others, but He has also proclaimed it to Jews and Gentiles, and through Him they
both as "one new man" have access to God.
3.5.4.1 Proclamation
participle) provide a transition

of Peace (2: 17). The words Kai A&6v(aorist


that links verse 17 to the programmatic

statement

in
about peace verse 14a and its subsequent development in verses 14b-16. The
understood subject continues to be Jesus Christ, and His work as proclaimer is the
focal point. This raises the question about what specific occasion of His ministry is in
When
did
Christ
view.
preach peace? Was it before, during, or after His death and
Several
different solutions have been offered. 110 Most likely a interresurrection?
related cluster of events is in view. If Kat'A%Pis a transitional
verses 14-16, then the "coming" was Christ's incarnational

back
to
reference

coming that culminated in

His death bringing reconciliation, and the "proclamation" was the good news of peace
that He secured by His death in which He made peace and in so doing proclaimed it to
Gentiles and Jews. But Christ's death and resurrection was also the content of the
proclamation that continued through the apostles and other messengers. 111 For
109Abbott, Ephesians, 66; Lincoln, Ephesians, 146;
and Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 117.
Barth, Ephesians, 1:297, concludes that the two interpretations "in his own person" and "on the
be
held
together and combined. In context, these are not mutually exclusive ideas, but
cross" must
the personal reference is more likely.
11OFor a discussion and evaluation
of various views, see Best, Ephesians, 271-73. If
forced to choose, the view Best prefers is either the proclamation of Christ's earthly life itself, or the
proclamation of the risen Christ through the preaching of the apostles and others.
111Lincoln, Ephestans, 149, concludes that it is "the
effect of that accomplishment on the

186
Paul, then, Christ embodies peace both in deed (vv. 14-16) and word (v. 17).
The remaining language of verse 17 takes up the terms yaKpav and cyyv's-

in
13
used verse and combines the verb Ev'ayycAi&from Isaiah 52:7 with the wording
yyw'
Isaiah
in
57:19
of Isaiah 57:19.112The original reference ofToZ,,
--1-taKpall
Tots...
referred to two groups of Jews, namely, those who lived "afar" in exile and those who
"near"
land.
in
In later Jewish interpretations of this text, the terms
the
remained
paKpapand yyw' came to refer to other divisions within Israel, including a line of
interpretation that understood paKpat,of Isaiah 57:19 as a reference to Gentile
proselytes. They were those who came "near" (:np, i. e., entered) the community of
Israel and shared in its blessings.113
In light of Paul's comments in verses 11-12, it may well be along the lines of
traditional

proselyte terminology that he formulates his statement in verse 13. The

difference, signaled by vvpt' &, is that now, because of Christ's death on the cross,
Paul can broaden the scope of the "far" who have come "near" from proselytes to
Judaism to all Gentiles who have become Christians.

In the same way, in light of

Christ's reconciling work, when the "far" and "near" terminology prompted the
allusion to Isaiah 57: 19 in verse 17, Paul applied it to his Gentile readers and Jews. 114

(v.
be
identified as a preaching of the good news of peace to the far off, the
16)
which
can
cross
Gentiles, and a preaching of that same good news to the near, the Jews. " The aorist participle,
eACv, following Kai is adverbial, either antecedent temporal ("And after He came
"), or
..
.
("And
temporal
He
contemporaneous
when
came. .. "), or attendant circumstance ("And He came
The first option is
and. . .") to c67yycA1oaTo(cf. Wallace, Grammar, 614-15,624-25,640-43).
preferred.
112Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 150,
pays minimal attention to these Isaiah texts and assumes
that, in his reconstructed hymn, the terms "far" and "near" designated cosmic powers originally.
But Stuhlmacher, "'He is our Peace' (Eph. 2: 14)," 187, shows that this assumption has no support
in Jewish interpretation of these Isaiah texts.
113Lincoln, "The Use of the OT in Ephesians, " 27-28,
and id., Ephesians, 146-47. The
Qumran
literature
is
in
for the idea of bringing a person into the
n-ip
also
used
verb
community (cf.
1QH 14.14; 1QS 6.16,22; 8.18; 9.15f).
1141bid., 28; pace D. C. Smith, "The Ephesian Heresy, " in Society
of Biblical Literature:
1974 Proceedings (Missoula, MT: Scholars Press, 1974) 45-54; and Martin, Reconciliation, 191-92.

187
Lincoln points out several differences in the wording

Ephesians
of

2: 17

when compared to the wording of LXX Isaiah 57: 19: cip7jVqPJT'Ejp7jlq.7 -r-ois-PaKptip Kai 1'

One
important
is
that the double reference to peace at the
-roi,,
variation
- cyyw' ou'utp.
beginning of the LXX text has been split up so that cip77'pq
occurs with bothTo-ts-MaKpat,
and Toi,,- c'yyw', emphasizing that the peace Jesus Christ procured is to be proclaimed
to both groups, Gentiles and Jews. Is this peace primarily

between
the two
peace

groups (vv. 14b-15) or peace with God (v. 16)? Lincoln argues that the wording of the
verse, which has peace being preached to the two groups separately, makes it harder
to take a horizontal, sociological need for peace as the primary reference. The
emphasis of the rewording indicates that peace on the vertical level-peace
God-has

with

115
become
Verse 16 has already combined the
the
now
primary concern.

two perspectives by speaking of a reconciliation of the two groups jV 6-PIUCU'PaTl


andT(j
Oco. The first is horizontal; the second is vertical.

Both "the near" as well as "the far"

116
God.
Then, verse 17, by talking of a proclamation of
require reconciliation with
by
Christ
to each of the two groups, makes the vertical reference dominant.
peace
This is further reinforced in verse 18 by the statement that through Christ the two
groups now have access Trpo's76v TraTepa.So, Christ proclaims peace with God to both
Jews and Gentiles, but as verses 14-15 make clear, this has profound implications for
between
Jews
Gentiles
level.
horizontal
the
and
peace
on
A further modification is Paul's addition of upip before 7o'FsMaKpav. Here, he
takes up again the second person plural pronoun from verse 13, where he addressed
his Gentile Christian readers. This reminds them specifically of the new situation into
have
Christians.
they
now
come
as
which

This also suggests that the material in

115Lincoln, Ephesians, 148; also Mussner, Christus, 101-102; Burger, Schdpfung, 155;
Rechtfertigung,
Barth,
71;
Wolter,
Ephesians, 1:278.
pace
and
116Paul does not say how it is that Jews
also are alienated from God and need
but
he
points out that transgression of the Law had separated them from
elsewhere
reconciliation,
God and confined them to a state of condemnation and slavery (cf. Gal. 3: 10-22; 2 Cor. 3: 7-11; Rom.
2: 17-27; 3:9-20; 9: 30-10: 4). See discussion on pp. 183-84 above.

188
verses 14-16 provides a preparation for the christological interpretation

of Isaiah 52: 7

and 57: 19 in verse 17, where Paul uses this Old Testament language to address them.
3.5.4.2 Access To God (2: 18). Verse 18 reinforces verse 17 by
emphasizing that Christ provides access to God for both groups to whom He preached
peace and who constitute the "one new man. " The theological distance between both
the "far" and "near" and God no longer exists. The introductory

O'Ttwith its clause

be
taken in apposition to cipljt-q (v- 17) giving the content of the peace that was
could
117
But the content has already been expressed in verses 14-16.
proclaimed.
Alternatively,

O'Ttcould be understood in a loosely causal or confirmatory sense118

modifying ci;7?yycA1oaToand introducing the basis for the statement in verse 17.
However, verse 18 appears to provide the result rather than the basis for verse 17.
Consequently, it is better to understand o'Ttin a consecutive sense ("with the result
that") modifying cw'7yycAt'uaTo
and introducing the effect for both Jews and Gentiles
from
the proclamation of peace with God in verse 17 (cf. Rom. 5: 1-2). 119
coming
The subject of this clause, ot' dyOoTepot,stands in apposition to the pronoun

"we" in the present tense verb CXOP


'
cv, which emphasizes the abiding privilege of
This
mpoo-ayo)y. word could be understood in the transitive senseof "an introduction"
intransitive
the
sense of "access,approach." In all three New Testament uses
or
(Rom. 5:2; Eph. 2: 18; 3: 12) the intransitive sense is best.120 Christ acts to create
accessto God (cf. 3:12). The idea of accessto God in contrast to alienation (cf. 2:12)
has cultic associations from the Old Testament even for Gentiles who come
and pray

117BAGD, s.v.

O'TI,

Lb; Eadie, Ephesians, 186.

118BAGD, s.v. o'Tt, 3; BDF, 456; Lincoln, Ephesians, 149. Abbott, Ephesians,
67, treats
6-rt in a confirmatory sense, giving the proof of what precedes in v. 17.
119BAGD, s.v. O'Tt,Ld. pace Best, Ephesians,
r,
273, who says v. 18 "summarizes and
explains what has gone before. "
120BAGD, s.v. 7rpooaytuY7?;
Schmidt, TDNT, 1: 130-34; Abbott, Ephesians, 67; Lincoln,
Ephesians, 149; Best, Ephesians, 273; pace Barth, Ephesians, 1:268.

189
toward the temple (1 Kings 8:41-43), and are seen prophetically as coming to Zion to
Lord,
(Isa.
56: 6-8; Zech. 8: 20-23).
the
and pray
offer sacrifices, seek
Now, apart from the temple and legal prescriptions, the privilege of access
to God-formerly

limited
in
enjoyed
a
way only by the Jews-has

been provided in a

for
both
Jews
Gentiles
together. This new arrangement, which replaces
and
new way
'
the old, is amplified by the three phrases that modify the statement CXOY
EV77V
First,
is
access
provided through
7Tpoouytonv.
has
both
God
to
thereby putting
reconciled
who

Christ (&'av'To, emphatic

position)

an end to the enmity between them

(v. 16). Second, both have access v 6'-p!7TPc


'UPaTt. 121 In the sphere of the flesh (v. 11)

there was division between Jew and Gentile, but now in the sphere of the same Spirit
there is peace (vv. 14b-15) and access to God (v. 18). This phrase is parallel to V CPI
link
between
16,
"one
in
body" and "one Spirit, " a theme
suggesting a
uq.La7t verse
that Paul develops elsewhere (cf, 4:4; 1 Cor. 12:4-13). It confirms that Christ has
created something new (v. 15) since the realm of the Spirit replaces the Jerusalem
temple as the place of access into God's presence. Third, the access both Jews and
Gal.
6;
God
(cf.
5;
4:
Gentiles have is 7Tpo'5Father
1:
to
-ro'v7=epa, a new relationship
as
4: 6; Rom. 8: 15-16). Access to the presence of God as Father through Christ in one
Spirit, then, is the remarkable result derived from the proclamation of peace with God
to both Jews and Gentiles. Those "far off'have indeed been brought "near. " The
by
both
this
new privilege
enjoyment of
groups is also evidence of the peace
between
them.
established

121Word

order and contextual parallels indicate that this phrase has a locative (sphere),
function
instrumental
here,
but not agency (Wallace, Grammar, 372-74).
means
an
or possibly
Some interpreters
understand Trvc6pa-rt as a reference to the human spirit or disposition, but this
ignores a reference to the Father, Son and Spirit that appears to be intentional
since several such
Ephesians
(cf.
1:
in
4-14;
2: 22; 4: 4-6). The unifying power of the Spirit reflects
occur
associations
that the resurrected Lord continues to be active and effective in His Church
Paul's understanding
through the Spirit (3: 16), giving and sustaining life (i Cor. 15: 45) and freedom (2 Cor. 3: 17-18). On
the relation between the Body of Christ and the Spirit, see Best, Ephesians, 274.

190
3.6 Concluding

Observations

on the "One New Man"

The designation CL'Sin Ephesians 2: 15 occurs in a context in


Kaiv6s-dkOpcu7Toswhich Paul contrasts his Gentile readers' pre-Christian

past with their Christian

present. The contrast schema 7To76'... v0k,(v. 13) is explicit and significant to the
Gentiles were "far off' (I-LaKpap),
from
whole passage. Once OToTC')
Israel's
alienated
covenant privileges and Israel's God. Previously, because of the special covenant
status of the Jews in relation to God in redemptive history, there was a fundamental
difference and deep-seated enmity between Jews and Gentiles. This distinction
in
religious existence affected all other social relationships as well. But now (Vvpi &),
through Christ, the Peacemaker, they have been brought "near" Vyyz-) to God and
His salvific blessings. In His death, Christ removed the cause of hostility between
Jews and Gentiles in order that in Himself He might create "the two"-the
alienated Jew and Gentile-into

formerly

"one new man, " thus making peace.

The reference to Christ as the creator of something new that overcomes and

transcends old divisions sets up a contrast with the first creation involving the first
man, Adam, the inclusive representative of the old order. The corporate structure of
the old order / realm, established by fallen Adam and dominated by the power of sin
and death, has a "solidarity group" comprised of all those who belong to him, namely,
the "old (fallen) humanity. " By contrast, through the death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ, a new order / realm has been established that has a "solidarity
group"
Jew
those,
or Gentile, who are incorporated into Christ, namely, a
comprised of all
"new
(redeemed)
the
humanity. " This is the "one (vs. "two") new (vs.
new creation,
"old") man" Christ has created by incorporating reconciled Jews and Gentiles in
Himself. He has made the two-believing Jews and Gentiles-into

one reconciled

both
community where
are no longer what they once were in relation to God.
Corporate solidarity with Christ comes to dominate the
concept of the "new man" so
believers
Body
that
the
as
strongly
of Christ can be called the "one new man" (Eph.

191
2: 15; cf, Gal. 3:28). This is a redemptive-historical,
it involves individuals.

not an individual, change although

It is a change in soteriological, not ethnic, status that

transcends the age-old division between Jews and Gentiles, the prototype of all
human hostility.
The word Katpos,stresses the qualitative

newness brought about by Jesus

Christ. Through the cross He put the Mosaic legal system


out of operation for it had
served its purpose, killed the enmity between Jew and Gentile, and united them in a
"oneness" (c"P,v. 14). In making peace where once there had been deep
religious and
division,
He created the two into "one new man" and at the same time
social
reconciled both to God. Now, together, Jewish and Gentile believers share equally in
the blessings of the new era of salvation. KatVO51
denotes the new things that have
come through Christ and highlights the contrast between the old situation
by
represented
6'XOpa
and the new situation represented by ctP771,
R, bringing a new
religious unity of Jew and Gentile in Christ.
In keeping with the language of this passage, the "one new
man" refers to

the new redeemedhumanity that belongs to the corporate structure of the new order
realm established by Jesus Christ and dominated by the power of righteousness and
life. This corporate structure has: 1) a "founding father" in the inclusive
figure,
Jesus Christ, the prototypical "new man" (2:14-16; Rom.
representative
cf.
5:15-19);2) a "solidarity group" comprised of those who belong to Him, the new
humanity (2:14-16; cf. Rom. 5: 15-19); 3) a way of life that those "in Christ"
pursue
(2:10; 4:1-6: 20); and 4) a destiny to which they go-eternal life (1:13-14; 2:6-7;
cf
Rom. 6:22-23). Given these associations, the "new man" metaphor functions
primarily at the corporate level in this passage. The designation is appropriate
becauseit comesabout by the uniting of Jews and Gentiles in the inclusive,
Jesus
Christ.
Together they (individually) form the new
new
man,
prototypical
humanity (corporately), of which Christ is the Head. This
new corporate entity is

192
depicted
also
as "one body" (2: 16), which earlier was identified as the "Body of Christ, "
Church
(Eph. 1:22-23). The "one new man, " then, is created and
the
namely,
constituted a community of many persons, both Jews and Gentiles together, who are
reconciled to one another and to God by Jesus Christ.
At this point, we turn our attention to Colossians 3: 9-11 and Ephesians
4: 22-24, two passages in paraenetic contexts that use clothing imagery and contain a
reference to both the "old" and the "new man. " We must examine these texts to see
how Paul uses this double metaphor. We look first at Colossians 3: 9-11.

CEUPTER
COLOSSLANS

4
3: 9-11

THE OLD MAN PUT OFF / THE NEW MAN PUT ON


The words "having put off the old man
[nian]"
having
the
and
put
on
new
...
Colossians
This
is
in
3:
9-10.
"old
text
the
to
a
primary
occur
reference
man" and the
"new man" in the corpus Paultnum and the first to mention both the terms together
/
"put
light
imagery.
In
the
off put on"
along with
of this, an exegetical study of this
text in its context is important to our investigation.

Once again we shall speak of the

1
Following
discussion
Paul.
Apostle
historical
the
the
as
a
of
setting of
author
Colossians (4.1), the literary context of Colossians 3 (4.2), and the structural form of
Colossians 3: 1-11 (4.3), the chapter proceeds with an exegesis of Colossians 3: 5-11,
/
"old
(4.4),
3:
9-11
the
man new man"
and concludes with observations on
especially
(4.5).

4.1 Historical

Setting of Colossians

The town of Colossaewas located on the banks of the Lycus River in


Minor,
Asia
100
from
Like
in
inland
Ephesus.
towns
the
about
miles
other
western
it
had
its
including
time,
that
the presenceof
share
at
of
religious syncretism,
region
Judaism in one form or another. It is reasonable to supposethat Christianity was
introduced to Colossaeby Epaphras, a native of the town (Col. 4: 12). Though not
he
it
directly,
is
Christianity
that
by
to
the
trained
probable
was
converted
and
stated
Apostle Paul during Paul's two- to three-year stay in Ephesus (Acts 19:10; 20:31).
Later, as Paul's representative, Epaphras carried the Christian gospel to his own
hometown (Col. 1:7-8) and exercised painstaking pastoral care there and in the
Hierapolis
Laodicea
(4:
towns
13). Apparently through his
and
of
neighboring

lSee the discussion and support for this


view in ch. 1, pp. 6-11.

193

194
Colossian
Christians were well instructed in the
teaching,
the
and
preaching
Christian faith (2:6-7).
Paul writes this letter to the predominantly

Gentile Christian congregation

in Colossae (cf. 1: 12,21,27; 2: 13). It appears to be prompted by a visit from


Epaphras who informs Paul about the spread of the gospel in the Lycus Valley region
and brings an encouraging report of events there (Col. 1:6,8,9; 2: 5). But his report
includes
some troublesome news about "false teaching" that was threatening the
also
Colossian Christians (2: 8,16-23).

Paul takes Epaphras' report seriously and by

means of the Colossian letter sets out, with some restraint, to refute this erroneous
teaching that he regarded as a denial of the apostolic gospel. Apparently, Epaphras
was not free to return to Colossae when the letter was sent, so Tychicus was
commissioned to carry it there and to convey news concerning Paul and his
associates, especially Epaphras (4: 12; cf Eph. 6: 21-22).
Since Paul gives no formal exposition of the "error" facing the Colossian

Christians, modern interpreters are forced to reconstruct it from the counterhe


arguments
puts forward and the meaning of the terms and slogans he apparently
takes up from his opponents and uses for apologetic purposes. The identification of
"the
Colossian
heresy"
has long occupied the attention of New
call
some
what
Testament scholars, and the discussion has produced a variety of opinionS.2
For our purposes, it is sufficient to say that this erroneous teaching
intellectual
the
probably grew out of
and religious syncretism of the Greco-Roman

2For

a survey of the discussion with references, see W. G. Ktimmel, Introduction


to the
New Testament, rev. ed., trans. H. C. Kee (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1975) 338-40; also F. 0.
Francis and W. A. Meeks, eds., Conflict at Colossae: A Problem in the Interpretation
of Early
by Selected Modern Studies, 2nd ed., SBLSBS 4 (Missoula, MT: Scholars
Illustrated
Christianity
Press, 1975); M. D. Hooker, "Were There False Teachers in Colossae? " in Christ and Spirit in the
New Testament, eds. B. Lindars and S. S. Smalley (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1973)
315-31; and J. J. Gunther, St. Paul's Opponents and their Background. A Study of Apocalyptic and
Jewish Sectarian Teachings (Leiden: Brill, 1973). That Gunther lists 44 different views indicates
there is no consensus on the nature of the false teaching (3-4). In addition, see the discussions in
the major commentaries.

195
Phrygia,
Colossae
in
located,
the
the
region
of
period.
which
culture
was
was well
beliefs
3
Free-thinking
to
the
of
amalgamation
various
and practiceS.
suited

diaspora

Judaism was open to speculative ideas from the Hellenistic world. Against this
background, Christianity

have
been
readily viewed by some as another new
would

both
Hellenistic
Judaism
be
Hellenistic
to
assimilated
and
religious
with
cult
philosophy and mysticism.

Thus, "the Colossian error" appears to be composite in

4
false
Paul
describes
"deceptive
teaching
the
as
nature.
philosophy" that rests upon
"human tradition" and "the elements (-rd oTotXcia) of the world" (2:8; cf. 2: 20; Gal. 4:3,
9).5 It minimized the person and work of Christ, viewing Him as one among many
between
beings
God
it
prescribed a program of rigorous
and
man,
and
mediating
for
heavenly
in
in
to
to
self-denial
order
visions,
and
a
person
participate
asceticism
"fullness
life"
(2:
16-18,23).
This
thereby
to
made
angelic
worship,
and
gain
of
observe
God
demonstrated
the
that one possessed the special
to
and
wisdom of
one privy
knowledge necessary for salvation.

In short, the "Colossian heresy" appears to have

been an innovative attempt to attain "divine fullness" (7TA77',


ptqpa).
Paul, however, repudiated the heresy because it denegrated Christ. All the
fullness of the Godhead was in Him, and in Him were all the treasures of wisdom and

30n the intellectual


and religious syncretism of Greco-Roman culture, see H. Koester,
Fortress Press, 1982) 1: 164-203.
Introduction
to the New Testament, 2 vols. (Philadelphia:
4This is challenged by N. T. Wright, The Epistles
Colossians
Paul
to
the
of
and to
Philemon, TNTC (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1986) 24-30, who argues that all the elements of
Paul's polemic in Colossians make sense as a warning against the claims of Judaism by portraying
Judaism itself as if it were just another pagan religion, that is, a "philosophy"
(2: 8) developed by
human tradition (2: 8,22). To follow it would be to return to the same type of religion the new
had
recently abandoned.
converts
5VVhat

Paul
Does
is
debated.
meant by the phrase
precisely
ToO
K6o-pov
still
Td oTotXcFa
instruction"
he mean: 1) "elementary
of this present world (cf. Heb. 5: 12); 2) "divinized
elemental
beings
heavenly
"
spirit
or
viz.,
powerful
powers who control the present world order; or
substances,
flesh,
law,
3) "basic elements"
the
of pre-Christian
on which the existence
rests,
powers
of
man
viz.,
in
dominate
this
We
incline
that
Cf. Philo, Aet. 107,
toward the second view.
people
world?
and sin
For
Cont.
3.
" NIDNTT,
a survey of views with references,
and
see H. -H. Esser, "Law-uTotxda,
"Lexikalisches
2: 451-56; J. Blinzler,
zu dem Terminus
rd aToixeia
-rOb KOopoD bei Paulus, " in
17-18 (Rome: Pontificio
Instituto
SPCIC 1961, AnBib
Biblico,
1963) 429-43; and P. T. O'Brien,
WBC 44 (Waco, TX: Word Books, 1982) 129-32.
Philemon,
Colossians,

196
knowledge (Col. 2:3,9-10). One did not need secret knowledge from visions to learn
the mystery of God's purposes and activities.

Asceticism, adherence to the calendar,

and circumcision were all unnecessary. Submission to these things was an attempt
to find completion and fulfillment

from
Christ. All this is superfluous. Christ is
apart

the true reality, and all these prescriptions are merely shadows (2: 16-23). In Christ
believers are complete in their standing before God, and, thus, they need nothing else
for Christian living. All this is important to the "new man. "
4.2 Literary
Many interpreters

Context

of Colossians

recognize that Colossians has three main parts:

exposition in 1: 3-2: 5, refutation


framed by an opening salutation

of error in 2: 6-3: 4, and exhortations


(1: 1-2) and the closing greetings

and blessing

(4: 7-18). In part one (1: 3-2: 5), Paul offers a prayer of thanksgiving
in Colossae (1: 3-8) that turns into a splendid intercession
Then he forthrightly

to the new creation, the Church, in particular

relation
initial

statement

understanding,
maturity

of purpose for writing.

By drawing

for the Christians

behalf
(1:
9-14).
their
on

presents the unique and complete preeminence

Jesus Christ as creator and reconciler, both in relation

in 3: 5-4: 6,

and power of

to "all things" in general and in


(1: 15-20). Out of this grows his

his
on
overall theological

he writes to help the Colossian believers develop the genuine Christian

that God wills for His people (1: 21-2: 5). He wants them to have a proper

understanding

of God's mystery, namely, the indwelling

Christ in whom the totality

knowledge
found
is
wisdom and
and is made available to all (2: 2-3).
At this point the second part of the letter (2: 6-3: 4) begins to
unfold.
turns to the relationship

of the Colossian believers to Christ.

He confirms

Paul

the

teaching that they already have been given (2: 6-7) and issues the command to
"walk (live) in Christ. " He then attacks certain teachings

that would prevent them

from doing this in the mature way he desires to see (2: 8-19). As these
verses

of

197
being
"complete"
they
to
their conversion by accepting
suggest,
were
pressured
but
Paul
Negatively,
this.
the
ascetic
regulations,
protests
rigorous
against
legalism of such "philosophy" is empty and irrelevant since believers "died with
Christ" and have been set free from the control of all hostile powers (2: 16-23,
faith
By
baptism,
20).
in
the believer accepts Christ's
as proclaimed
especially
death as his own and commits himself to the fact that his former life in bondage to
these spiritual powers and regulations has come to an end with Christ at the cross.
Positively, believers have been "raised with Christ" to a new life that unites them
Him
(3:
The
dying
1-4).
outcome
of
and rising with Christ brings with it the
with
kingdom
live
been
God's
have
Son
the
into
to
they
as citizens of
of
obligation
which
transferred (cf. 1: 13). They must set their minds on the things that are above-the
hidden realities of glorified life in the world above-not

things that belong to the

is
life
for
believers
Paul's
the
emphasis
on
present
realization
of resurrection
earth.
designed
false
for
fuller,
the
the
to
teachers
claims
more
of
counter
a
probably
complete salvation. However, even though they have entered upon this life already,
its consummation and full manifestation will not take place until Christ, who is its
6
(3:
4).
embodiment, appears
In part three (3: 5-4: 6), Paul shifts his emphasis from doctrinal indicatives
to ethical imperatives.

However, he does not leave the indicative behind for it is

6Much has been made of the fact that in Colossians (and Eph. 2: 5-6) Paul
speaks of
believers as having already been raised with Christ, whereas in Rom. 6 he views resurrection with
Some interpreters
Christ as an event still future.
for
see this as a sign of a post-Pauline
author
Colossians: e. g., E. Lohse, Colossians and Philemon, trans. W. R. Poehlmann and R. J. Karris
Fortress Press, 1971) 104,134 n13,180; R. C. Tannehill,
(Philadelphia:
Dying and Rising with
Christ. A Study in Pauline Theology, BZNW 32 (Berlin: T6plemann, 1967) 47-54; and E. Grdsser,
"Kol 3,1-4 als Beispel einer Interpretation
secundum homines recipientes, " ZThK 64 (1967) 139-68.
"already" and the "not yet"-are
In both passages, however, both elements-the
represented,
though with different degrees of emphasis. The "already" aspect is implicit in Rom. 6: 4,10,11,13
"not
Col.
in
3:
1-2,
the
while
yet" aspect is expressed in Rom. 6: 5,8, and Col. 3: 4,6,24.
and explicit
See O'Brien, Colossians, 165-69; and A. T. Lincoln, Paradise Now and Not Yet: Studies in the Role of
the Heavenly Dimension in Paul's Thought with Special Reference to His Eschatology, SNTSMS 43
Press, 1981) 122-34.
(Cambridge: Cambridge University

198
interwoven with his exhortations. 7 The double assertion-"since

died
you
with Christ

Christ.
have
been
11(3: 1)-is amplified in 3:5-11 and 3: 12raised
with
since
you
...
..
17, concluding with the command in 3: 17 to do all things in the name of the Lord
Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through Him, which is more or less the sum
his
In
3:
5-11, Paul describes the life of the "old age /
whole appeal.
and substance of
Colossian
believers
the
to make a clean break with it; and in 3: 12realm" and urges
17 he encourages them to embrace the lifestyle of the "new age / realm. " He applies
it in more detail to three areas: the home (3: 18-2 1), the workplace (3: 22-4: 1), and in
from
final
(4:
2-6).
In
(4:
he
7-18)
to
the
the
section
world
conveys greetings
witness
fellow workers who are with him and expresses greetings to other churches in the
3:
1Colossae.
In
light
to
this
turn
our attention
of
contextual overview, we
region of
11 to set the stage for an exegesis of 3: 5-11.
4.3 Structural

Form of Colossians

Colossians 3: 1-4 serve as an important transition

3: 1-11
8
On
letter.
in
the
section

false
hand,
Paul's
"philosophy"
teachers
they
the
the
conclude
polemic
against
of
one
(2:8-23) and provide the true alternative to their erroneous teaching. The inferential
On
line
follows
(v.
indicates
draws
1)
that
the
of argument.
what
preceding
upon
ovP
the other hand, these verses provide the theological basis (the "indicative") for the

7Though this shift in emphasis is


(e.
Rom.
Paul
1: 18-11: 36 and Rom.
g.,
characteristic of
12:1-15: 13), it should not be pressed rigidly. It is not to be explained by a tension between the
ideal and the actual, pace A. S. Peake, "The Epistle of Paul to the Colossians" in The Expositor's
Greek Testament, vol. 3, ed. W. R. Nicoll (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1903) 3: 537, who states,
"Clearly these assertions of verses 1-4 are idealistic. The death and resurrection potentially theirs
death
balance,
in
The
to
"
For
be
the
C.
Moule,
their
F.
D.
to
putting
of
members.
a
see
realized
are
Epistles of Paul the Apostle to the Colossians and to Philemon, 3rd ed., CGTC (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1968) 113; G. B. Caird, Paul's Letters From Prison (Ephesians,
Philippians, Colossians, Philemon) in the Revised Standard Version, NCB (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1976) 203; and Wright, Colossians, 21.
8F. Zeilinger, Der Erstgeborene der Sch6pfung. Untersuchungen
zur Formalstruktur und
Theologie des Kolosserbriefs (Wien: Herder Verlag, 1974) 60-62; E. Schweizer, The Letter to the
Colossians: A Commentary, trans. A. Chester (Minneapolis: Augsburg Press, 1982) 130-31; O'Brien,
Colossians, 157-58.

199
immediate exhortations (vv. lb-2) and the main hortatory part of the letter (the
"imperative") that follows (3: 5-4: 6). The exhortations relate to the way a Christian
thinks and lives as summarized in a number of imperatival

clauses (cf. 3: 1b, 2,5,8,

12 et al. ). The basis for these exhortations is twofold. First, the Colossian believers
have "died with Christ" (3:3a, cf 2: 11-12,20) to the old order and way of life. Second,
have
been
Christ
(3: la), 9 they now participate in His
those
as
who
raised with
resurrection life (3:3b) and await the full and open manifestation of their life with
Him in the future (3:4).
Verses 5-11 begin the main paraenetic section of the letter (3: 5-4: 6). This
has been called the "negative paraenesis"

paragraph

it
since
contains two negative

commands, texpwaaTc (v. 5) and 67T60co* (v. 8), along with two catalogs of vices (vv. 5,
N. 9a). 10 The inferential
8), followed by y Oc6&co-Oc

(v.
5) recalls the theological
o6p

basis for these commands given in verses 1-4. The object of the first imperative
(vcKpa'k7a7c, v. 5) is 7d pAq -ra em' Ti

first
is
defined
by
the
which
more precisely

five
followed
by
three relative
catalog of
vices
the readers.

clauses describing

The object of the second imperative

the pagan past of

(d7oOcoOc,v. 8) is Td 7MV7a,which is

defined more precisely by the second catalog of five vices. The 7ToTE
/ vbP ("once-now")
contrast

schema is used to link the second catalog of vices with the first in a chiastic

arrangement:
[al
d7T606-0,06-

[a] ev ors-(cf. v. 5) Kai ' ds- [b] TreptciTaTq'oaTe-7ToTc


...

Kai Weis- -rd 7TavTa... (cf v. 8b). 11 By this means Paul shows the

Colossian Christians
pre-Christian

[V] vvpt' &

how they ought to conduct themselves

(once).
The
third imperative
past

now in contrast

to their

(y Oc6&u0c, v. 9a) is followed by two

9The
conditional clause introduced by el does not express doubt, but means "if, as is the
denoting
"
"
"since,
an assumption relating to what has already happened; see BAGD, s. v. ci,
case,
I. 1; BDF, 372; Delling, TDNT, 7: 686. This point is confirmed by a7Tc0dPcTc yap in 3: 3.

1OZeilinger, Der Erstgeborene, 63; O'Brien, Colossians, 174-75.


11R Tachau, "Einst" und Wetzt" im Neuen Testament. Beobachtungen
zu einem
der
Predigtschema
in
neutestamentlichen Briefliteratur und zu seiner Vorgeschichte,
urchristlichen
FRLANT 105 (Gbttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1972) 124.

200
V6VUalICVOL
9b-10)
clauses (d7TcK-(5t)o-dpe7vot
Kai
vv.
...
....
that contrast the "old man" and the "new man. " Finally, verse 11 declares that,
parallel aorist participial

within

the realm of the "new man, " the barriers

that separate people from one

another are done away, leaving the focus solely on Christ who is "all and in all. " As a
whole, this paragraph
"positive paraenesis"

stands in antithetical

following
the
with

parallelism

in 3: 12-17. We now turn our attention

section of

in more detail to 3: 5-11

and Paul's use of the terms "old man" and "new man" in verses 9 and 10.

4.4 Exegesis of Colossians

3: 5-11

This section of Paul's ethical appeal is primarily

negative. The general

"set
to
exhortation
your mind ... not on earthly things" (v. 2b) finds concrete
in
Its
focal
this
(v. 5),
paragraph.
application
points are the commands VcKpojaa-rc
(v.
(v.
8),
9a). As those who have died and risen with Christ
Oe-6&cOeand li
67T60ca0e(3: 1-4), the Colossian believers are to rid themselves of the vices of their sinful, preChristian life (3: 5-11) and to clothe themselves with Christian virtues (3: 12-17).
It is generally accepted that much of the paraenetic material in the Pauline

letters had already been collected and used in the life of the early Church before Paul
Philip
it.
Carrington and E. G. Selwyn have done the pioneer
and others made use of
12
They
have
in
this
area.
work
shown that passagesof ethical instruction have
in
things
common, such as agreement in subject matter, distinctive style
several
(e.g., the presenceof lists), and a distinctive vocabulary including catchwords that
headings
as
summary
of ethical teachings. These similarities, they claim, are
serve
the result not of literary borrowing, but of the author's drawing on and developing this
traditional material in his own way. In compiling such material, use was made of
12p. Carrington, The Primitiue Christian Catechism (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1940) 31-65; and E. G. Selwyn, The First Epistle of Saint Peter, 2nd ed. (New York:
Macmillan, 1947) appended essay 11,363-466, where he compares the ethical sections of Romans,
Colossians, Ephesians, 1 Peter and James. Carrington states that this material could be classified
"put
headings:
four
off, " "submit, " "watch, " and "resist. " See also G. E. Cannon, The Use of
under
Traditional Materials in Colossians (Macon, GA: Mercer Press, 1983) 73-82.

201
appropriate ideas available from various sources such as Stoic teaching, rabbinic
instruction, and the words of Jesus. Judging by New Testament usage, such ethical
teaching was post- rather than pre-baptismal instruction. 13
4.4.1 Colossians 3: 5-7: Put To Death What Is Earthly
4.4.1.1 Colossians

3: 5a. With an inferential

14
Paul
emphasizes the
OV'V,

logical connection between theological affirmation and ethical exhortation.


connection introduces the ethical duties stemming from the instruction

This

forth
in
set

2:20-3: 4 with perhaps special reference to the theological basis summarized in 3: 3-4.
The sense is this: the Colossian believers have a new status (position) before God in
the risen Christ, therefore they are to conduct their life in conformity with it. Though
the believer's life is "hidden with Christ" at present (v. 3) and is yet to be openly
displayed at His parousia (v. 4), it must find authentic expression in his / her present
conduct, both negatively (3: 5-11) and positively (3: 12-17).
Paul's first command in this paraenetic section is the aorist imperative
be
15
in
ingressive
The
taken
should
which
an
PcKpokuTc,
verb VcKpOw, meaning
sense.

"to put to death, " occurs in an active sense only here (v. 5) in the New Testament. 16
It is used figuratively

in accord with the emphasis on "death" in the context (2: 11-12,

13SeeA. M. Hunter, Paul and His Predecessors, rev. ed. (London: SCM Press, 1961) 52-57,
128-31; J. D. G. Dunn, Unity and Diversity in the New Testament, 2nd ed. (London: SCM Press,
1990) 141-47; and id., The Theology of Paul the Apostle (Grand Rapids / Cambridge: Eerdmans,
1998) 661-67.
14BAGD, s.v. oup, 1; BDF, 451,1; A. T. Robertson, A Grammar
of New Testament Greek
in the Light of Historical Research, 4th ed. (Nashville, TN: Broadman, 1923) 1191-92; W. Nauck,
"Das oup-pardneticum, " ZNW 49 (1958) 134-35, points out that an oup frequently connects
theological discussion with subsequent paraenetic exhortation that gives the ethical responsibilities
instruction.
from
theological
the
stemming
15B. M. Fanning, Verbal Aspect in New Testament Greek, OTM (Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1990) 358-61. For further discussion, see ch. 2,134 n202.
16BAGD, s.v. PcKpOO);
Bultmann, TDNT, 4: 892-94; Coenen, NIDNTT, 1:445. The perfect
form
(vcvcKpo)yvos-)
is used in a literal sense in Rom. 4: 19 and Heb. 11: 12, where
passive participle
in both instances it describes Abraham's body in old age as being "as good as dead, " indicating that
his procreative capabilities had come to an end.

202
13,20; 3:3)17 and is more appropriate with -rdI-LA77
as its object than the verb 67606-90C
Rom.
in
8
(cf.
It
13:
12).
be
to
verse
used
appears
selected with special reference to
in verse 3: "you died [with Christ]
the aorist indicative 67TcOdvc-retherefore, put to
...
death the members.
The force of this command must be seen in light of its
.. ."
object 7d pAq.
Considerable discussion has taken place over the meaning ofTci MAq,which
broad
in
the
was used
ancient world with a
range of meaning, including reference to
body
human
(cf.
Rom.
6: 11-13; 8: 13). 18 A further difficulty
the
various parts of
involves the catalog of five vices that is placed rather abruptly in simple apposition to
fact,
In
it
is
has
this
that
appositional
construction
7a y077.
given rise to various
attempts to explain the words 7d yAq 7a e'm'Ts-

19 Proposals include taking Ta

20
2)
the
sentence;
as
a
vocative
subject
of
I-LA77
putting a period after 7-S-rq-s-and
taking the following "vice" nouns as "prospective accusatives" governed by the verb
213)
following
in
8;
five "vice" nouns themselves as the I-LAq
J
the
taking
d7T6,06-a0cverse
17The figurative
in Rom. 6: 11 has probably been influential
use of the adjective P6-Kp6shere also, except that the governing verb Aoyt'CcoOe-is present tense, and Paul makes a different
point there than he does here; pace F. F. Bruce, The Epistles to the Colossians, to Philemon, and to
the Ephesians, NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1984) 140 n49, who claims that the idea here is
synonymous with the statement in Rom. 6: 11. See ch. 2,126-27 at Rom. 6: 11.

18BAGD, s.v. pAos-;Horst, TDNT, 4: 555-68; Schiitz, NIDNTT, 1:229-32. MAo,,


- occurs
34 times in the NT, of which 29 are in the Pauline corpus. See ch. 2,133 n192 at Rom. 6: 13.
19See the survey of proposals in O'Brien, Colossians, 176-78. Manuscripts
K2 A C3 DFG
H and most cursives insert uptip after Td jiAq, but it is omitted by p46 A* B C* , and several
cursives. This addition, however, appears to be an accommodation to Pauline usage elsewhere (cf.
Nevertheless, the translation
"your members" is acceptable
Rom. 6: 13,19) and is not preferred.
due to the presence of the article Td preceding jiA77. The Td following p6Ai7 together with the
following prepositional
phrase may be translated by a relative clause, "which are upon the earth, " or
the article may make the phrase equivalent to an adjective; thus: "earthly members. " See D. B.
Wallace, Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics: An Exegetical Syntax of the New Testament (Grand
Rapids: Zondervan, 1996) 211-16.
20C. Masson, L'pitre
de Saint Paul aux Colossiens,
CNT 10 (Paris/Neuchdtel:
Delachaux
142. For the vocative
thus the Colossian
use he appeals to BDF, 147,2;
et Niestl6,1950)
"Members
(of the Body of Christ]
believers
Similarly,
are being addressed:
put to death
......
Grammatical
Insights
into
N. Turner,
the New Testament
(Edinburgh:
T. & T. Clark,
1965) 104-05.
Such a technical
in this context.
use of p0i7 is quite improbable

21J. B. Lightfoot,

St. Paul's Epistles

to the Colossians

and to Philemon,

reprint

of 9th ed.

203
from
Iranian
borrowed
this
the
that
an
arrangement either
author
and claiming
"pentaschema" of anthropology, 22 or, from the Gnostic myth of the two cosmic
"men, " each of whom had five "members" (limbs); 23 4) taking the "vice" nouns to be
"members" of the "old man" as a corporate entity that must be put to death; 24 and 5)
taking the "vice" nouns in apposition to -rti pAq but treating pAq by metonymy as a
bodily
by
they
deeds
the
to
the
are used as
members
when
performed
reference
instruments of sin (cf. Rom. 8: 13).25
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1959) 209-11. With the troublesome accusatives accounted for in this
"old
has
himself
in
two-fold
man"
Lightfoot
that
a
moral potentiality-the
each person
states
way,
faculties
that
bodily
(pA77,
i.
his
"old
The
(vv.
9-10).
"new
the
e.,
man" with all
members
man"
and
"
"Colossians,
Peake,
Matt.
29)
For
(cf.
5:
be
"pitilessly
to
critique, see
slain"
sin) must
cause one
3:538; Bruce, Epistles, 141; note also Moule, Colossians, 116.
Their
22Lohse, Colossians, 137, who follows R. Reitzenstein, Hellenistic Mystery
-Religions:
Basic Ideas and Significance, trans. J. E. Steely from the 3rd German edition, PTMS 15 (Pittsburgh:
Pickwick Press, 1978) 338-51. According to Iranian ideas, a person's members are his good or bad
for
found
be
decided.
Reitzenstein
that
is
his
destiny
deeds out of which
a parallel can
claims
CH
"life
immortality"
limb
in
12.21,
to
are, as a variant reads,
and
a
comparing an abstract quality
from
this
later
from
God.
But
these
passage.
are
remote
a
period
and
come
parallels
of
p077
23E. YAsemann, Leib und Leib Christi: Eine Untersuchung zur paulinischen Begrifflichkeit,
BHT 9 Mibingen: J. C. B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1933) 137-59, esp. 150; but see Lohse, Colossians,
179-81,
Herder,
1980)
(Freiburg/BaselfVienna:
HTKNT
10.1
Der
Kolosserbrief,
Gnilka,
J.
137.
Iranian
Jewish,
Greco-Roman,
background
that
for
and
combines elements of
a complex
argues
literature
the
Philo
ideas
from
Colossians,
182-88,
as
Schweizer,
and apocalyptic
thought.
combines
background. J. D. G. Dunn, The Epistles to the Colossians and to Philemon, NIGTC (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1996) 213 n19, states that this text does not require these complex views, both of which
7
the
Bar.
48:
42-52:
Apoc.
'T
by
Reitzenstein.
R.
Levison,
J.
dependent
and
on studies
are
Apocalyptic Dimension of Colossians 3: 1-6, " JBL 108 (1989) 93-108, provides an incisive critique of
both Gnilka's (104-05) and Schweizer's (105-06) proposal. Instead, he shows that "the unified,
Bar.
42-52:
7
Apoc.
48:
2
background
preserves, explains
of apocalyptic eschatology, which
consistent
the allusive language of Col. 3: 1-6" (94).
24Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 50-52. He argues that Paul understands Christ's death
he
death,
dying
to
in
to
inclusive
so
with
when
refers
which a corporate entity was put
event
as an
Christ or stripping off the "old man, " he is speaking about what has taken place in Christ's cross, a
(7-14,22-28).
further
For
during
baptism
period
an early, pre-Pauline
connection associated with
discussion of this view see ch. 2,107-09. See also O'Brien, Colossians, 178; pace J. A. T. Robinson,
The Body: A Study in Pauline Theology, SBT 5 (London: SCM Press, 1952) 30.
25Bruce, Epistles, 141; see also Peake, "Colossians, " 3: 538. T. K. Abbott, A Critical and
Exegetical Commentary on the Epistles to the Ephesians and to the Colossians, ICC, reprint of 7th ed.
(Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1974 [18971) 280; and Moule, Colossians, 115, who states that they are
is similar to the
"to be dead as regards their [your] limbs'immoral use. " This metonymic use of I_LA77
8:
10
death,
"
body
[moral]
7:
13);
("the
("the
7:
24
Rom.
6:
6
body
in
this
and
of
sin");
cf.
of
use of u6ya
("the body is dead because of sin"). R. H. Gundry, S6ma in Biblical Theology with Emphasis on
SNTSMS 29 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1976) 42 nl, states
Pauline Anthropology,
that Td p6k77sometimes means or refers to 76 a6pa, but the definition of Td /lEA77here by "sins" that
death
it
taking
for
to
be
to
against
militates
as
put
a
synonym
atipa.
are

204
The last option fits this context best. In a vivid and forceful way, Paul
his
identifying
to
readers'bodily members with the sins of which they
comes near
But
his
focus
the
vehicles of expression.
of attention is on the use to which
were once
they had been devoted in their pre-Christian life. He does not regard a person's
instincts,
desires
in
anatomy,
one's
constitution,
one's
as
sinful
physical
or one's
themselves. He does not advocate a radical self-denial in the form of suppressing
basic human needs in an attempt to control one's body or gain merit as practiced by
the legalistic asceticism of the false teachers (cf. 2: 18,23). 26 Furthermore,

itself,
sin

in its totality, is not to be thought of as a "body" and its various elements as


"members. " This is unacceptable in light of Romans 6: 6 and Colossians 2: 11 as well
27
this
text.
as
The phrase -rciETr!Tij,,- yij5-picks up the identical expression used in verse 2

for
"belonging
"
the
to
the
the
the
existence and
earth,
sphere
as
qualifies
-rd
pAi7
and
is
"earth"
itself
listed
in
5
8,
though
the
the
not
verses and
material
vices
operation of
"the
by
"the
(2:
20)
This
is
the
the
or
elements of
world"
sphere permeated
sinful.
dominion of darkness" (1:13) from which believers have been delivered. Since
believers have died with Christ, the power of sin over them has been broken (Rom.
6:1-14; Col. 2:11-12; 20-23). The old relationship to sin as a master is severed by this
death, and it no longer has the right to enforce its claims as it once did. This liberation
by
in
be
life
bodily
to
their
their
refusing
place
new
employed
now
experiences
must
longer
disposal
lordship
the
they
of
sin
no
under whose
serve. To the
members at
Colossian believers, who were relatively recent converts from paganism, Paul calls
for decisive action in "putting to death" (aorist) the sinful actions and attitudes of the

26Pace BAGD, s.v. peko,-, 2, who paraphrase


as follows: "put to death whatever in your
id.,
"
belongs
"put
"
These
to
the
in
death
is
to
earth;
and
s.
v.
vw6a),
you.
nature
what
earthly
...
"earth
far
/ earthly" are understood as "what is sinful, " which is
too
to
go
unless
glosses appear
See
2,130-32
Rom.
Paul.
for
6: 12.
at
ch.
unlikely
27See the discussion in ch. 2,111-16, and
pp. 222-27 below.

205
in
life
"death"
Christ.
This
is
life
in
their
that
or
reappear
new
may remain
old
Christ"
"death
(3:
3)
the
the
necessary
with
already
accomplished
as
with
consistent
Christian
morality.
action of corresponding

The idea of "death" as "severing

connections with, " or "putting an end to" that operates at conversion-initiation

is also

to characterize the life of the Christian subsequently in a negative ethical sense.28


4.4.1.2 Colossians

3: 5b. There are several lists of vices and virtues in the

New Testament, especially in the Pauline letters. 29 Various views have been
background
30
Such
lists
liStS.
the
these
and
origin
of
were a
advanced regarding
distinguish
faithful
In
form
from
insiders
to
among
moralists
outsiders.
common
(e.
for
idolatry
Jews
g.,
pagans
sexual
and
sins, covetousness,
reproached
particular,
Wis. 14:25-26; 4 Macc. 1:26-27; 2: 15; 1QS 4.9-11; CD 4.17-19; 2 Enoch 10.4-5). 31
The New Testament vice and virtue lists reflect the ethical dualism of the Old
Testament and are descriptive of opposing ways of life. 32 The vice list in verse 5

28MOule, Colossians, 114-15; Bruce, Epistles, 140 n49; O'Brien, Colossians, 176.
29E. g., Rom. 1: 29-31; 1 Cor. 6: 9-10; Gal. 5: 19-21. See the lists in Cannon, Traditional
(Philadelphia:
Materials, 54-60; and in D. E. Aune, The New Testament in Its Literary Environment
Ethical Patterns in the
Press, 1987) 194-96. See also E. Schweizer, "Traditional
Westminster
Pauline and Post-Pauline Letters and Their Development (List of Vices and the Housetables), " in
Studies in the New Testament Presented to Matthew Black, ed. E. Best and
Text and Interpretation:
Press, 1979) 195-209.
R. McL. Wilson (Cambridge: Cambridge University

30Some trace their origin to similar lists in Stoicism, e.g., B. S. Easton, "New Testament
Ethical Lists, " JBL 51 (1932) 1-12; and A. V6gtle, Die Tugend- und Lasterkataloge im Neuen
Testament, NTAbh 16 (Miinster: Aschendorff, 1936). Others trace their origin to an early Jewish
Carrington,
W.
D.
Davies,
Paul
Catechism,
13-21,
g.,
e.
catechism,
and
and Rabbinic
proselyte
Judaism, 4th ed. with new preface (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1980) 123-29; to Iranian
influences mediated through sectarian Judaism such as Qumran (IQS 4), e.g., S. Wibbing, Die
Tugend- und Lasterkataloge im Neuen Testament und ihre Traditionsgeschichte unter besonderer
Beracksichtigung der Qumrantexte, BZNW 25 (Berlin: Tbpelmann, 1959); or to the Hellenistic
katalogischen
E.
der
Neuen
Kamlah,
Die
Form
Pardnese
im
the
e.
g.,
religions,
of
mystery
syncretism
Testament, WUNT 7 Mibingen: Mohr, 1964). For a survey with references and evaluation, see

0. J. F. Seitz, "Lists, Ethical, " in The Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, ed. G. A. Buttrick et al.,
4 vols. (New York: Abingdon Press, 1962) 3:137-39; D. Schroeder, "Lists, Ethical, " IDBSup (1976)
546-47; and O'Brien, Colossians, 179-81.
31Cannon, Traditional Materials, 58-59; Dunn, Colossians, 213-14.

32Martin, NIDNTT, 3:928-29; cf. Deut. 30:15-20; Josh. 22:5; Ps. 1:1-6; Jer. 21:8; Ezek.
18:1-32. Note also subsequent Christian use: 1 Clem. 35.5; Did. 2-5; Barn. 18-20.

206
from
influence
Judaism in making idolatry its climax and in seeing
shows strong
idol
(cf.
Deut.
31: 16; Hos. 4: 12). Lohse believes that
to
sins
as
related
worship
sexual
this list was simply part of traditional

paraenetic material and was not related to any

33
Colossian
in
But this is probably going too far. Even
the
specific problem
church.
though Paul does not say that such behavior was extant among the Colossian
Christians, this does not reduce the significance of the list in this context nor its
They
to
them.
application
were continually exposed to the sins of their former pagan
life and tempted by them. Perhaps also, Paul placed these lists (vv. 5,8) over against
lists that were used by the false teachers (cf. 2: 21-23).
The vice list in verse 5 moves from acts to attitudes, from the outward to
the inward, with each item logically following what precedes. First on the list is
a general term denoting any kind of sexual intercourse outside of marriage. 34
Troppe-i'a,
The second word, dKaOqput'a,is used figuratively in a moral sense to mean "moral
It
impurity.
1135
uncleanness or
points to the immoral activity of pagan life. In this
denotes
the
third
the kind of shameful passion that leads to
context,
word, 7TaOo5-,
36
desires
(cf.
Thess.
1
4:
Rom.
1:
26).
5;
uncontrolled sexual
or even sexual perversion
The fourth word, MOUPL'a,
could be used by itself in a neutral sense, meaning "a

33Lohse, Colossians, 137-38;


also Easton, "Ethical Lists, " 9-10.
34BAGD, s.v. voppeta; Hauck
and Schulz, TDNT, 6: 579-95; Reisser, NIDNTT, 1:499-501;
and V6gtle, Die Tugend, 223-25. B. Malina, "Does Porneia Mean Fornication? " NovT 14 (1972)
10-17, questions this general understanding of vopvc(a; however, J. Jensen, "Does Porneia Mean
Fornication? A Critique of Bruce Malina, " NovT 20 (1978) 161-84, argues that the term describes
behavior,
fornication,
including
in the NT. In the LXX the word was used to denote
sexual
wanton
fornication
(cf. Gen. 34: 31; 38: 15; Lev. 19:29; Deut. 22: 21); also in
prostitution,
and
unchastity,
Jewish literature (e.g., T. Reub. 1.6; 3.3,4.6-8-it
leads to idolatry) and the DSS (e.g., 1QS 1.6;
4.10; CD 2.16).
35BAGD, s.v. dKaOapoia; Hauck, TDNT, 3: 427-29; Link
and Schattenmann, NIDNTT,
3: 102-108. Note Wis. 2: 16; 1 Esdr. 1:42; 1 Enoch 10.11; T. Jud. 14.5; T Jos. 4.6.
36BAGD, s.v. 7TdOo-5-;
Michaelis, TDNT, 5: 926-30; Lohse, Colossians, 138. Note T. Jud.
18.6; T. Jos. 7.8.

207
longing that compels one to action. "37 But the action may be good or evil; hence,
be
71
defined.
Here it is qualified by the adjectiveKaK77,
contextually
c7nOvIii'amust
indicating it is "evil desire" (cf. Prov. 12: 12; 21: 26).38
The climax of the present list is 7TAcovceia.It is set off byKaL' ("and
especially"), the definite article 777'v,
and an explanatory relative clause beginning with
39
The
I/
addition of the relative clause accounts for the use of the article with
77TL,
5..
definite,
it
7TAcovceiap,making
whereas the article is lacking before the other nouns in
the list.

This is a kataphoric

article pointing

Acts 19: 3; 26: 27; 2 Cor. 8: 18); consequently,

forward

to a subsequent

one could translate

(cf.
adjunct

these words: "And

that chief vice, covetousness, which is idolatry. "40 Perhaps this extra emphasis by
Paul is designed to highlight
literally,
is,
TrAcovE-eia

the root cause of all the other vices. The normal sense of

"an insatiable

desire to have more. "41 Here the word refers to

unchecked desire for personal pleasure that becomes a breeding ground for more
specific evil desires.

It involves the "ruthless

things exist for one's own benefit.

assumption

It is tantamount

that all other persons and

to idolatry,

interest in the place of God. "42 The close link with idolatry

because it puts self

danger
the
stresses
subtle

37BAGD, s.v. vtOvpia; Biichsel, TDNT, 3: 168-71; Schbnweiss, NIDNTT,

1:456-58.

38The adjective KaK4Pis omitted in p46, F


and G. However, strong, early (despite p46)
and wide attestation would argue for its inclusion here.
39Robertson,

Grammar,
727-28,960;
see also MHT, 3: 311 and BDF, 132,2, who state:
"In explanatory phrases Koine employs the neuter 6 eo-Ttv [vernacular],
I
TOOT'C"01TIV
or TovTcomv
[literary] 'that is to say, ' a formulaic phrase used without reference to the gender of the word
D.
Moule,
C.
F.
An
Idiom-Book of New
explained or to that of the word which explains...
and
;"
Testament Greek, 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1959) 130. Often the gender is
readily assimilated to the antecedent, as is the case here (cf. also Rev. 4: 5; 5: 6,8).

4013DF, 258,1; Wallace, Grammar, 220-21. See


also Robertson, Grammar, 522-23,
758, who states that the relative clause in Col. 3: 5 explains the use of the article with vkoveetav41BAGD, s.v. 7TAcovceia;Delling, TDNT, 6: 266-74; Selter, NIDNTT, 1: 137-38. In Plato,
Symp. 182 D, this word is used of sexual greed and, as Dunn, Colossians, 215, notes, "[it] sums up
list
is
a
of sexual sins: the ruthless insatiableness evident when the sexual appeite
primarily
what
is unrestrained in a man with power to gratify it (cf. 1 Thess. 4: 4-6). "
42Caird, Paul's Letters, 205; also Moule, Colossians, 116-17; Lightfoot, Colossians, 210.

208
leads
his
It
desires
(cf.
3: 2), draws
to
things
a
person
of covetousness.
set
on earthly
him away from God who is the source of life, and drives him to use God for his own
false
instead.
This may be directly related to the false
thus,
to
gods
ends and,
worship
teaching threatening the Colossians (cf. 2: 18).
All these expressions of self-seeking gratification,

characteristic of the

Colossian
Christians
in
lived,
death
because
be
the
to
to
which
pagan ethos
are
put
they have no place in their new life in Christ. Those who follow these paths are
(cf.
death
Rom. 1:21-32; 6: 21). These vices themselves must be
actually pursuing
11putto death, " i. e., removed from their conduct. Their presence is evidence of sin
human
character and relationships.
controlling and ravaging

In verses 6 and 7 Paul

Christians
two
should not practice these sins.
reasons
why
gives
4.4.1.3 Colossians

3: 6. People who practice these vices (v. 5)43 incur the

lists
God.
Pauline
to
reference
of
ethical
vices
often
a
sobering
conclude
with
wrath of
divine judgment that comeson those who practice these things (cf. 1 Thess. 4:3-6,1
Cor. 5:10-11; 6:9; Rom. 1:18-32; and Eph. 5:5-6). The expression 6py ToDOcob
denotesthe outward manifestation of God'sjudicial displeasure at evil and the
retribution that comesupon evil in vindication of His righteousness rather than
44
of
an
emotion
vindictive
anger.
merely

43The

is no doubt secondary. The 8t' din the text has


variant reading, 5t' 6, in CDFG
better attestation externally and is more appropriate internally
as a reference to all the vices listed
in v. 5 rather than simply the last one only, in which case the feminine singular relative pronoun
be
required grammatically.
would

44Stdhlin, TDNT, 5:419-47, esp. p. 425: "As in the Old Testament


so in the New
Testament 6py4 is both God's displeasure at evil, His passionate resistance to every will which is set
against Him, and also His judicial attack thereupon. " The genitive ToD Ocoi)is subjective: "the wrath
God exhibits. " See also Hahn, NIDNTT, 1:107-13; and G. H. C. MacGregor, "The Concept of the
Wrath of God in the New Testament, " NTS 7 (1960-61) 101-09. It is not sufficient to claim that the
impersonal
denotes
God
an
merely
principle of retribution that is not closely associated with
wrath of
God as in C. H. Dodd, The Epistle to the Romans, MNTC (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1932) 21-23;
denotes
God
the
that
to
of
wrath
nothing other than His judgment as in R. Bultmann,
claim
or
Theology of the New Testament, trans. K. Grobel, 2 vols. (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1951,
1955) 1:288.

209
In view of the ethical context, correlation with Colossians 3:4, and the
likely
is
Ephesians
6,
it
in
5:
that this is a reference to future judgment and
parallel
futuristic
be
'
thus EPXE
7at could
rendered as a
present-"God's

is
going to
wrath

listed
in
'45
It
is
in
idolatry
5
(&
the
'd)
that
vices
on
account
of
verse
come.
culminate
that God's wrath will come upon "the sons of disobedience. " But the future judgment
of God to be executed on sin is already in process of revealing itself in history and in
personal life experience (Rom. 1:18). In light of this, '
understood as a gnomic present-"God's

be
7aLshould probably

wrath comes"46 that is, it takes effect in the

tragic and degrading effects of sin itself at present (Rom. 1: 18-32) and leads to final
judgment (Rom. 1:32; 2: 1-16).
The M'phrase ("upon the sons of disobedience") may have been added from
Ephesians 5:6, but the manuscript authority for its inclusion is strong. 47 It is
because
in
that
transmission.
the
of an oversight
omission occurred
probable

On

internal grounds, the sentence is quite abrupt without the phrase, and the c'pot'!;,Kai
be
build
7
that
to
on
would
a
previous
mention of unbelievers
of verse seems
vyc7is48
In
by
For
longer
is
the
these
this
the
preferred.
reading
phrase.
reasons,
supplied
Semitic idiom, "sons of disobedience, " vlos-is used metaphorically

to denote member-

ship in a particular group of people. In this case, it is people who are disobedient to
God in contrast to those who trust in Him. They are non-Christians,

lack
this
of
and

45BDF, 323; Dunn, Colossians, 216-17. Note Isa. 34: 8; Dan. 7: 9-11; Joel 2: 1-2; Mal.
4: 1; also Jub. 5.10-16; 1 Enoch 90.20-27.
46Wallace, Grammar, 523-25; Caird, Paul's Letters, 205.
47Lohse, Colossians, 139 n30. The phrase is
omitted by p46 B D* itb copsa syrpal and a
few Church Fathers. Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 281, notes that in D this phrase is written
in smaller script at the end of the line, an apparent indication that it was not present in its
It
is
the
then,
that
phrase was added at an early stage in the transmission
possible,
archtype.
indicated
Eph.
6,
by its omission in p46, our earliest piece of evidence.
influence
5:
the
as
of
under
48Metzger, Textual Commentary, 557,
records that the UBS committee was divided.
Most commentators favor omission, but Wright, Colossians, 135 n1, and Dunn, Colossians, 210,21617, are exceptions. Translations are divided; for omission: RSV, NEB, NAS, NIV; for inclusion:
GNB, NJB, NRSV.

210
trust in God is the normal situation of a person outside of Christ (Rom. 11:31-32; Eph.
2:2).49 This is the "old realm" in Adam, the realm of the "old man. "
4.4.1.4 Colossians 3: 7. With the words Kat' b'pdc, Paul reminds his readers
life
their
about
pre-Christian
when these vices characterized their own behavior not
50
follows
A
long
similar reminder
a catalog of vices elsewhere in Paul's
ago.
so
(cf.
Cor.
Rom.
1
6:
9-11;
6:
19-21;
Eph.
5: 7). If the disputed C'M'phrase of verse
writings
6 ("upon the sons of disobedience") is omitted, then o'tS-and m6vTotswould of necessity
both be neuter and refer to &'din

verse 6 and, thus, to the vices mentioned in verse

5.51 However, if this phrase is retained, as is preferable, it allows ev o'LCand ev TovTotsin verse 7 to refer to different antecedents. Under this arrangement, verses 6-7 could
be translated: "Because of these things (&'d, i. e., the vices of v. 5), God's wrath is
disobedience,
the
sons of
among whom (CPot's-)you also once 0ToTO
coming upon
"
living
in
/
5).
(ev
i.
the
these
things
of
v.
walked, when you were
ways
vices
ToV'Mts-, e.,
The verb TrcptTraTcoi,
a favorite Pauline metaphor used thirty-one times by
him, is borrowed from Old Testament Jewish tradition, denoting a way of life (cf. 1:10;
2:6) or daily conduct in general (cf Deut. 13:4-5; Prov. 28: 18; Isa. 33: 15, etc. ).52 Once
(7Tor),namely, in their pre-Christian past, they also (Kai, i. e., along with other godless

49Fohrer, TDNT, 8:345-47; Becker, NIDNTT, 1:593. In the Ephesians


parallel, the
"sons of disobedience" (unbelievers, 5: 6) are contrasted with the "sons of light" (believers, 5:8).
50Lohse, Colossians, 140; R. P. Martin, Colossians and Philemon, 3rd
ed., NCB (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1981) 104; and J. Jervell, Imago Dei: Gen. 1,26f im Spdtjudentum, in der Gnosis
Briefen,
FRLANT 76 (G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1960) 235.
den
in
paulinischen
und
51SOO'Brien, Colossians, 173, who prefers the
shorter reading in v. 6; see Metzger,
Textual Commentary, 624-25. Lightfoot, Colossians, 211, argues that, even if the e7ri phrase of v. 6
is retained, it is still better to take both pronouns in v. 7 as neuter ("in which"), referring to the vices
best
however,
it
is
balance,
On
to take ots- as masculine and relate ev ors-to the e7t' phrase
5.
of v.
For
discussion
is
its
6,
nearest
antecedent.
a
which
of v.
of other options if the e7T(phrase in v. 6 is
Colossians,
Ephesians
Abbott,
282; and if the phrase is not retained, see O'Brien,
and
see
retained,
Colossians, 186.
52BAGD, s.v. 7Tcpt7mTw,
2; Seesemann and Bertram, TDNT, 5: 944-45; Ebel, NIDNTT,
3:943-45; O'Brien, Colossians, 22,106. For the Pauline uses of 7TCpOTaT&)
in this way, note Rom.
6:4; 8:4; 13: 13; 14: 15; Col. 1: 10; 2:6; 3: 7; 4: 5; Eph. 2: 2,10; 4: 1,17; 5: 2,8,15.
See ch. 2,95 n9l
for use at Rom. 6: 4.

211
Gentiles) were included among the "sons of disobedience, " and participated in these
evil vices (v. 5) when they were in their pre-Christian

sphere of life that was

dominated by such things. The contrast in the verb tenses is vivid. The aorist
(7Tcpte-7ra'o,
a-rc) sums up as a whole their participation

in these ungodly acts in the

past, while the imperfect WC-rc)views the course of their former way of life from
53
which such conduct comes. To "live" appears to be a more fundamental

concept for

Paul (cf. Gal. 5: 25), while to "walk" refers to one's actual conduct that manifests the
"life" that is one's settled state of existence. The Colossian believers did evil while
they were living in bondage to its power in contrast to dying with Christ out from
under its power (cf. 2: 20; 3:3; Rom. 6: 2-6,19-2 1; 1 Cor. 6: 9-11). Their sinful lifestyle
(i. e., walking in old ways) was conditioned by living in a sinful state. They were "dead"
in their sins (cf Col. 2: 13). Only a change of realm, being transferred into the kingdom
of the beloved Son (1: 13) and obtaining "life, " made a new lifestyle possible (2:6; 3: 12). This has important implications with respect to the "old" and "new man. "
4.4.2 Colossians

3: 8: Put Off All [These] Things

The vore'l vvvL'antithesis of verses 7 and 8 is a classic Pauline way of


indicating the fundamental transition from the old life to the new: "you were once
(7ToTC,
pre-Christian

existence) ... but now you are (Pvpt'&, Christian existence). 54


Paul used this contrast as his transition to the exhortation that follows. This turn of
God's
by
gracious act in Christ, demands obedient loyalty to Him.
events, effected
As noted above (p. 197), verses 7a and 8a are arranged in chiastic order emphasizing
the contrast (80 between what the Colossians' lives as Christians must now (VVV0
be, compared to what they once (7ro-re')were before they entered their present
53Wallace, Grammar, 503, states: "Cdo)("I live")
occurs as a present or imperfect
indicative 29 times in the NT, all of which have a stative meaning (eg.,
Col. 3: 7). " These sins
(3: 5) marked their conduct when they used to live in that state.
Eph. 2: 13.54Cf

Gal. 4: 8-9; 1 Cor. 6: 9-11; Rom. 3: 26; 6: 17-22; 7: 5-6; 11: 30; Col. 1:21-22; 2: 13-14;

212

Christian state at conversion-initiation. 55


Just as the Kal'VbL
'd 5-of verse 7 reminded Paul's readers of the immoral
OTo-rc)
in
involved,
they
were
once
pagan situation
which
so the Kal biwis-of verse 8
Christian
them
the
situation in which they also (KaL')along with
reminds
of
moral
involved. In light of this, Paul exhorts them to "put
other Christians are now (PVVL')
(-rd
things
these
namely, the whole gamut of sins that precedes(v. 5)
7TavTa),
off' all
56
follows
(v.
8)
kind
take.
that
this
they
the
command regardless of
and
of expression
With the aorist imperative, d7TOOcoOe-,
Paul uses a garment metaphor related
to the divestiture of clothing. It was commonly used metaphorically
57
Just
as important
sense.

in an ethical

as decisively "putting to death" the sins characteristic of

their old way of life (v. 5) is the need for the Colossian believers to "put off' decisively,
fitting
longer
(v.
8b),
the
the
tongue
sins of
as an old, worn-out garment,
which are no
for them and threaten the unity of the Christian community.

These activities and

by
Christian
of
communication
which
one
can sin against another
expressions
"new
Paul's
the
that
man" (v. 10) has a corporate as well as a
concept of
suggest
dimension.
personal
The two aorist imperatives vcKpwaaTe(v. 5) and a7T60co,
0c (v. 8) reinforce each
58
for
This
leads
two
the
the
to
metaphors
are
and
same
ethical
reality.
other

55Tachau, "Einst" und Vetzt, " 124-26.


56Peake, "Colossians, " 3: 538; Lohse, Colossians, 140; Kamlah, Form, 183; Gnilka,
Kolosserbrief, 184; and O'Brien, Colossians, 174,186. The verb a7To-ri077pt
is also linked with 7d,5-in
Heb. 12: 1; Jas. 1:21; and I Pet. 2: 1. The object of the putting off is thus designated as a totality,
done
in
behavior
"old
the
connection
with
sinful
man. "
all
57For references and further discussion,
see ch. 1,43-45.
58Fanning, Verbal Aspect, 357-64, gives
vcKpt6uaTe(v. 5) an ingressive nuance (361) and
(v. 8) a constative (summary) nuance (363). He points out that clothing imagery verbs
d7T60cu0c
("put off / put on") occur most often in the aorist tense in biblical Greek (see Table 5.4,362) and
ideas
"in
these
that
are uniformly regarded not as ACTIVITIES but as
usage
states
ACCOMPLISHMENTS, not as processes, but as events" (362). Such imperatives emphasize the fact
of the action commanded as a whole without focusing on duration, repetition, etc., even though in
obeying the command repeated action would surely be involved. Many contexts exhibiting this
linguistic feature lend a sense of urgency or decisiveness to an aorist imperative.

213
inference that the indicative verbs on which these imperatives are based refer to the
for
believers
(3:
have
Christ
3a)
died
includes
to
theological
namely,
reality,
with
same
having "put off'the

"old man" (3: 9b; Rom. 6: 6). If so, then it follows that to have

having
"put
All
Christ
(3:
includes
(3:
1a)
"new
10).
this takes
the
on"
man"
risen with
place at conversion-initiation

for the individual believer.

The five-member vice list in verse 8 begins with OPYR,


the underlying human
59
Together
hatred
directed
toward
with
vindictively
others.
emotion of anger and
Oupos-,an uncontrolled outburst of rage, 60both expressions of temper destroy
harmony in human relationships and must be put away (cf. 2 Cor. 12:20; Eph. 4: 31).
KaKt'ais a general term whose meaning ranges from "trouble" to "moral wickedness"
havoc
61
depicts
defined.
likely
be
Here
it
"
it
the
"malice,
contextually
and so must
or
to interpersonal relationships caused by evil-speaking (cf Rom. 1:29; 1 Corinthians
5:8; 14:20; Eph. 4: 31). The word gAao,0)7pt*ameans "slander" in the sense of
deliberately telling lies (cf. Mark 7:22; Eph. 4: 31; 1 Tim. 6:4; 2 Tim. 3: 2).62 In this
damaged
by
is
defamation
it
to
rather
of character
refers
which someone
context
than a curse directed against God.63 This, also, a Christian must avoid completely
(cf. Titus 3: 2).

59BAGD, sx. 6py4; Stdhlin, TDNT, 5:420-21; Hahn, NIDNTT,

1: 110-13.

60BAGD, s.v. Ovp6,5-;


Biichsel, TDNT, 3: 167-68; Schbnweiss, NIDNTT, 1: 105-06. In the
LXX 6py and Oup6gappear to be virtually synonymous terms; note this combination of words for
human anger in Sir. 45: 18; Pss. Sol. 2: 23; 16.10; Eph. 4.31; also Josephus, Ant. 20.108.
61BAGD, s.v. KaKia; Grundmann, TDNT, 3:482-84; Achilles, NIDNTT,
Colossians, 118. Note also Did. 5.1; Barn. 20.1.

1:561-64; Moule,

62BAGD, sx. gAao,0771-ita;


Beyer, TDNT, 1:621-25; Wdhrisch and Brown, NIDNTT,
45; Moule, Colossians, 118-19; Martin, Colossians, 105.

3: 341-

63Lohse, Colossians, 140; Schweizer, Colossians, 145; Martin, Colossians, 105; O'Brien,
Colossians, 188; pace Beyer, TDNT, 1:624, who claims that it is blasphemy against God, the most
Greek.
biblical
in
this
word
common use of

214
Finally, aI'oXpoAoyta,which occurs only here in the New Testament, likely
language,
64
form
is
It
to
take.
that
refers
obscene or abusive
which
a
slander may
foul
to
talk
or even recourse
expletives, thus, "foul-mouthed abuse. "
suggests crude
The final phrase in the verse, cK -rouo-r6yaTos-bpt5v(an emphatic ' (jp recalling them
to their Christian profession), is dependent upon d7roOco&rather than the last noun in
the list and is to be understood with all the sins that are mentioned rather than the
last two only. 65 The singular of =11a is a Semitism where Paul follows the Hebraic
for
discussion
is
distributive
in
item
the
singular
applicable
which
a
preference
under
to each person in the group. 66 The behavior outlined in verses 5-8 is characterisic of
These sins poison and destroy human relationships.

fallen humanity.

What was once

be
believers'
Colossian
the
conduct must now
put off.
characteristic of
4.4.3 Colossians

3: 9-11: The Old Man / New Man

4.4.3.1 Colossians

3: 9a: Do not lie. The present imperative of verse 9a

is
(vv.
5,8),
imperatives
this
the
connected closely with
and
clause
series of
continues
the preceding sins of the tongue. 67 Only here and in Ephesians 4: 25 in the Pauline
64BAGD, s.
Abbott,
NIDNTT,
Link,
3:
Bultmann,
564.
TDNT,
1:
190-91;
v. aioXpoAoyt'a;
Ephesians and Colossians, 283, claims that the sins mentioned here are those lacking love rather than
the term here to
those expressing moral uncleanness, as in v. 5, but Bruce, Epistles, 146, understands
by
Homer,
Il.
Polybius
"
The
is
in
language
"foul
3.38;
talk.
the
word
used
sense of abusive
mean
8.13.8; 12.13.3; 31.10.4; and Plato, Rep. 3.395e. If pre-Pauline tradition
reflects non-Christian
Greek
literature
lend
Later
to
this
that
support
used the word to mean:
would
supposition.
material,
"obscene, disgraceful speech" (Clement of Alexandria, Paed. 2.6.52; Diodorus Siculus 5.4.7).
65Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 283; Caird, Paul's Letters, 205; Moule, Colossians,
117-18; pace Peake, "Colossians, " 3: 538; O'Brien, Colossians, 187.
66BDF,

140; MHT,

3: 23-25; 4: 91. See ch. 2,105 n126 and 108-09 n134. A few
but
G
latvg)
(F
the
elcvopcva6w
from
29,
Eph.
4:
this
to
add
words
probably
verse
M
manuscripts
to clarify and smooth out the construction.
they are, no doubt, an addition attempting
67p46 places the present subjunctive (Oc6877u0c)
after the negative p4. S. E. Porter,
"P. Oxy. 744.4 and Colossians 3,9, " Bib 73 (1992) 565-67, makes a plausible case for the present
Col.
Cor.
3:
9
I
11: 33 in p46. However, BDF, 364,3 state that the
and
at
reading
subjunctive
here,
is
not
correct
presumably meaning that this variant is an incorrect reading
subjunctive
present
in Col. 3: 9. The use of the aorist subjunctive with p4 for the negative aorist imperative corresponds
is not used in the NT.
to classical usage. The present subjunctive with m4 to express a prohibition
20-21. Here is a prohibition
See Moule, Idiom-Book,
against a course of action, i. e., a habit of
lies
"Do
to one another, " or, "Make it your habit not to lie to one another. "
tell
not
conduct:

215
Such
lying
Paul
does
to
a prohibition
others.
express a strong concern about
corpus
may seem anticlimactic,

but the social effects of untrustworthy

promises and

deceitfulness are great. It is especially destructive and inappropriate

in the Christian

Thess.
3:
2;
(cf.
5:
15;
1
by
important
dAA77'Aovc
the
phrase ciscommunity as suggested
2 Thess. 1:3; Rom. 12: 16; 14: 19; Eph. 4: 32).
The difference in meaning between the aorist imperative (vv. 5,8) and the
imperative
but
The
is
(v.
9a)
imperative
time,
present
not one of
of aspect.
present
in
When
be
habitual
is
to
that
a
used
an ongoing
action.
commands an activity
it
if
it
is
the
context allows, may
prohibition with y717, a general negative precept, or,
imperative
he
The
doing
is
doing.
to
aorist
or
what
she
command someone stop
it
if
is
the
that
context allows,
viewed as a whole action and,
commands an activity
NT
instances)
(only
8
It
force.
is
in
be
ingressive
rarely used with negatives
may
68
here
to
The
by
is
its
the
taken
refers
prohibition
aorist subjunctive.
place
since
his
Paul
habit
begins
that
readers
urges
and continues.
resisting a course of action, a
Tim.
1;
1
Rom.
9:
Cor.
11:
31;
2
(cf.
Gal.
1:
20;
lying
be
to
one another
going about
not to
2:7). All these sins, which disrupt the harmony of the Church, are to be replaced by
12-15).
harmony
(Col.
3:
that
promote
corresponding virtues
4.4.3.2 Colossians

3: 9b-10a: Aorist

Participles.

theological
a
strong
affirmation.
with
ethical appeal

Paul undergirds his

The aorist participles in verses

9b-10a (a7Te-K(5vordycPotP&voraycvot)have been understood in two ways: 1) as


...
imperatival in force either as independent imperatival participles continuing the
having
imperatival
sequence of admonitions, or, as adverbial participles

force, thus:

indicative
2)
"[YOU]put off
participles
;"
or
with
on
adverbial
put
as
causal
...
...

68See the discussion on commands


doing
"stop
(i.
what you are
e., present:
view
have not yet begun") in Wallace, Grammar,
Grammar, 851-54,980, who, however, notes
37,362-64,387
provide a helpful discussion;

and prohibitions
with a critique of the traditional
already doing, " and aorist: "do not start doing what you
714-25. Pace MHT, 1: 122; 3: 76-77,94; and Robertson,
335BDF,
to
the
traditional
many exceptions
view.
see also Fanning, Verbal Aspect, 327-32,336.

216
force, providing the ground and reason for the preceding and the following admonitions,
thus: "Since you have put off
on
put
......
...
Most recent New Testament grammarians recognize that Greek participles
69
Part
Testament.
New
imperatives
in
independently
be
the
of
as
and were used
can
the debate on this subject centers on whether this is to be accounted for as a genuine
Hellenistic development, 70or as an indication of Semitic influence, which seems most
likely. 71 Some interpreters hold the imperatival view of the participles here and
defend it with several arguments. 72 First, the participles are preceded (v. 9a) and
followed (v. 12a) by imperative verbs; thus, they should be understood in an
imperatival

times
Lohse
that
the
several
appears
participle
points out
sense also.

in
73
Second,
Christian
the
in
function
imperatival
parallel
exhortation.
early
with an
Ephesians 4: 22-24 using aorist infinitives

to
than
appears
participles
aorist
rather

69MHT, 1: 180-83,223-24; Robertson, Grammar, 944-46,1134; BDF, 468,2; Moule,


Idiom-Book, 179-80; Fanning, Verbal Aspect, 386-87; Wallace, Grammar, 650-53; S. E. Porter,
Note
the
374-76.
Peter
Lang,
1989)
New
Testament
(New
York:
Greek
Aspect
in
the
Verbal
the
of
Pet.
2:
18;
1
Cor.
8:
24;
2
Rom.
9-14,16-19;
imperative
in
12:
independent
the
participle as an
use of
3: 1,7; and possibly Phil. 2: 3.
70MHT, 1:180-83,232-35; H. G. Meecham, "The Use of the Participle for the Imperative
Use
the
"The
Imperative
P.
Salom,
A.
(1946-47)
"
ExpTim
58
207-08;
Testament,
of
New
in the
and
Participle in the New Testament, " ABR 11 (1963) 41-49.
71D. Daube, "Participle and Imperative in 1 Peter, " in The First Epistle of Saint Peter, by
E. G. Selwyn, 2nd ed. (New York: Macmillan, 1947) 467-88; C. K. Barrett, "The Imperatival
Participle, " ExpTim 59 (1948) 165-66; Moule, Idiom-Book, 179-80; M. Zerwick, Biblical Greek, 4th
Davies,
Paul
Rabbinic
141;
Institute,
1963)
Lohse,
Colossians,
130;
Pontifical
(Rome:
and
ed.
Judaism, 130-31,329.
72This view was held by earlier interpreters such as Luther, Bengle, Olshausen,
de Wette, and Ewald, according to Lightfoot, Colossians, 212-14, who also holds this view. More
3rd
Kolosser,
Epheser,
Philemon,
die
M.
Dibelius
Greeven,
H.
An
include
an
and
recent proponents
die
die
Die
Briefe
Philipper
Mohr,
J.
C.
B.
E.
Lohmeyer,
1953)
42;
Mibingen:
HNT
12
an
an
ed.,
Kolosser und an Philemon, 13th ed., KEKNT 9 (G6ttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1964) 135,
Oepke,
Tbpelmann,
Neuen
Testament,
157;
Eikon
BZNW
(Berlin:
1958)
Eltester,
23
W.
F.
139;
im
TDNT, 2:318-19; Lohse, Colossians, 141; Schweizer, Colossians, 194 n43; P. Pokorny, Colossians:
A Commentary, trans. S. S. Schatzmann (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1991) 168-69; and, with
hesitation, M. Barth and H. Blanke, Colossians. A New Translation with Introduction and
Commentary, trans. A. B. Beck, AB 34B (New York: Doubleday, 1994) 409-10.
73Lohse, Colossians, 32 nl. He contends, for example, that translating 6bxaptOrToDVTE,
- in
Col. 1:12 as an imperative is justified since it is only loosely attached to the preceding verses and
there is a change in subject matter. See footnote 69 above.

217
support an imperatival translation: "Put off the old man
the new man
put
on
...
"74 Third, an imperatival translation for ev&(o, the clothing metaphor, is more
....
common in the Pauline corpus (e.g., Rom. 13: 12,14; 1 Thess. 5: 8; Eph. 6: 11; cf. also I
Pet. 2: 1 and Jas. 1:21), though Galatians 3: 27 is a significant exception. 75 Fourth, the
addition of the phrase ubv TaTs-iTpdecutvaToD(v. 9) and the present participle
(V. 10) indicate that contemporaneous rather than antecedent action
dvaKaLV0V1-L6-V0V
is intended by the participles.

In light of this, Paul is stressing the obligation, which

the Colossian Christians must accept and act upon, to put away the habits of their
"old man" by stripping off all sinful behavior that relates to their former life and
putting on a new manner of conduct. 76
Other interpreters, however, defend the second view that treats these
participles as true adverbial participles that express antecedent causal action to the
preceding exhortations and assign a twofold reason or basis for theM. 77 Again,
several arguments are put forward. First, there is nothing in what precedes to
741bid., 141
that Eph. 4: 24 clearly supports the imperatival
n49. Lohse maintains
translation
(ev66uaoOc), which
no matter whether one reads the aorist infinitive
or the imperative
is found in p46 A B* K and other manuscripts
See also Lightfoot,
and a few Church Fathers.
Colossians, 213; Bruce, Epistles, 357-58; Barth, Ephesians, 2: 505-506; and Schnackenburg,
Ephesians, 199-200. However, see the discussion in ch. 5,263-69.
75Lightfoot, Colossians, 213. He
admits that both indicative
found in Paul (cf Gal. 3: 27 with Rom. 13: 14).

and imperative

uses are

761bid., 213.
77H. A. W. Meyer, Critical
and Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament. Part IX. *
The Epistles to the Philippians
and Colossians, trans. J. C. Moore from the 4th German ed., trans.
rev. and ed. W. P. Dickson (New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1875) 431; J. A. Eadie, A Commentary on
the Greek Text Of the Epistle of Paul to the Colossians (Edinburgh:
T. & T. Clark, 1856; reprint, Klock
& Klock, 1980) 227-28; Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 283-84; Peake, "Colossians, " 3: 539;
Masson, Colossiens, 143 n6; Martin, Colossians, 106; Caird, Paul's Letters, 204-205; Gnilka,
Kolosserbrief, 186; Cannon, Traditional
Materials, 72; O'Brien, Colossians, 189; and Dunn,
Colossians, 210 n6,220.
See also Maurer, TDNT, 6: 644 n5; Merk, Handeln, 205; Tannehill, Dying
and Rising, 50-52, esp. 52 n14; Jervell, Imago, 235-36; E. Larsson, Christus als Vorbild: Eine
Untersuchung zu den paulinischen
Tauf und Eikontexten (Lund: Gleerup, 1962) 197-98;
and most
modern English versions. Schweizer, Colossians, 194 n43, views these as adverbial participles
describing the means by which the preceding imperatives
are carried out. But this requires that
they be contemporaneous
with the present imperative
oe-68co*-, a sense normally conveyed by
present participles (cf e. g., Col. 2: 6-7; 3: 13,16). Bruce, Epistles, 146, seems to vacillate between the
indicative and the imperative force in this passage.

218
correspond with P&aqycvot since none of the Christian virtues are mentioned until
fits
Second,
12.78
11
verse
verse
with verses 9b-10 better when the participles are
for
heeding the preceding admonitions rather than
the
ground
understood as assigning
viewing them as continuing the exhortations. This is in keeping with Paul's
Colossians
in
(cf. 2:6-7; 2: 16-3: 4). 79 Third, the imperative of
presentation earlier
by
12
is
introduced
the inferential conjunction oV'V.The same clothing
verse
metaphor is used in verse 12 as in verses 9b-10, but in paraenetic form by way of
inference from what has been said in verses 9-10 in non-paraenetic forM. 80 Fourth,
the participles are aorist, and as such cannot be contemporaneous in time with the
None of the
preceding controlling verb, which is the present imperative 06-666-U06.81
studies nor the grammars cited above (footnotes 69-71) list Colossians 3: 9-10 as a
possible instance of an independent imperatival participle.

All of the cases cited are

is
dpdycvot
24:
47.82
Fifth,
in
Luke
this
the
view
exception of
present participles with
in keeping with Paul's teaching elsewhere in Colossians where he refers back to the
reader's conversion-initiation

by means of an aorist indicative or an aorist participle

(cf. 1:6-7,13,22; 2:6-7,11-15,20;

3: 1,3). 83 Paul is reminding the Colossians of an

has
dramatically
in
the
that
them
affected
so
past
event

that it has become the

basis and reason for heeding the exhortations to put off sinful ways (vv. 5 and 8) and
(vv.
12ff).
put on righteous ways
78Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 283.
79Meyer, Colossians, 431; also Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 283-84.
801bid., 431.
81Ibid.
82Moulton (MHT, 1: 182) includes this
exception with "great hesitation, " and both
Meecham. ("Use of the Participle, " 207) and Salom ("Imperative Use, " 46) dismiss it as too suspect
because of its probable dependence on the preceding verb. Salom ("Imperative Use, " 48-49) cites
two instances in the papyri of aorist participles used as independent imperatives; nevertheless, this
use is considered very rare.
830'Brien, Colossians, 189.

219
It must be admitted that conceptually either view can be harmonized with
Paul's attested teaching because he uses the "put off / put on" clothing metaphor with
both an aorist indicative pointing to conversion-initiation

imperative
and an aorist

(cf.
The
Gal.
Rom.
13:
12-14).
3:
27
to
subsequent ethical conduct
with
pointing
determine
his
here.
this
then,
must
passage,
meaning
context of
First, to argue that the participles are imperatival

because imperative

finite
from
derive
implies
these
that
they
their
them
tense
and mood
verbs surround
immediately
the
Oc66co*
the
to
participles are
preceding
which
1_t
verbs, specifically
attached grammatically.

This overlooks two grammatical difficulties.

The first

difficulty is the fact that the participle is non-finite (time dependent and non-modal)
in
from
the
its
its
to
time
elements
other
and
mood
relationship
relationship
and gains
function
84
itself,
In
the
the
of
principal or controlling verb.
and of
sentence, especially
the aorist tense participle is not to express antecedent time but to indicate that the
duration
is
involved
to
the
or
viewed as a simple event undefined as
verb
action of
does
However,
though
the
not automatically
even
aorist participle
completion.
denote antecedent action, it is most frequently used for an action that is antecedent
in time to the action of the controlling verb where the antecedence is implied not by
the aorist tense as a tense of past time (as it is in the indicative mood), but in some
be
if
An
in
the
normally
used a resultant
context.
aorist participle will not
other way
futurity
state, contemporaneity, or

in relationship to the action of the controlling verb

is intended since these kinds of actions are not expressed by the aorist, but by the
future
85
The
the
is
that
tenses
and
major
present,
exception
respectively.
perfect,
the aorist participle may denote contemporaneous action if the controlling verb itself

84Robertson, Grammar, 946; Wallace, Grammar,


85Burton, Moods and Tenses, 59-63 (132-34).

614-16.

220
is in the aorist tense. 86 In this passage, however, the main verb is in the present
tense (y Oc66cor&) followed by aorist participles.
intend the participles
imperative

to be understood

verb, and, consequently,


The second grammatical

This suggests that Paul does not

as contemporaneous

with the preceding

does not intend them to have imperatival


difficulty

with this argument

force. 87

is the fact that a

genuine imperatival participle stands independently, that is, grammatically

unrelated

to a finite imperative verb in the sentence (cf. Rom. 12:9ff; 1 Peter 2: 18; 3: 1,7). 88
This is not the case here. Even if the participles were viewed adverbially as
attendant circumstance to Oc6&o,6-,they would borrow the mood of this imperative,
89
ideas
be
However,
logically
the
two
sets of verbal
would
considered
and
paratactic.
this is not likely here since the tense / aspect of the finite verb is present, and the
The
two verbal ideas, though related, are not necessarily
participles are aorist.
logically coordinate. It would be difficult to hold that the participial actions are merely
an accompaniment of the action of the controlling verb.
Second, to argue from the parallel in Ephesians 4 is not convincing because
(v. 22) and jP860ragOat(v. 24) indicates
the best manuscript evidence for d7ToWoOat
that both verbs are infinitives

Whether
form.
in
imperatives
these infinitives
and not

90
force
in
be
decided
imperatival
in
that
or not must
context.
are

86Robertson, Grammar, 860-61; 1112-14; BDF, 339; Wallace, Grammar, 614. As


a
result, when the aorist participle is used for contemporaneous action, the controlling verb is either in
the aorist or perfect tense (cf. e.g., Eph. 5: 26).
87Pace Fanning, Verbal Aspect, 358
n35 with 363, who allows for the imperatival
these participles.

force of

88Robertson, Grammar, 944-46,1134; Wallace, Grammar, 650-53. Though the


imperatival participles in Rom. 12 occur in the middle of imperatives or infinitives acting as
imperatives (e.g., 12: 15), the syntactical construction makes it impossible to connect them with any
stated finite verb.
89Burton, Moods and Tenses, 173-74 (449-50).
90See the discussion of the infinitives

in Eph, 4: 22-24 in ch. 5,263-69.

221
Third, to argue that the imperative is normal usage for ep6w in the Pauline
fact
(Gal.
falters
Paul
indicative
3:
27)
in
both
that
the
the
the
on
used
verb
corpus
both
Jesus
Christ
imperative
(Rom.
13:
14),
the
the
object.
and
with
as
and
Furthermore

d7TcK8UJ

,I

(as opposed to

a7ToTt '6qyt,

in
8
v. and elsewhere) occurs earlier

Colossians 2: 15 and in its noun form in 2: 11, and in both places it is non-imperatival
and non-paraenetic.
The indicative use of cpc&oaoOe-in Galatians 3: 27 and the imperatival use of
the same verb in Romans 13: 14 VP86ouo,00 highlights
Pauline ethics: the indicative,

pointing

basis
the
and motivation
necessary
as
91
This
relationship
ethical conduct.
imperative
ethical

fundamental
a

to conversion-initiation
for the imperative

imperative
the
and

benefits,
its
serves
and

that calls for subsequent

between the "baptismal"

indicative

Colossians
in
(1:
6-7,13,22;
times
occurs several

2: 16-3: 4). And, it can be readily observed in the oscillation

element in

and the

2: 6-7,11-15;

between the indicative

(v.
077Tc(v. 1a)
in 3: 1-12: 1) cvvq YEP
Ci7Tc-iTc(v. 1b); 2) Opove-ZiTc
...

(v.
8)
dTr6Oe7oOc
(v.
dve-Odve-re(v.
5)
3)
3)
(v.
3);
and
vexpo)aaTc
a7TcOdve--re...
...
...
...
b8vo,au0c (v. 12).

2)

In light of all this, it seems most likely that the participles d7TcK6vuqpcvot
9b) andE'v6vaqpcvot (v. 10a) between the imperatives of verses 8-9a and 12 are not to
be taken as continuing the commands (imperatival),

description
how
the
or as a
of

be
indicative,
(means),
but,
to
to
the
as
a
return
accomplished
rather,
commands are
for
It
in
is
best,
basis
in
the
imperatives
the
the
therefore,
the
past
present.
stating
to understand both aorist participles in a causal sense, providing the reason and thus
the motivation for heeding Paul's admonitions.

This implies that they express

91Jervell, Imago, 236. On the subject of the


relationhip of Pauline ethics to conversioninitiation, see V. P. Furnish, Theology and Ethics in Paul (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1968) 214-171
G. Bornkamm, "Baptism and New Life in Paul: Romans 6, " in Early Christian Experience, trans.
P. Hammer (New York: Harper & Row, 1969) 71-86; W. D. Dennison, "Indicative and Imperative:
The Basic Structure of Pauline Ethics, " CTJ 14 (1979) 55-78, esp. 72; and J. M. G. Barclay, Obeying
the Truth. A Study of Paul's Ethics in Galatians (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1988) 212-15. See ch.
6,316-24 for further discussion of the indicative and imperative relationship.

222
This
antecedent action.
view also receives support from the larger context in
Colossians as we shall see next.
4.4.3.3 Colossians

3: 9b-10a and 2: 11,15.

Most interpreters

recognize a

between
3:9 and 2: 11,15. The doubly composite verb d76-KS6Cg0at
connection
occurs
in only these three verses in the New Testament.

It is a more forceful word than the

in
in
3:
8,
d7ToT1'077yt
other paraenetic contexts (e.g., 1 Thess. 5: 8; Rom.
used
verb
13: 12), and in the parallel
can be represented

clause in Ephesians

by the English

expressions

4: 22. The meaning of the two verbs


"to put off' (dV00co,0at) and "to strip

92
In
Colossians
2:
in
'(d76-06k-o-Oat).
11
15,67TK&07Sd7rCK&A--90at
and
Off
are used
and
Christ's
death
and resurrection
connection with
93
Him.
The
"stripping
with

off'language

dying
believer's
the
and rising
and

in these verses suggests that "stripping

off

the old man" in 3: 9 has some connection with this motif

94
follows
aqpKos-,
I-LaTos,
In 2: 11 the phrase, ev 7- d7TcK&v'oct
the
ro
ao)`
Ti,
[Colossian
"in
him
[Christ]
Christians]
also you
were circumcised with a
words
The
hands.
"
has
It
been
in
interpreted
three
ways.
main
circumcision made without
first view takes the phrase as a reference to the physical body of Christ that He
"
His
"circumcision,
in
is,
"stripped off' (removed) ev 7^ 7Tcpt
Xpto-rob,
that
own
-royjq -rob

92The

middle voice may have an active or a reflexive sense, i. e., "to strip off from one's
The
NT
MHT,
2:
dvK&atsin
"
310.
the
noun
else
and is also rare outside
self, see
occurs nowhere
the NT; see BAGD, s. v. d7TKbumsc;Oepke, TDNT, 2: 321; and note Josephus, Ant. 6.14.2. Thus,
Paul perhaps coined the word on account of the circumcision figure he was using in Col. 2: 11-12; so
Bruce, Epistles, 104 n66,107 n82; and Robinson, Body, 42.
93Death, burial,
themes are commonly associated with the motif of
and resurrection
Christ
in
Paul's
(participation)
letters: Rom. 6: 3-6; 7: 1-6; 8: 17; 2 Cor. 1: 3-9; 4: 7-14;
with
union
5: 14-17; 7: 3; 13: 4; Gal. 2: 19-20; 6: 14-15; Phil. 3: 9-11; Col. 2: 20; 3: 1-4,9-10;
1 Thess. 4: 14; 5: 10;
Eph. 2: 5-6.
94The

manuscripts A2 D1 C with a majority of cursives and the Syriac versions insert the
("of
"
KJV:
dyapTt6v
the
"the
body of the sins of the flesh), but this is surely a
cf.
sins,
-nip
words
The
descriptive
is
in
that
the
word oapK6s- is a qualitative
reading.
secondary
a
place of
genitive
put
quality to a6pa, the noun it modifies, i. e., "fleshly body; "
adjective, thereby ascribing a characteristic
Wallace,
Grammar,
2:
440;
MHT,
86-88.
and
see

223
understood metaphorically

95
This
His
death.
to
as a concise reference
view appeals

to the allusions to Christ's death and resurrection in verses 12-15. It treats the
"in
the circumcision of (undergone by) Christ, " as a reference to the
phrase,
Christ
defining
it
in an appositional sense the phrase "in
and views as
crucifudon of
the stripping off of the body of flesh. " The wordsTob XptoTob are understood as an
is
Christ's
it
body of flesh that was "stripped off'
that
objective genitive, making clear
in physical death.
This view also looks back to the phrase "body of His flesh" (av'-roD)in
Colossians 1:22, which clearly has a physical meaning with reference to the death of
Christ (cf. Rom. 7:4) and so claims the same significance here, even though the
here
is
This
because
is
of the
absent.
qualifier
possessive pronoun au'roD
not needed
following defining phrase, "in the circumcision of Christ. " It also looks ahead to the
"principalities
the
stripping off of

fact
the
in
2:
15
to
as a reference
and powers" clause

that Christ (regarded as the subject of the sentence) "stripped off' from Himself the
'His
flesh
(i.
by
"stripping
frail
humanity),
His
off
e.,
which was attacked
evil powers
by the evil powers. This line of interpretation

both
full
to
the grammar
weight
gives

in
It
imagery
15.
the
true
middle
voice
as
a
of
d7TcK&vudpcPosverse
regards
and
deponent in the reflexive sense instead of giving it an active and transitive sense
"disarm.
"96
rendered

95This was the general


view of the Latin Fathers and has been held by Kasemann, Leib,
139; Moule, Colossians, 94-96, who gives a helpful summary of major views; Martin, Colossians, 81-83;
Robinson, Body, 41-42,46; Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 49-50; Beasley-Murray,
Baptism, 152-53;
Colossians, " in To Tell the Mystery:
O'Brien, Colossians, 116-17; and J. D. G. Dunn, "The'Body'in
Essays on New Testament Eschatology in Honor of Robert H. Gundry, eds. T. E. Schmidt and M. Silva,
JSNTSup 100 (Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1994) 163-81, esp. 169-70. This represents a change of mind
from Dunn's earlier view as stated in Baptism in the Holy Spirit, SBT 15,2nd series (Naperville, IL:
Allenson, 1970) 153, in which he followed the prevailing consensus (the second view) that "'body of
flesh'was in effect synonymous with'body
7: 24). "
of sin'(Rom. 6: 6) and'body of death'(Rom.

96Pace BAGD, s.v. dTrcK(56qbLat,


2; Oepke, TDNT, 2:319. Schlier, TDNT, 2:31 n2, takes
the imagery from a royal court where public officials are disgraced by being stripped of their honor
battlefield
from
the
than
where an enemy is disarmed (as rendered in the NRSW He treats
rather
the verb as a "divestment of dignity" rather than a "disarming of weapons. " See also Lohse,
Colossians, 112, and Martin, Colossians, 87.

224
In this first view, then, the d7TK&atsdepicts Christ's radical "stripping off' of
His physical body in death on the cross. Like verse 10, verse 11 also deals with what
happened inclusively in the person of Christ, that is, His action included believers in
it. The transition to what has happened in the individual life history of believers
faith,
depicted
in
baptism,
through
as
comes
when Christians were united with Christ
At
in
12.
verse
conversion-initiation
as mentioned

they share in His "circumcision-

death; " it is not an independent act focusing on their own "circumcision-death. " Thus,
the whole statement (2: 11-12) is a vivid figure for death, meaning that Christ's fleshly
body was "stripped off' when He died by crucifudon, which included believers'
participation

in that saving event. However, several objections have been raised

97
this
against
view.
A second view understands ev 7-

diTcK&uct

atopaTosTov

7W

uqpKos-in 2: 11 as

flesh-dominated
believer's
(i.
his
to
the
sinful,
self),
unredeemed
a reference
nature
e.,
"
Christ,
he
(removed)
"in
by)
(effected
the
or she stripped off
which
circumcision of
98
This
for
Christian
baptism,
Jewish
the
the
substitute
rite of circumcision.
namely,
harmartiological
to
the
view appeals

flesh"),
18
("the
in
2:
to
the
mind
of
use of orape

the similar use of T6 a6pa with other qualifying genitives, as in Romans 6:6 ("body of
death"),
24
("body
body
humble
7:
Philippians
21
("the
3:
this
of
and
of our
sin"),
description
in the phrase, "putting off the old man" in
to
a parallel
state"), and
Colossians 3:9. In this view, 67TK&uts-depicts the believer's radical break with the old
life in bondage to the flesh. The cutting free from this bondage is the work of God

97See Caird, Paul's Letters, 193-94,


four
objections that lead him to decide
who presents
for the second view; also Lohse, Colossians, 103.
98This view is held by BAGD, s.v. dvK&ots-; Lightfoot, Colossians, 182; Lohse,
Colossians, 102-03; Masson, Colossiens, 126-27; Caird, Paul's Letters, 192-94; Bruce, Epistles,
103-06; Schweizer, Colossians, 143; id., TDNT, 7: 136; R. Schnackenburg, Baptism in the Thought of
St. Paul. A Study in Pauline Theology, rev. ed., trans. G. R. Beasley-Murray (New York: Herder and
Herder, 1964) 68; J. Ldhnemann, Der Kolosserbrief- Komposition, Situation and Argumentation,
SNT 3 (Gatersloh: Gerd Mohn, 1971) 121-22; Zeilinger, Der Erstgeborene, 144-45; and Wright,
Colossians, 104-08. Martin, Colossians, 81-83, discusses this view as the one that "our
interpretation requires, " but he finally opts for the first view.

225
experienced in conversion-initiation,

for
beginning
the believer.
which marks a new

Corresponding to this but not required by it, the d7re0vadlievos-clause of 2: 15 can be


taken as a reference to the fact that God (regarded as the subject of the sentence)99
completely stripped the principalities

and powers of their authority in Christ's cross

(jv ab-rt.
j, v. 15), the very place where they appeared to be triumphant

over His

In
(1
Cor.
2:
6-8).
depicts God's action of disarming
this way, d7TcK8vadycvospurposes
the ruling powers of their power and authority.

The middle voice is taken in an active

and transitive sense and indicates the personal interest of the subject (i. e., God) in the
100
Thus,
focuses
"Christian
(2:
11-12)
the
the
whole
statement
of
on
action
verb.
baptism" in which believers "put off'the old sinful nature. 101 There are, however,
102
to
the
second view also.
some objections
drrcK66'oct

A third view presents a mediating position. It takes the ev7-n-

flesh-dominated
in
(i.
2:
11
to
the
person e., the sinful,
phrase
as a reference
in
is
by
Christ's
two)
that
own
stripped off
union with
unredeemed self, as view
103
(i.
His
death,
in
Christ
The
death
as
view one).
of
underlies the
circumcision e.,
One
Paul
Christ
is
is
the
through whom
speaking.
spiritual experiencesabout which
the "circumcision made without hands" is brought about. So, believers by
99Meyer, Colossians, 380-81; Masson, Colossiens, 143-44; Lohse, Colossians, 112; Wright,
Colossians, 115. Pace Lightfoot, Colossians, 187-89; Robinson, Body, 41-42; Moule, Colossians, 101;
Background
G. H. C. MacGregor, "Principalities
Cosmic
Powers:
The
of Paul's Thought, " NTS 1
and
(1954-55) 23; Bruce, Epistles, 107 n8l; Martin, Colossians, 86-87; and Larsson, Christus, 85.
100BAGD,

TDNT,

804-05; Oepke,
s.v. d7TcK86opat, 2; BDF, 316,1; Robertson, Grammar,
2: 319; see also Bruce, Epistles, 107 n82; Schweizer, Colossians, 143-44.

101Bruce, Epistles, 104, says this is described in Rom. 6: 6


as the crucifixion
of "the old
"the
destruction
body.
"
However, this comparison seems to confuse positional
the
of
sinful
and
self'
and moral categories.
102See Dunn, "The'Body'in
Colossians, " 168-70; Gundry, S6ma, 40-43; and Abbott,
Ephesians and Colossians, 251. The issue at the Jerusalem Council in Acts 15 was not baptism
instead of circumcision, but the requirement
Baptism did not put a
of baptism and circumcision.
Paul's readers do not need "circumcision of the flesh"
stop to the circumcision of Jews (e. g., Timothy).
because they have already received "circumcision
of the heart, " a spiritual reality effected by God.

103Moule, Colossians, 95-96.

226
participation with Him in His death through faith, as depicted in baptism, were
(drr&8vaLs-,
stripped
understood in a passive sense here) of the "body of flesh. " The
flesh, while still a threat to believers, has been stripped of its controlling power over
them in the "cutting off' (death) of Christ on the cross (cf. Gal. 5: 24). 104 In this way,
depicts
flesh-dominated
the
the
d7T&6vatsradical removal of
self (i. e., the person as
dominated by the flesh) through union with Christ. This view, however, suffers from
the same objections as the second view (see footnote 102 above).
In light of the preceding discussion, the first view is preferred. All of the adp
far
have
Colossians
denoted
in
(1:
22,
bodily
flesh
so
references
physical
or
presence
24; 2: 1,5), and so the phrase "body of flesh" in 2: 11 focuses attention on the physical
body and its susceptibility to death. 105 The whole phrase, "the removal of the body of
flesh, " applies to Jesus' death defined by the next phrase, "in the circumcision of
Christ, " a reference to Christ's death under the metaphor of circumcision.

As

indicated by the initial relative clause of verse 11 (cv q') Kai), conversion-initiation
understood as participating

is

in His "circumcision-death. "

It seems likely that by using the aorist participles in Colossians 3:9-10,


2:
11Paul
his
intended
to
the
connection with
especially d7TcK6vudycvoL,
readers
make
15 and to refer the action of these participles to the events of the cross and to their
own baptismal confession of participation

death.
His
Christ
in
both
In
2:
11-12
with

lies
15,
break
the
the
is
the
that
on
emphasis
nature
completeness
radical
and
and
of

104For Paul, gdpe had several different


associations, and thus its meaning may vary
from
context to context; see BAGD, s.v. gdpe, 1-8; Schweizer, TDNT, 7: 125-38;
considerably
Thiselton, NIDNTT, 1:674-76,678-82. See also the discussion by Barclay, Obeying the Truth, 178215, esp. 206-09, where he suggests the gloss "what is merely human" as a generalizing definition of
definition
Paul's
that
accommodates
a
apocalyptic perspective and his various uses of the
adpe,
term, but one that must be nuanced contextually. See ch. 6,313-16 for further discussion of adpe.
105Dunn, "The'Body'in Colossians, " 169;
"sinful
NEB,
"lower
"
NIV,
nature;
pace
"
NJB,
"your
GNB,
"
"sinful
natural
self;
and
nature;
self " ToDatipaTog occurs in the genitive
following the noun d7TcK&actand 7-s,oapK6,
- can be understood as an attributive genitive following
body")
better,
("fleshly
or,
as a genitive of material ("body made out of flesh"), see
-roDuopaTosWallace, Grammar, 86-88,91-92,135.

227
106
former
In 2: 11-12, there is explicit mention of faith
made with a
state of affairs.
and baptism, suggesting that "stripping off' the "old man" (3:9) and "putting on" the
"new man" (3: 10) has connections with baptismal patterns of thought.

Some have

Paul
be
for
baptism
that
to
the
the
alluding
may
action of
suggested
who
candidate
for
his
old clothes
new ones, thereby symbolizing this transfer of solidarity.
exchanges
But this practice is unlikely at this early stage. 107
4.4.3.4 Colossians
stripped

"108
"the
is
man,
and what
old
off

RSV and NEB


"nature"
"self'in

corporate,

somewhat

an individualistic
and Christ
suggests

restrict

has been put on is "the new man. "109 The

the scope of Paul's

dvOpamos% Similarly,

to translate

"person"
or
however,

3: 9b-10a: The Old Man / New Man. What has been

sense, which
are actually

a wider

and an individual

the JB, NJB,

could imply

person

NAS,

NIV

the erroneous

opposed to one another.

range of meaning,

by using

thought

one that

Paul's

can include

the word

and NRSV

idea that

use

"self'
one's

5-,
use of a'VOp(J7To,
a representative,

110
sense.

In 3: 9b, Paul says that the "old man" has been stripped

off uv'v -raTs-7TpdeEoLv

111
draws
his
The
is,
that
attention
uV'V
phrase
along
conduct
and
actions.
with
aV7-00,

106Bruce, Epistles, 146 n77, suggests that d7TcK8vodyckotin Col. 3: 9 gives much the same
sense as avaTaup6toin Rom. 6: 6, and the same idea is repeated in different language in Rom. 8: 12-13.
107See discussion of this in ch. 1,47-48,
below.
229-31
pp.
and
1080n the term 7TaAatog,see BAGD
Seesemann,
TDNT,
5: 717-20; Delling,
s.v, 7TaAat6s-;
TDNT, 1:486-87; Haarbeck, NIDNTT, 2: 713-16; ch. 2,107-11; and ch. 5,269-73.
1090n the term Katv6s-,see BAGD,
sx. Katvoc; Behm, TDNT, 3: 447-51; and Haarbeck,
Link, and Brown, NIDNTT, 2: 669-74; and on the term vco,5-,see BAGD s.v. v&S-; Behm, TDNT,
4:896-901; and Haarbeck, NIDNTT, 2:674-76. Note also R. A. Harrisville, "The Concept of Newness
in the New Testament, " JBL 74 (1955) 69-79, who concludes: "the terms kainos and neos are
NT.
Both
in
terms imply a qualitative as well as a temporal significance" (79).
the
synonymous
Also see footnote 116 below; ch. 3,174-81; and ch. 5,278-84.

ch. 1,42.

11OJeremias, TDNT, 1:364-67, esp. 366


Vorlander,
NIDNTT,
n12; and

2:564-69. See

1110n the term vpdetg, see BAGD,


s.v. 7Tpdtg;Maurer, TDNT, 6: 642-44; and Hahn,
NIDNTT, 3: 1158, who refers to the term here as "the deeds of the old man viewed as a whole (Acts
19: 18; Col. 3: 9). "

228
to the whole way of life associated with the "old man, " a way of life prior to and
without Christ and characterized by the sort of vices listed in verses 5 and 8.112 As
expressed in verse 5, the list of vices stands in apposition to Ta PAq,that is, these
be
"members"
"old
the
the
could
as
vices
viewed
of
man. " Similarly, the virtues of
following
12
and
could be called "members" of the "new man. " 113
verse
This oV'Vphrase brings into sharp focus the already recognized tension
between the indicative and the imperative.

If the "old man" along with (a6v) his

has
been
stripped off (v. 9b), as we have argued, then it seems to
already
practices
imperatives
5
8
the
of verses and unnecessary, or at least less significant.
make
However, the indicative relates to the believer's status or relationship with respect to
the "old man" who has been "put off'; while the imperative relates to the conduct of
the "old man" that believers are to "put off, " i. e., remove from their lives.
With the putting off of the "old man, " there has been a putting on of 76PPeop

[dv0p(t)7Tovj
as stated in 3:10114.The action of the aorist participle V&Gqycpot,which
is also causal and antecedent in force, is connectedbyKafto the preceding
Having
is
it,
put off the
a7TcK8vuqpc,
vot and contemporaneouswith
as argued above.
"old man, " the believer has at the same time been clothed with the "new man. " This
is a "new and distinctively Christian application of this metaphor. "115 The presence
(as
in
in
Eph.
instead
4:
22
the
contrast to 7TaAaLoSofKatpop
may
parallel)
of ve-op
in
emphasize newness point of time (temporal). If so, this would suggest that Paul's
112The u6V phrase links the "old
man" with his deeds without turning the "old man"
figure
for sinful attitudes and deeds that believers must put off.
into
itself
a
metaphor
113See discussion of yAq on pp. 202-05
above.
114See ch. 1,43-45, for a discussion of the "put
off / put on" verbs.
115Dunn, Colossians, 220-21; cf. Eph. 2: 15. See
Lohse,
Jervell,
Imago,
240;
also
Colossians, 142 n60; O'Brien, Colossians, 189-90; Gnilka, Kolosserbrief, 187-88; R. Schnackenburg,
"Der neue Mensch - Mitte christlichen Weltverstndnisses (Kol 3,9-1l)" in Schriften zum Neuen
Testament. Exegese in Fortschritt und Wandel (Munich: Ksel-Verlag, 1971) 392-413; and
M. Thompson, Clothed with Christ: The Example and Teaching of Jesus in Romans 12: 1-15: 13.
JSNTSup 59 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1991) 149-58.

229
Colossian readers were relatively
synonymous
distinctive
participle

new (recent) converts.

However,

with KatVO5'here and appears simply as a stylistic

idea of KatP65,(qualitative

freshness), if maintained,

follows
immediately.
dvaKatpo'V11
that
Evov

is
probably
Pew

change since the


is supplied by the

116 Before discussing the identity

for
these
"
"new
to
the
"old"
the
setting
man, we shall give consideration
and
of
designations.
It is generally recognized among scholars that 3: 9-11 alludes to a baptismal
between
text
this
based
is
in
117
This
judgment
and
often
on
parallels
wording
setting.
is
One
baptism
is
Pauline
texts
such passage
explictly mentioned.
where
other
Galatians 3: 27-28 where three parallels are evident: 1) the clothing metaphor-"put
Jew,
Greek
"neither
language
Gal.
2)
3:
28);
the
3:
9-10,12;
/
(Col.
nor
of
on put off'
both
in
&L
including
Gal.
3:
28),
free"
3:
11;
the
(Col.
unusual expression obK
slave nor
fact
the
3)
that
Jas.
17);
the
1:
Cor.
6:
1
5
NT
in
(elsewhere
the
texts
and
and
only
3:
27).
Gal.
3:
10;
(Col.
"
"person,
is
"put
the
not a moral quality
on" a
verb
of
object
be
3:
28),
(Gal.
Jts-,
Christ
Jesus"
(efs-)
in
"you
an
The masculine
could well
are all one

116Until recently, most scholars and lexicographers maintained a fairly rigid distinction
between Pos-and Katv6s-by regarding P&s- primarily as a temporal adjective and Katv6s-as a
in
is
is
time
"N&S'
Behm,
TDNT,
For
3:
447,
or
new
what
states:
example,
adjective.
qualitative
is
is
for
Katp6g
the
lack
immaturity
the
what
i.
old.
of respect
or
suggestion of
origin, e., young, with
in
the
from
better
than
different
impressive,
the
superior
in
value or
old,
usual,
nature,
new
Col.
Eph.
22-24
both
4:
3:
9-10
TDNT,
3:
he
In
449
the
that
and
of
context
n15,
says
attraction ......
life
for
Christian
(mode)
the
time
ideas
the
the
the
are closely
of
of
new
and
new quality
shows that
does
that
However,
demonstrate
MM,
314-15,
not
papyrus
usage
related and complementary.
in
The
Concept
Newness
Harrisville,
A.
R.
After
investigation,
distinction.
thorough
this
of
a
support
distinction
the
Augsburg,
that
(Minneapolis:
1960)
1-11,
Testament
New
arose
concluded
the
believed
literature
Lexicographers
late
(1820-40).
classical
supported
who
and exegetes
relatively
NT.
However,
to
the
LXX
two
terms
Koin6
it
the
to
the
the
distinction
appear
of
and
applied
such a
be used interchangeably (synonymously) in the LXX and the Koin6, with the temporal and
Cor.
7;
by
5:
both
(cf.
1
determined
the
to
context
vcos-and Katp6s-as
qualitative aspects attributed
Grand
(reprint,
9th
Synonyms
1880
Testament,
C.
Trench,
New
R.
Pace
the
Cor.
3:
6,14).
ed.,
2
of
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1953) 219-25.
117Lohse, Colossians, 141; O'Brien, Colossians, 189; Jervell, Imago, 231-35; and A. J. M.
Wedderburn, Baptism and Resurrection: Studies in Pauline Theology Against its Graeco-Roman
Background, WUNT 44 (Tdbingen: J. C. B. Mohr [Paul Siebeck], 1987) 338-39. However, the verb
P&&)in and of itself does not refer to baptism as imperatival usage elsewhere addressed to already
baptized people makes clear (Rom. 13: 12,14; Col. 3: 12; Eph. 6: 11); pace Merk, Handeln, 204-05;
RNT
die
Philipper,
die
Epheser,
Philemon,
Briefe
Die
die
Kolosser,
Ernst,
J.
an
an
an
an
and
(Regensburg: Verlag Friedrich Pustet, 1974) 226. See ch. 1,45 n130.

230
abridged way of saying "you are all one new man in Christ Jesus" (cf. Col. 3: 10-11; 1
Cor. 12: 13; Eph. 2: 15). 118

In Colossiansitself, Paul exhorts the readers to continue in the teaching


they received in the beginning (2:6), and he reminds them of the meaning of baptism
(2: 12) even though he had never visited the church there (cf. 1:4,7-8; 2: 1). This
suggests that he is referring to specific instruction
baptism itself

they received in connection with

This may explain why concepts introduced in connection with baptism

are not otherwise explained in the letter. Paul apparently assumes that the audience
is already familiar with these ideas derived from a standardized core of instruction
that all Christian converts received at the time of their baptism or soon after. This
for
the presence of the "old man" / "new man" here within a wider
may well account
paraenetic context. This may also help explain the abrupt and rather casual
"old
to
the
reference
man" in Romans 6, even though Paul had not yet been to Rome
He
apparently assumed the readers were already familiar with it; hence the
either.
"do
know?
" (6:3) as well as "and (or, since) you know" (6:6). 119 The
words,
you not
in
Ephesians
4: 21, "you heard and were taught in him" (i. e., Christ),
statement
presumably at the time of conversion seems to refer to standardized baptismal
instruction also. 120 Thus, we hold the view that the "putting off / putting on" in

118Barth, Ephesians, 1:309; E. Best, One Body in Christ: A Study in the Relationship
of
the Church to Christ in the Epistles of the Apostle Paul (London: SPCK, 1955) 79; pace F. F. Bruce,
The Epistle to the Galatians. A Commentary on the Greek Text, NIGTC (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1982) 190; and H. D. Betz, Galatians: A Commentary on Paul's Letter to the Churches in Galatia
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1979) 187-88, who wants to supply 0,tipa here. However, this would
instead
&
the
neuter
of erg (cf. Rom. 12:5; 1 Cor. 10: 17; 12: 12,20; Eph. 2: 14-15; also cf.
require
John 10:30; 17: 11,23; 1 Cor. 3: 8).
119Seethe comments in
ch. 2,84-86 and 104-05; also A. J. M. Wedderburn, "Hellenistic
Christian Traditions in Romans 6?" NTS 29 (1983) 337. Dunn, Baptism, 144 n17, sees this as
Paul's way of introducing new information, but it makes better sense to view it as a reminder of
what they already know based on their baptismal instruction. This does not preclude the notion
that Paul originated the "old man / new man" metaphor and early on contributed it to Christian
instruction through his missionary preaching.
120See ch. 5,258-63 for a discussion
of this text.

231
Colossians 3: 9-10 relates to something accomplished in "baptism" (conversioninitiation) and something concerning which the converts received instruction.
If this is a baptismal "putting off / putting on, " did Paul associate it with
dying and rising with Christ? Three items in this context and elsewhere suggest that
he did. First, dying with Christ and entrance into new life are associated with baptism
letter
(cf.
Col.
in
2:
11-13;
3:
1-4),
this
earlier
and the reference to baptism through the
is
in
3:
9-10
probably another way of referring to the same
clothing metaphor
121
Second,
between
Colossians 2: 11 and 3:9, in which
the
indirect parallel
event.
Christ's physical body is pictured as a garment and His death is viewed as the
forges
that
garment,
another link between the clothing metaphor and
stripping off of
in 2: 11 and d7re-K&Ollat
dying with Christ (67TcK8VUtsin 3:9). Third, since the "old man"
baptismal
having
Christ
is
in
Romans
it
in
6:
3-6,
that
a
setting
appears
crucified with
"put off the old man" here refers to the same basic occasion. 122
The identity of the "old man / new man" has been understood and expressed
in various ways by interpreters of Paul. 123 In light of various factors in this passage
"old
/
discussed
the
the
new man" as
above, we may summarize
as
meaning of
follows. At conversion-initiation,

believers have put off the "old man" as those who

have been crucified and buried with Christ (Col. 2: 11), and have put on the "new man"
belong
Christ's
in
has
to
the
those
that
new
who
as
creation
come about
resurrection.
The "old man" refers to the status and conduct of the individual person who lives
At
faith
Christ.
in
the
the same time it signifies
to
and
rule
of
power
sin
prior
under

121The association of baptism


with death is not unique to Paul since Jesus' death and
that of His disciples is termed a "baptism" in Mark 10: 38-39 (cf. Luke 12: 50). See R. Scroggs and
K. I. Groff, "Baptism in Mark: Dying and Rising with Christ, " JBL 92 (1973) 536-37.
122See discussion in ch. 2,82-84,92-93,
linkage
Those
96-97.
this
accept
and
who
include Tannehill, Dying and Rising, 52-54; Beasley-Murray,
Baptism, 149; Dunn, Baptism, 158;
P. W. van der Horst, "Observations
on a Pauline Expression, " NTS 19 (1973) 182; Zeilinger, Der
Erstgeborene, 152; and Scroggs and Groff, "Baptism, " 539-40.
123See the survey of views in
ch. 1,52-60

232
that one belongs to the old humanity in Adam, the representative embodiment of the
old humanity.

On the other hand, the "new man" refers to the status and conduct of

the individual who lives under the power and rule of the new creation and is being
it
Creator's
image.
At
that
in
the
time,
the
one
signifies
same
continually renewed
belongs to the new humanity in Christ, the representative embodiment of the new
humanity. 124
4.4.3.5 Colossians

3: 10b: The Renewal

Man.
New
the
of

It is the "new

in
increase
his
being
(ct',
is
to
progressive
renewed with a view
5-)
man" who constantly
knowledge. 125 The participle dvaKawo'UPcvov is a present passiue (not middle)
in
4:
16
Corinthians
the
in
2
this
that
occurs
only
passage
and
adjectival participle
New Testament. In the latter text, the "inner man" (vs. the "outer man") is being
force
the
day,
tense,
day
by
the
the
passive
while
of
present
which reflects
renewed
be
divine
the
that
activity.
placed on
emphasis should
voice suggests

It is a reference

in
8taooe-ipc-rat
Christian,
the
the
used
to the moral and spiritual renewal of
opposite of
"
"old
"
"126
Likewise,
"new
the
it
is
"outer
the
to
the
man, who
man, not
man.
reference
is being renewed. 127 This is confirmed by the contrasting descriptive clause, "who is
being corrupted, " that modifies the "old man" in the Ephesians 4: 22 parallel.

typology,

124See O'Brien, Colossians, 190-91. This viewpoint grows out of the Adam-Christ
Cor.
1
15:
22).
See
12-21;
1,40-41.
in
Pauline
5:
(Rom.
fundamental
theology
ch.
motif
a

125Behm, TDNT, 3: 452-53. The preposition cis- could express purpose, "with a view to"
(Moule, Idiom-Book, 70); result, "which results in knowledge or perception-the
response of the
"in
be
locative
Christ"
(Moule,
P,
the
Colossians,
to
God
121);
to
equivalent
a
or
or,
whole person
Lohse,
Colossians,
knowledge"
142;
in
(BAGD,
e7Tt'yvcootsknowledge,
and
KTt'Cto;
s.
v.
of
sphere
See Rom. 12: 2 for the equivalent noun.
O'Brien, Colossians, 191-92). The first option is preferred.
126Behm, TDNT, 2: 698-99. On the contextually
Wallace,
"
"divine
see
passive,
nuanced
Grammar, 437-38; BDF, 130,1; and S. E. Porter, Idioms of the Greek New Testament, 2nd ed.
(Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press) 65-66. See further discussion on dVaKatVo(d and dpavc& (Eph.
4: 24) in ch. 5,272-73; and on the "outer / inner man" in ch. 6,301-07.
127Jervell, Imago, 244 n254. He correctly
the
Kdsemann's
interpretation
of
rejects
fallen
dVaKatVo6MCVoV
the
The
the
(Leib,
148).
primeval
of
renewal
man
as
participle
renewal
"old
the
be
man" grammatically
with
connected
cannot
or conceptually.

233
It is more natural
rather than the following

to connect cis- M'yvwutv with the participle

dvaKaLvo6pcPoP

Ka-rd phrase, and to supply the content for this absolute use

from
JM'yvtoatsthe larger context, namely, the knowledge of God's will (Col. 1:9;
of
Rom. 12: 2) and His purposes in salvation

through

Christ

(Col. 2: 2; Eph. 1:9-12,17;

4: 13). 128 Em'yvo.)uts-is often used in reference to the knowledge of God and His will
following

conversion because it charts the path on which the "new man" progresses

toward the goal of conformity

to Christ. 129 This knowledge

is the determining

factor

in the conduct of the "new man. " However, it is not gained once for all or in a flash of
insight but continues to increase and grow in the life of the Christian
the "new man" is not a static but a dynamic
perfect but is continually

figure.

indicating

that

He is not yet complete and

being renewed in understanding

130
and moral character.

The passive suggests that the renewal is the work of an agent (divine) not intrinsic
the believer, although

the believer bears active responsibility

In addition, this is not only an individual


humanity
new

to

(2 Cor. 7: 1; Rom. 12: 2).

renewal but also a corporate renewal of the

in the creator's image (cf. 3: 11).

Similarly,
with the participle

be
the phrase Ka-r'CiKOva -rob K77tuavTosconnected
should also
a'Tov
V
131
"
Th
em'yvwat
than
the
e new
v.
VPe-Povrather
avaKawo6,
phrase eis-

being
is
constantly
man"

renewed in accord with the image (KaT'CL'KOVa)of the one who

128Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 284; Lohse, Colossians, 143; Jervell, Imago, 255-56.
129BAGD, s. v. 67Ttyv&)ots-;Bultmann,
TDNT, 1: 706-07; Schmitz, NIDNTT,
2: 397-403;
Bruce, Epistles, 46 n30; O'Brien, Colossians, 192; Dunn, Colossians, 222. Moule, Colossians, 159-64,
concludes that in the NT j7Tiyvtoot,- is specifically concerned with the knowledge of Christ and
likeness.
His
to
conformity
130Pace J. C. Dillow, The Reign
of the Servant Kings: A Study of Eternal Security and the
Final Significance of Man (Miami Springs, FL: Schoettle Publishing,
1992) 170, who says: "When
the Christian is viewed as 'one born of God, ' the reference is evidently to his true identity as a new
The
is
(Eph.
Christ.
Christian
4:
24;
in
Col.
in
life
3:
10),
the
the
sinless
new
man
and no sin
man
of
he
from
is,
a new creation" (italics mine). Further, he says: "How can a perfect
really
who
ever comes
be
'renewed'?
The
Christ
in
renewal is 'into' (eis) knowledge and 'according to' (kata) the
new man
image of God. The new man while without sin is not mature" (178, italics mine). These statements
about the new man are erroneous.

131Jervell, Imago, 248-49; Larsson, Christus, 198; O'Brien, Colossians, 191.

234
him
WT60.
created

Three items call for special attention here. First, what is the

This
"new
"
to
the
pronoun
refers
antecedent of a6Tov?
man, the redeemed person of
the new creation, not to Christ or redeemed humanity in general. 132 In turn, avTOV
serves as the object of the substantival aorist participle

"new
The
TObKT[OaV7oS-.

his
being
has
been
is
(KaTa)
image
in
the
and
now
created
renewed
of
man"
accord with
creator.
Second, who is the creator of the "new man"-Christ

or God? Some

interpreters have put forth several reasons for taking Christ as the creator of the
"new man. "133 The argument is based on: 1) Paul's references elsewhere to the
Christian putting on Christ (Gal. 3: 27; Rom. 13: 14); 2) the statement of Colossians
3: 11 that Christ is "everything" (Trap-ra)and "in all" Vp Trdatv,i. e., indwelling all
Christ
is
Church);
3)
in
Ephesians
to
His
2:
15
the
said
parallel
where
members of
4:
24
Himself;
Ephesians
the
in
in
4)
"one
the
the
where
and
parallel
new man"
create
"
God,
image
"according
to
the
"new man" is said to be created KaTd Oe-ov,
of
viewed as
i. e., Christ. 134
On the other hand, most recent interpreters have brought forward reasons
for taking God as the creator of the "new man. "135 The argument is based on: 1) the
God
have
been
by
Genesis
26-27,
first
is
1:
Adam
to
the
to
created
said
where
allusion

132Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 284; Lightfoot, Colossians, 214-15; Moule,


Colossians, 120; Masson, Colossiens, 144; Scroggs, Last Adam, 69-70.
133Lohmeyer, Kolosser, 140-42; Behm, TDNT, 3: 453; M. Black, "The Pauline Doctrine of
the Second Adam, " SJT 7 (1954) 170-79, esp. 175; S. G. Wilson, "New Wine in Old Wineskins: IX.
Image of God, " ExpTim 85 (1973-74) 356-61, esp. 358; see further discussion in Eltester, Eikon,
158-64. Chrysostom and others in the early church took this view.
1340n these passages, see pp. 241-42 below; ch. 3,174-77; and ch. 5,280-82.
135Lightfoot, Colossians, 214-15; Moule, Colossians, 120; Peake, "Colossians, " 3:539;
Scroggs, Last Adam, 69; Masson, Colossiens, 144; Jervell, Imago, 219,249-50; Larsson, Christus,
205-06; Martin, Colossians, 107; Merk, Handeln, 207; Lohse, Colossians, 143; O'Brien, Colossians,
191; Barth and Blanke, Colossians, 413; Dunn, Colossians, 222; Gnilka, Kolosserbrief, 188. In Eph.
4: 24, the "new man" is created KaTd Oc6v,literally, "according to God, " but the phrase can be
likeness
(image)
"after
God"
21).
the
Phil.
3:
(cf.
Cor.
4:
16;
Col.
3:
10;
2
3:
18;
of
as
understood

235
in the image of God" (1: 27); 2) the fact that God is usually the
"in his own image
...
New
Testament
in
its
subject Of K7t'CCO
represented

is almost always

uses and the act of creating

logical
136
God
is
3)
God;
the
the
that
the
subject of
claim
and
as
work of

the passive verbs 6-KTL'oOq


and &TtoTat in Colossians 1: 16.

Apart from the unique christological contribution


favors
designating
evidence
weight of
aorist participle

indicates
KTt'01aVT05-

Ephesians
2:
15,
the
of

God as the creator of the "new man" here. The


that His creative act is antecedent

(76v
dvaKatvoVPcvov), and either contemporaneous
of
renewal
process
11,
antecedent
of verse

conversion-initiation.

to the putting

to the present

light
in
with, or,

Vv6vorapevot)
"new
the
on
man" at
of

If antecedent, the emphasis lies on the prior existence of the

in
"new
the
connection
created
with
redemptive-historical
man"
corporate
Jesus (cf. Eph. 2: 14-18). Then, at conversion-initiation

death of

the "new man" was "put on"

by the believer and is now being renewed. If contemporaneous, which is most likely
here in light of verse 10, the emphasis is on the individual
conversion-initiation

"new man" created at

(cf 2 Cor. 5: 17) when the "new man" was "put on" by the

believer and is now being renewed. 137


in this phrase-Christ
Third, who is the referent Of ELK&J'V
referring

God?
Is
Paul
or

to the renewal of the "new man" according to the "image of Christ"

"image of God"? 138 Understandably,

the interpreters

who take Christ

or the

as the creator

136See Rom. 1:25; 8: 19-22,39; 1 Cor. 11:9; Col. 1: 15-16,23; Eph. 2: 10; 3: 9; 4: 24; 1 Tim.
4:3; also Matt. 19:4; Mark 13: 19; 1 Pet. 4: 19; Rev. 4: 11; 10:6. In Eph. 2: 15, Christ is said to have
in
Himself
keeping
Christ's
"
however,
in
the
"the
This,
is
man
with
emphasis
new
on
one
created
Paul
in
God
Christ
that
the
the
passage.
as
creator
speaks
work
with
as
usually
of
mediatorial
both
"old"
"new"
Col.
(cf.
1:16).
and
of
creation
mediator
137The antecedent use of the aorist participle is most common; however, if the controlling
(i.
ev6vadpepot
here), the action of the participle is often
is
e.,
aorist
also
verb or verbal
contemporaneous with the action of the verb; see Robertson, Grammar, 1112-14; and Wallace,
Grammar, 614-15. See additional discussion in ch. 3,175-76, and ch. 5,281-82.
1380n the word clKt6v, see BAGD, sx.
381-97;
TDNT,
2:
Kittel
2;
Lb,
al.,
et
clKt6v,
Flender, NIDNTT, 2:286-88,292-93; Eltester, Eikon, 156-64; and Jervell, Imago, esp. 214-16. This
NT:
denote
in
(Heb.
15
Law
23
times
the
1
to
the
physical
appears
word
refers
representations,
10: 1), 5 relate humans to the image of God or Christ (Rom. 8: 29; 1 Cor. 11:7; 15:49; 2 Cor. 3: 18;

236
Christ
the
take
of
new man also
as the referentof

139
Consequently,
"new
the
Cilctup.

image
Christ,
being
is
the
that is, he is a copy of Christ's
of
man"
renewed after
image. Some interpreters who take God as the creator of the new man, nevertheless,
take Christ, who is the image of God (Col. 1:15), as the middle term between God and
140
Christ
However,
is
image
God,
being
"new
is
the
the
while
of
renewed
man"
man.
him,
God,
is,
the
to
that
one
who created
as ar gu ed above.
Ka-r clicovawith reference
Thus, other interpreters take God not only as the creator of the new man but also as
the referentOf CiK06041 The "new man" is being renewed according to the image of
(belonging to) God his creator. 142

The last view appears to reflect Paul's meaning best for several reasons.
First, the allusion to Genesis 1:26-27 is unmistakable, suggesting that Paul draws on
the "image of God" concept from the old (Genesis) creation to describe a reality of the
God"
143
"image
Second,
implies
the
the
that
to
of
reference
renewal
new creation.
in
being
damaged
(but
lost)
is
the
and corrupted
restored
not
and now
was severely

Col. 3: 10), and 2 denote Christ as the image of God (2 Cor. 4: 4; Col. 1: 15).
139See adherents to this view in footnote 133 above. Some take the Ka-ra phrase to mean
"according to Christ, " but the parallel Ka-rd 060P(Eph. 4: 24) makes this improbable; and, one would
before
if
"the
image of Christ" were Paul's meaning according to Peake,
the
article
ctK6va
expect
"Colossians, " 3:539, and Lightfoot, Colossians, 214.
140Jervell, Imago, 276-78, insists that Christ is the ciKt6v -roi)OcoD(Col. 1:15)
and the
Christian is renewed Ka-r'CtKOva,that is, "according to His image; " Christ is Vorbild, the believer is
Abbild; also, Masson, Colossiens, 144-45.
141Scroggs, Last Adam, 69-70; O'Brien, Colossians, 191-92.
142The aorist substantival participle
is
70D KTioavTo,
(- a genitive of possession modifying
"according
image
"new
(belonging
One
(the
to
the
(God)
thus:
him
the
to)
of
who
created
KaT'c11K6va,
man, " i. e., the redeemed man of the new creation). " On the substantival participle, see Wallace,
Grammar, 619-21. For KaTd denoting pattern or standard, "in accordance with, corresponding to, "
5.
BAGD,
v.
s.
Kara,
see
143Pace W. G. Kiimmel, Man in the New Testament,
(London:
Vincent
J.
J.
trans.
rev. ed.,
Epworth Press, 1963) 67-68 n78; Merk, Handeln, 207. The allusion does not imply an identity of the
Genesis
the
creation, but only an analogy between the two. Dunn, Colossians, 222,
with
new creation
".
the understanding of creation as God imprinting his image on humanity remained
states:
-.
fundamental to both Judaism and Christianity
11
....

237
"new man. "144 Third, this passage connects back with Colossians 1: 15-20 where,
among other things, it is said that Christ is "the image of the invisible God" (1: 15, cf.
2 Cor. 4:4). 145 He exists as the image of God. The "new man" is being renewed KaT'
of God. He does not become the image of Christ but the image of God. For
61KOtla
Paul, people in the new creation will one day be fully restored to the image of God.146
Fourth, this restoration of the divine image is nothing other than the "new man" being
transformed into the same image in which Christ now exists as Paul states elsewhere
(Rom. 8:29; 1 Cor. 15:49; 2 Cor. 3: 18). Since Christ is the image of the invisible God,
Paul can also describe the goal of redemption as that of bringing believers into
conformity with the image of God's Son (Rom. 8: 29) and of changing them more and
more into His likeness both individually

and corporately (2 Cor. 3: 18; cf. Eph. 4: 7-

16).147 Nevertheless, the "new man" does not become an "image of Christ" but the
fully restored "image of God." His renewal is in conformity to Christ who now already
exists as that image perfectly. It is only through Christ, then, that the "new man" is
God's
image
to
renewed according
so that both are the image of God. 148 Fifth, the

144Kittel, TDNT, 2:392-94; cf. Wis. 2: 23; 13-15. Pace Gnilka, Kolosserbrief, 188, the
divine image has not been lost or entirely effaced by the Fall. In fact, Gen. 5: 1-3; 9:6; 1 Cor. 11:7;
and Jas. 3:9 indicate that God's image, to some degree, remains in all humans even after the Fall.
145According to Paul, the invisible God has become
visible in Christ. He perfectly
embodies and reveals the very nature and character of God (O'Brien, Colossians, 42-43). As the
image of the God who is invisible (cf. Rom. 1:20; John 1: 18; Heb. 1:3; 11:27; Acts 14: 17; 15:23-28;
1 Tim. 1:17), Christ does not belong to the created order but stands with the creator who through
Christ acts upon and in the whole creation. See Ridderbos, Paul, 69-73. On Jewish interpretations
Scroggs,
Genesis
Last Adam, 16-28,32-37,70.
texts,
the
see
of
146Scroggs, Last Adam, 68-70. Scroggs
Paul
that
also uses the "image of God"
notes
"as
an eschatological term and looks ahead, rather than to primeval time, for its
concept
(70).
Paul,
interprets
then,
the concept eschatologically rather than protologically. See
realization"
discussion of the Urzeit / Endzeit theme in ch. 1,49-51.
147S. Kim, The Origin of Paul's Gospel, WUNT 4 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1992) 233,
states: "Only in the light of the epiphanic phenomenon [the Damascus christophany] can we
understand how Paul can speak of Christ as the 'image of God' on the one hand and speak at the
same time of the'image of Christ'(cf. Rom. 8: 29; 1 Cor. 15:49) on the other. "
148Scroggs, Last Adam, 68-69; Kim, Origin, 232-33,320-29; O'Brien, Colossians, 191. In
each of the texts cited, Paul stresses a certain identity between Christ and the believer (e.g., 2 Cor.

238
parallel passage in Ephesians 4: 24 does not use
created

KaT6

Ocov

to be understood

...

e'v

CiK(JJP but

instead
being
to
refers

dA770ctas-.It is likely that KaTdOEV


6tKatoa6w Kai bcTt6T77TL
is
T77s0
,7

as "like God" or "after the likeness (image) of God. "149 If the "image"

is something that believers and God share, then this text identifies
holiness that come from the truth"

as central features

"righteousness

of that image.

and

And, it

indicates that the image must be fully restored for the "new man" to be like God.
Theologians and biblical scholars continue to debate the nature of the image
God
150
in
humanity.
They
of
attempt to answer the question: What do humans and
God have in common that sets human beings apart from the rest of created life? The
major problem with the biblical data is that Scripture nowhere explicitly defines or
describes what the image of God comprises. Many scholars believe it has several
aspects. The Reformers, especially Luther and Calvin, 151appealed to such texts as
Colossians 3: 10 and Ephesians 4: 24, and proposed "righteousness and holiness" as
the essence of God's image. Since these and other communicable attributes of God
"relational,
" perhaps, as a starting point, it is fair to speak of God's image in
are also
humanity as at least "moral and relational" in nature. As such, the image of God,
though corrupted by the Fall, is being increasingly renewed and perfected in redeemed
humanity-the

individual and corporate "new man. "

The allusion to Genesis 1:27 in Colossians 3: 10 seems to justify interpreting


Paul's use of the "old man" as a reference to the first Adam, the prototypical "old

3: 18, "being transformed into the same image"). But these texts also reveal the "already-not yet"
tension in Pauline eschatology, namely, the tension between partial realization in the present
(2 Cor. 3: 18; Col. 3: 10) and full possession in the future (Rom. 8: 29; 1 Cor. 15:49). The Christian is
a "new person" (realized) who is still in the process of renewal (not yet fully realized).
149See the discussion in
ch. 5,280-82.

literature,

150For a discussion of this topic in biblical


scholarship with references to recent
see G. Bray, "The Significance of God's Image in Man, " TynB 42 (1991) 195-225.

151M. Luther, Luther's Works,


eds. J. Pelikan and H. T. Lehman (Philadelphia:
Muhlenburg Press, 1958) 1:61-63; and J. Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, ed. J. T.
McNeill, trans. F. L. Battles, LCC (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1960) 1:15.3-4.

239
"
humanity's
man, and
standing in him, and his use of the "new man" as a reference to
the last Adam, the prototypical "new man, " and believing humanity's standing in
Him. For Paul, the identity of the last Adam is Christ (1 Cor. 15:45-46). One might
argue that the "new man, " then, refers to Christ Himself since Paul states that
believers have put on Christ in baptism (conversion-initiation),

instead of saying that

they have put on the "new man" (Gal. 3: 27), and he also urges them to put on Christ
in ethical renewal (Rom. 13: 14).152 However, the "new man" has been created (Col.
3: 10) and Christ is not created (Col. 1: 15-16). This suggests that Paul orients the
"new man" figure toward the members rather than the head of the new creation even
though Christ is the prototype of the new humanity both at its inception and in its
continuance.
4.4.3.6 Colossians
r/

3: 11: The Sphere of the New Man.

In the opening

It

words of this verse, 07TOV


OV'K
0/1, the relative adverb 67Tov,whose antecedent is the
[diOp&)7ToP1
in verse 10, denotes "place where. " It is used
substantival T6PPeop
figuratively here to designate the sphere of the "new man, " the new creation realm in
Christ, and to introduce some things that are found init. 153 The barriers that
from
separated people
one another in the old creation, and which still exist there, have
been put aside in the new creation. This new situation is objectively real and
historically present in the new humanity, the corporate new man, the Body of Christ
(Rom. 10: 12; 1 Cor. 12: 13; Gal. 3: 28; Eph. 2: 15), since all believers were baptized by
Spirit
Body
into
the
one
of Christ (i Cor. 12: 13). The thought of Galatians 3:28 is,
one
in fact, repeated and modified according to the needs of the Colossian readers. 154
152Lohmeyer, Kolosser, 140-42; thus Behm, TDNT,
become a new man as Christ is the new man. "

3: 453, states: "The Christian

is to

153BAGD, s. 6vov, 2. Robertson, Grammar,


712, brings out the force of 0'7Touby calling
v.
it "almost personal" in that 67Tovequals ev 0. Dibelius-Greeven,
Kolosser, 42, describe it as "in the
realm of the new man. "

154Lightfoot, Colossians, 214-15; Martin, Colossians,


108; Jervell, Imago, 251; O'Brien,
Colossians, 192; pace Lohse, Colossians, 143, who regards the
verse as traditional material.

240
There is equality in Christ because all believers, regardless of race, religious tradition,
class, or social status, have been baptized into Christ. All these distinctions that put
in
people
separate categories are no longer relevant in the community of the new
"in
Christ.
" Thus the force of
creation

0'7TOv

and the antitheses in this verse indicate

that Paul now speaks of the "new man" on the corporate level.
The word e7'PL
is the longer form of the preposition v with C'OITLP
understood
U,ilcuTtO. It appears in the New Testament with the meaning "there is" and always
occurs with a negative WK) serving to point out an objective fact (cf Gal. 3: 28). It
negates not merely the fact-something

"does not exist"-but

also the possibility-

"cannot
something
exist. "155 This leads us to consider the barriers that can no longer
exist in the corporate "new man" based on the gospel Paul preached.
First, national and racial barriers-Greek

and Jew-are

transcended in the

by
the gospel, which is addressedto all (Rom. 1:16). Here, as elsewhere,
creation
new
is used in the wider comprehensive senseof Gentile as opposedto Jew (cf. e.g.,
'EAA71k,
Rom. 1:16; 2:9-10; 3:9-12; 1 Cor. 1:22-24; 12:13; Gal. 3:28.156 Second,religious
privileges such as circumcision, whether inherited by birth or adopted later, have lost
their significance and have been disregarded in the new creation (Gal. 6:15; 5:6; 1 Cor.
7:19; Rom. 2:25-29; 4:9-12).157Third, while to the Jew the world was divided into
Jews and Greeks (privileged and unprivileged religiously), to the Greeks and Romans,
the world was divided into Greeks and barbarians (privileged and unprivileged

155BDF, 98; BAGD,


s. v. &t; Lightfoot, Colossians, 214; see also Martin,
Dunn, Colossians, 223; pace Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 285.

Colossians,

108;

1560n the word 'EkAqv in Paul,


see Windisch, TDNT, 1: 551-53; 2: 512-16; Bietenhard,
NIDNTT,
2: 124-27; and on Yov&Tos- in Paul, see Gutbrod, TDNT, 3: 380-82. Manuscripts
D* FG
it vgmss, and a few Church Fathers insert apae-PKat' OjAv ("male and female" probably from Gal.
3: 28) at the beginning of the series, but the addition is, no doubt, secondary. The singular nouns
are generic and so may be rendered "Greeks and Jews. " See ch. 3,170-71 n70.

1570n the word dKPO)3VO'Tia, Schmidt, TDNT, 1:225-26;


see
and on 7cptTop, see Meyer,
TDNT, 6:82-83; and Hahn, NIDNTT, 1:307-12. These terms, "the circumcised (Jews) and the
(Gentiles)"
form
an abV a' chiasmus with the first word pair, "Greeks and Jews. "
uncircumcised

241
intellectually and culturally).

But such cultural barriers are also disregarded in the

(Rom.
Cor.
1:
14;
1
14: 11; Acts 28: 2,4). Here dp,3apos-is probably meant
new creation
to cover Gentiles of non-Greek culture, while the EK6077sis cited as the roughest and
158
barbarian.
Fourth, social barriers (slave vs. free) are also
type
of
most uncivilized
disregarded in the new creation (Gal. 3:28; 1 Cor. 7:22; Philemon). 159 For Greeks and
Romans alike, the slave was a piece of property legally speaking. But within the
Christian community, the slave, as much as the free person, was considered a
Christian "brother or sister. " The conversion of Onesimus and his return to Philemon
fitting
illustration
would provide a

of this to the Colossian Christians.

This series,

then, points to the equality and unity of all believers in Christ, both of which are
grounded in their baptism into Christ (Gal. 3:27). It is a theological rather than a
humanity.
the
new
sociological profile of
In contrast WAd) to the old order of things where divisive barriers

separate

160
Christ
(emphatic
difficult
in
It
is
is
the
world,
position)
people
Kat
7TdorLp.
7mv-ra
cp
determine whether

is
cp 7Tdatp neuter or masculine.

to

The neuter word 7Tap-raand

Colossians 1: 15-20 would support understanding it as neuter: Christ is "everything


161
"
However,
in
if the phrase is analyzed as a whole, the parallel in
and
everything.
Galatians 3: 28 and the immediate context would support treating it as masculine:

1580n the word Odp,3apos-,see Windisch, TDNT, 1:546-53; and on XK6077S., Michel,
see
TDNT, 7:447-50. The only other NT occurrence of #dpgapos-is in Acts 28: 2,4 (rendered "islanders, "
NIV), where it is used of the people of Malta who were probably of Phoenician descent. According to
Josephus, Ap. 2.269, Scythians "differ little from wild beasts. "
1590n the word &Dks-, see Rengstorf, TDNT, 2: 261-64,274-76,
and Tuente, NIDNTT,
3:595-97; and on eAc6O,
-pos-, see Schlier, TDNT, 2: 487-88,501, and Blunck, NIDNTT, 1:717-20.
The slave was described as "one who does not belong to himself but to someone else" (Aristotle, Pol.
1.1254a. 14), as "one who does not have power to refuse" (Seneca, De ben. 3.19), and as one whose
"he
be
that
prayer
was
set free immediately" (Epictetus 4.1.33). Manuscripts A D* FG
constant
insert Kai between 8oi)Ao,
5-and eAcOcpog to emphasize the contrast as in the first two pairs.
160Manuscripts BDG place the
article Td before 7TdvTa.The UBS4 text places square
brackets around it indicating dubious textual validity.
l6lLightfoot, Colossians, 217; Dunn, Colossians, 227. Ev
Vdaw is neuter in 2 Cor. 11:6;
Phil. 4: 12; 1 Tim. 3: 11; 2 Tim. 2: 7; 4: 5; and Eph. 4: 6; 6: 16.

242

Christ is "all and in all, " specifically, He is "all that matters, " all that people need to
He
indwells
Him,
irrespective
believe
in
the
enter
new creation realm, and
all who
of
their status in the old creation realm, binding them together into one. 162 The named
barriers that were so influential

and regulative of their life previous to the putting on

have
in
Christ
lost
"new
former
the
their
now
man"
meaning and value-a
of

fact

that was not recognized and accepted by the false teachers. Loyalty to Christ is to
take precedence over all sociological elements.
4.4.3.7 Colossians 3: 12a: Put On Virtue.

In Colossians 3: 12 and following,

the emphasis changes from the negative (vices) to the positive (virtues), and Paul
have
"new
those
the
to
who
put
on
man" to put on those moral
exhort
moves on
"new
"
An
inferential
the
that
man.
are characteristic of
qualities

(cf.
5)
makes
v.
obv

the connection with the preceding by introducing the direct summons that follows as
"old
his
having
the
characteristic practices
stripped off
man" with
a consequence of
(v. 9) and having put on the "new man" who is being renewed N. 10) and to whom
Christ is all and in all N. 11). The ethical consequences of having put on the "new
first
Paul
in
3:
9b-10,
detail,
but
drawn
in
more
out
once again, as
man" are now
"God's
(6,0
before
God
his
those
their
elect,
who are
standing
as
readers of
reminds
holy and beloved ones."
Five virtues that are to be "put on" (acquired) are listed in a catalog-like
his
behavior
identity.
through
"new
the
the
expresses
which
man"
series as

In

harmony
5
8,
in
to
the
the
these
of
verses
vices
promote
and
qualities
contrast
Christian community.

The "new man" owes his capability for such action to the

God
has
him
five
Christ.
in
fact,
In
given
all
of the qualities that
enabling grace
describe the new man's conduct designate acts of God or Christ in other passages:

162Martin, Colossians, 108; O'Brien, Colossians, 193. Lohse, Colossians, 145 n85,
Lordship
this
that
the
the
"to
draw
to
pleonastic
expression
with
of
remarks
attention
author wants
Christ which embraces all things. Thus, he is not concerned with the distinction between masculine
"
things.
or
people
or neuter,

243
compassion (cf. Rom. 12: 1; 2 Cor. 1:3); kindness (Rom. 2:4; 11:22; Eph. 2: 7; Titus 3: 4);
humility (Phil. 2:8); meekness (2 Cor. 10: 1); and longsuffering (Rom. 2:4; 9: 22). In
putting on these virtues along with forbearance, forgiveness and love (vv. 13-14), the
renewal that the "new man" experiences comes to light. These qualities were
displayed
in Jesus'character
perfectly and permanently

So
Paul
and conduct.
when

wishes to sum up and commend the whole body of Christian graces, he says, "Put on
the Lord Jesus Christ" (Rom. 13: 14).
The imperative verb cP(56o-aa0c
(v. 12) links the virtues that follow with the
idea of putting on the "new man" (v. 10), showing that a close relationship exists
between them. This imperative, like those in verses 5 and 8, is in the aorist tense,
signifying the decisive, holistic action that is to be taken. 163 Although the putting on
of the "new man" has taken place at conversion-initiation,

there are acts of renewal

that must continue to take place (cf. T6P apaKawo'UPepov,v. 10, and cP66oao,
0c, v. 12),
that is, the putting on of virtues characteristic of the "new man. " Once again, the
imperative is based on and develops out of an indicative dealing with the same
While
indicative
life
from
death
back
the
to
to
the
subject.
statements refer
passing
effected at conversion and to what is already present (Col. 3: 1a, 3,9b, 10a, 11,13b),
the imperatives point ahead from conversion to the expression of the new life by
those who have been raised with Christ to new life and are being renewed in order to
discern and fulfill God's will (3: 1b, 2,5,8,9a,

10b, 12).

4.5 Concluding Observations on the "Old Man / New Man! '


In Colossians 3:9-11, the designations 6 7TaAat6sdvOpmmsand 6 Peos,
[dv0p&)7To5;
for
together
the first time in the Pauline corpus. They
probably
appear
-1
occur near the outset of a predominantly paraenetic section of the letter. Four
factors influence Paul's use of these terms here: 1) verses 1-4 serve as the

163Fanning, Verbal Aspect, 362-64;


also see discussion on pp. 201 and 212-13 above.

244
"indicative"

theological

12M "imperatives"

basis for the immediate

of exhortation;

(vv. 5,8,9a)

2) the contrast

evident as Paul reminds the Colossian Christians


themselves

now (PDO in contrast

corporate associations

"old man" (vv. 5,8) but also in the virtues


new realm where old barriers

participles

(vv.

PDP(vv. 7-8) is

how they ought to conduct


past (once, 7ToTE);3)

not only in the sins that characterize


that characterize

the

the "new man" and in the

that separate people from each other have been put

(v.
11);
4)
the clothing metaphor
aside
and
is descriptive

schemaTroTe' ...

to their pre-Christian

are evident implicitly

and subsequent

("put off / put on") involving

of a contextually-defined

aorist

from
"old"
11new.
"
to
change

The aorist participles d7TcK8vudycvot


N. 9) and ev8vowevot (v. 10) are viewed
as lending indicative rather than imperative force to the clothing metaphor. The
strong theological affirmation in these participles (vv. 9-10) links up with the
indicative verbs of verses 1-4 and refers to the same theological reality.

For believers

to have "died with Christ" includes having "put off the old man; " to have "risen with
Christ" includes having "put on the new man. " This imagery pictures the change of
status and mode of existence from "old" to "new" that took place at conversioninitiation on the individual level. This theological reality (the indicative) serves as the
basis
for
incentive
the ethical exhortations (the imperative, 3:5,8,9a,
and
necessary
12M.
The conversion (baptismal) setting for the "old man / new man" and their
link with "dying and rising with Christ" allow Paul to use the terms on an individual
level. But such a connection also allows him to assume that his readers are familiar
with the corporate associations of these terms through the instruction
baptism
(conversion-initiation).
time
their
the
of
at

Thus, the "old man / new man"

stand over against each other in a redemptive-historical


individual
as
corporate
well
as
with
connections.

they received

and eschatological sense

245
As argued previously (cf. chs. 2 and 3), the corporate associations stem from
the connection of all people to Adam or Christ. Adam is the prototypical "old man"
who through the Fall established and now represents the old order of existence under
sin and death for all in the corporate "old humanity, " each member of whom is an
individualized "old man. " Christ is the prototypical "new man" who through His death
and resurrection established and now represents the new order of existence under
for
life
righteousness and
all in the corporate "new humanity, " each member of whom
is an individualized

"new man. " The invasion of the "old" by the "new" took place

redemptive-historically
conversion-initiation

at the cross and resurrection of Christ, and individually

at

believer
"put off the old man" and "put on the new
the
when

man. " Thus the two, "old man" and "new man, " do not coexist at the individual level.
The believer is now identified as a "new man" and belongs to the corporate structure
"new
the
man. "
of
Nevertheless, the believer as a "new man" encounters the corporate
structure of the "old man" and all its effects in present life experience. Consequently,
the "new man" is being renewed with a view to a progressive increase in the
knowledge of God in accord with the image of the One (God) who created him. This
implies that the "new man" is a dynamic (vs. a static) figure. This means that the
believer, though genuinely "new, " is not yet complete and perfect. He / she is already
"new" but not yet perfectly so; thus he / she is subject to the imperatives of grace and
is continually being conformed to the image of Christ, the prototypical

"new man. "

This renewal takes place within the corporate structure of the new order

Christ,
in
realm of existence
within the new humanity, where the various racial,
barriers
that separate and divide people from one another
cultural,
and
social
religious,
in the old order / realm of existence are no longer relevant. In the new creation realm
humanity
there is equality of status becauseall believers regardless of
of redeemed
race, religious tradition, culture, class, or social standing have been incorporated into

246
Christ (Gal. 3:27-28; 1 Cor. 12: 13) who is Lord over all and who by the Spirit dwells in
all who believe binding them together as one.
In this passage, then, Paul takes up a common clothing metaphor depicting
a change of status and identity and uses as its object the "old man / new man"
metaphor out of his own theological thinking in order to sum up and set forth certain
key ideas of his theology. The fact that believers have put off the "old man" and put
on the "new man" at conversion-initiation

serves as a theological summary for the

definitive transfer of the individual from the old solidarity of being "in Adam" to the
Christ.
being
"in
"
This,
in turn, is the necessary basis and incentive
new solidarity of
for conduct that comports with the "new man. "
Now we turn to Ephesians 4: 22-24, the last passage where the "old man
new man" metaphor occurs in the Pauline corpus. We must investigate this text to
double
is
this
metaphor
see whether
used in the same way as stated above, or
different
grammatical construction indicates it functions in a different way.
whether a

CHAPTER5
EPHESIANS

4: 22-24

THE OLD MAN PUT OFF / THE NEW NL4,N PUT ON


The words "to put off...

the old man


to put on the new man" occur in
and
...
Ephesians 4: 22-24. This text is the last reference to the "old man" and the "new
in
the corpus Paulinum.
man"

As in Colossians 3: 9-10, it also mentions both terms

together along with the "put off / put on" imagery. Since relevant introductory issues
concerning Ephesians have already been treated in chapter three (see ch. 3,145-46),
we begin our study of this text with a discussion of the literary context of Ephesians 4
(5-1) and the structural form of Ephesians 4: 17-24 with additional attention to 4: 1719 (5.2). This sets the stage for an exegesis of Ephesians 4: 20-24 (5.3) and concluding
observations on the "old man / new man" (5.4).
5.1 Literary

Context

Ephesians
of

As noted in chapter 3, Ephesians is usually understood to consist of two


main parts: exposition in 1:3-3: 21 and exhortation in 4: 1-6: 22, framed by the
(1:
1-2)
address
and the closing blessing (6:23-24). In part two (chs. 4-6), signaled by
(4:
Paul's
1),
o6v
7TqpaKaA6
emphasis moves from contemplative exposition to
straightforward

exhortation, although this is not a rigid shift because expositional

elements are intermingled


gives traditional

with the exhortations (e.g., 4: 4-16,30,32;

5: 25b-27). 1 He

ethical material a distinctly theological basis. However, his clear

intention in this section is to impress upon his readers that their daily
conduct must
be consistent with the Christian calling he has just expounded to them (4: 1). His
imperatives are addressed to people already freed from slavery to
sin and enslaved to
God as His chosen possession (cf. Rom. 6). Most of his readers
first-generation
were
1M. Barth, Ephesians,AB 34,34A (GardenCity, NY: Doubleday,1974)1:53-55,
and
2:453-57,rightly speaksout against driving a wedgebetweenthe "indicative" and "imperative" and
the misunderstandingsthat result. Seech. 4,198 n7.

247

248

Christians and some were probably recent converts.


The admonitions of part two could be grouped under four headings. First,
there is Paul's exhortation to maintain unity in the diversity of the Body of Christ
(4: 1-16). Second, in light of this, he gives specific admonitions, based on the motif of
the "old" and "new man" (4: 17-24), in which a vice characteristic of the "old man" and
harmful to the unity of the Church is paired with an opposite virtue that is
characteristic of the "new man" and beneficial to the unity of the Church (4: 25-5: 5).
This is continued by the antithesis between the "children of light" and the "children of
darkness" (5:6-14) and between the "wise" and the "foolish" (5: 15-20). Third, there
Haustafeln-admonitions
the
are

relating to the domestic life of believers (5:21-6: 9),2

involving wives and husbands, children and parents, and slaves and masters. Finally,
fourth, there are admonitions for believers to arm themselves for the moral battle
against spiritual powers of evil and to pray continually for one another and for Paul
(6: 10-20). He closes this section with a brief commendation of Tychicus (6: 21-22) in
the same terms as those given in Colossians 4: 7-8. In light of this overview, we turn
our attention to the structure of Paul's argument in 4: 17-24.
5.2 Structural

Form of Ephesians

4: 17-24

In terms of the structure and sequence of argument, this pericope has two
parts: 4: 17-19 and 4: 20-24. In 4: 17-19 Paul gives a penetrating description of the
status and conduct of pagan Gentiles and exhorts his Christian readers not to live like

2Summaries of domestic duties


are found here and elsewhere in the NT: Col. 3: 18-4: 1;
1 Tim. 6: 1-2; Titus 2: 1-10; and 1 Pet. 2: 13-3: 7. This suggests that such instruction formed part of
body
fairly
well-defined
of instruction imparted to converts from early times. While many of the
a
ethical emphases in these summaries have parallels in Jewish and Stoic sources, they are
presented here on the basis of and in the context of Christian theology. From the rich bibliography
on the subject, mention may be made of J. E. Crouch, The Origin and Intention of the Colossian
Haustafeln, FRLANT 109 (Gbttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1972); W. Schrage, "Zur Ethik der
neutestamentlichen Haustafeln, " NTS 21 (1974-75) 1-22; D. Liffirmann, "Neutestamentlichen
Haustafeln und Antike Okonomie, " NTS 27 (1980-81) 83-97; and D. L. Balch, "Household Codes,"
in Greco-Roman Literature and the New Testament, ed. D. E. Aune (Atlanta, GA: Scholars Press,
1988) 25-50.

249
them any longer (I-07KCTO.By contrast,
of life that is in accord with Christian

5.2.1 Ephesians

4: 17-24: Contrasts

in 4: 20-24 he sets forth the status and manner


truth

and teaching.

and Comparisons

Throughout 4: 17-24 one finds several contrastive features: 1) the contrast


between pagan Gentiles and Christians (vv. 17,20); 2) the basic exhortation that
Christians are no longer to conduct their lives as the pagan Gentiles (v. 17); 3) the
temporal references "no longer" (v. 17) and "your former way of life" (v. 22); 4) a
description of pagan thinking and conduct (vv. 17b-19) set over against Christians who
have "learned Christ" N. 21) and were taught "truth in Jesus" N. 22); 5) the antithesis
between putting off the "old man" (v. 22) and putting on the "new man" (v. 24); and 6)
the antithesis between "desires that come from deceit" N. 22) and "righteousness and
holiness that come from truth" N. 24). In essence, this is the contrast between two
types of existence: non-Christian

(4: 17-19) and Christian (4: 20-24).

This type of material appears elsewhere in the New Testament (cf. Rom.
1:21-25; 1 Thess. 4: 3-8; 5: 1-11; Col. 3: 5-11; Eph. 5: 3-20) and there are parallels in the
Old Testament and Jewish literature3 as well as in the paraenesis of Hellenistic
4
literature.
Specifically,
life
has
between
two
the
ways of
philosophical
contrast
Jewish antecedents and appears in other early Christian catechetical material. 5
Andrew Lincoln suggests that 4: 17-24 reflects three features from an underlying
Christian
baptismal
life
1)
imagery
the
the
catechesis:
early
of
new
entered upon
through conversion-initiation,

namely, the "new man" and new creation in verse 24

(cf. Rom. 6:4; Gal. 6: 15; 2 Cor. 5: 17; Col. 3: 10; Titus 3: 5); 2) the imagery of "put off'
3E. g., the Holiness Code of Leviticus,
particularly 18: 1-5,24-30; 20: 23; Wis. 14:22-31;
4 Mace. 1:26-27; 2: 15; 1QS 4.2-11; CD 4.17-19; Philo, Sac. 27,32; Virt. 182; Josephus, Ap. 2.146.
4E. g., Crates, Epist. 6-7,18-19,21; Plutarch, Mor. 441A; Epictetus 2.18.15,19; 4.1.122;
see K. Berger, "Hellenistische Gattungen im Neuen Testament" in ANRW 2.25.2 (1984) 1340-41.
5This contrast is found, for example, in the following texts: Deut. 11:26-28; 30: 15-20;
Ps. 1; Jer. 21: 8; 1QS 3-4; Matt. 7: 13-14; 1 Clem. 35.5; Did. 1-5 and Barn. 18-20.

250
(67TOT07711L)

(cf
Thess.
Vv&w)
in
24
1
5:
8;
"Put
22
that
appears
and
and
on"
verses

Rom. 13: 12-14; Gal. 3: 27; Col. 3: 8-12; 1 Pet. 2: 1; Jas. 1:21); and 3) the listing of vices
to be put away in verses 19 and 22 and virtues to be acquired in verse 24.6
Upon comparison, it is evident that there is a close relationship between this
The
Colossians
language
3:
5-11.
thought
the
and
similarities
of
passage and

be
can

follows:
set out as
Colossians 3: 5-11

Ephesians 4: 17-24
4: 17 p77KCrtiyds- 1T-cpom-rCi'KaOC6'
Mvq
Tre-ptm7d
Kai Tti

3: 7

7TacW
4: 19 as- c'pyaotap dKaOapoLaS*
7

3: 5 vopvct'av,dKaOaout'a 7TaOos-,
Mv
Kai
iTAcopeeiap
c7Ttov,
ut'ap Ka"P,

EV

7TACOVE&

i%

71'OTC

b,
Cis&
Kal'
VV
a7ro0cm9r
vvvt'
3: 9 47cOwaii'-.e.-PO-t7-6V 7TaAaL6V

4: 22 d7TOWOlOaL
U'paC KaTa 7V
pav aivaoTpoov Tot, 7TaAatOV
7TpoTc,

3: 8

4: 24 Kat' cv8v'uauOatT6v KatO,

3:10

dVO PMTOP

d40POATOV

dvopW7TOV

& -r mleutLaTt
4: 23 qmqmcQbuOaL
TOV POOC- VII(OP

4:24 -r6p

KaTa

OE6V KTL

uWpTa

6-V OTS' Kat I11V'UCL-,- 7T-C6PLC77a7oaTc

Kai jv&qacvot
dvOVm)7FOV

r6p k'7pp
pI/

3: 10 jp.. dvaKatvo'u
vmcmQpcts- cmyvtoutv
................
3:10

Ka7-'

EiKOva

700

KTigavTos-

abTov

In addition to the similarities, there are also some significant differences. In


4:22, the infinitive

diToWoOat(cf. Col. 3:8) is used in reference to the "old man" instead

Similarly,
3:
9.
in
24,
4:
found
Colossians
in
the
the
as
a7Te-K6vo-dyCVOL
participle
of
is used in reference to the "new man" instead of the participle
infinitive eP86'o-acOat
"new
found
Colossians
in
being
In
to
the
3:
10.
eP(5vud,
as
man" and
uCVOL
reference
"renewed" in 4: 23-24, the use of Katpos,and ve'os,and their respective cognate verbs is
for
"new
3:
9-10.
Where
has
Colossians
Colossians
in
the
man" and a
ve'oc
reversed

6A. T. Lincoln, Ephesians, WBC 42 (Dallas: Word Books, 1990) 272. See also
P. Carrington, The Primitive Christian Catechism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1940)
31-65; and E. G. Selwyn, The First Epistle of St. Peter, 2nd ed. (London: Macmillan, 1947) 363-466.
Note the discussion of Col. 3: 5-8,12 in ch. 4,200-14, and 242-43.

251
form of dvaKaLPOO)
for "renew, " Ephesians

participial

for the "new man" and


has KaLPOS,

form of dvapcooi for "renew. " In 4: 24, the idea of the creation of the "new

infinitival
an

to God is expressed by the phrase KaTa Ocovrather than the more

in
man"
relation

Colossians
in
3: 10. Finally,
explicit KaT'CiKOva phrase

the additional

pagan Gentiles in 4: 17c-19a and the discussion about Christians


Christ and having been taught truth

material

about

having learned

in Jesus in 4: 20-21 have no parallel

in

Colossians 3: 5-11. On the other hand, the corporate emphasis and the abolition
that divide people mentioned

barriers
various

the Ephesians passage. Nevertheless,

its distinctive

in

in Colossians 3: 11 have no parallel

by using similar

language but relating

Gentile
between
life
life
Christian
in
pagan
contrast
and
sharp
accord with
gives his paraenesis

of

it to the
Paul

truth,

emphasis in this passage.

The resumptive oW and the double use Of 76PLrraTe-to


in verse 17 provide a
following
In
4:
1-3
link
4:
1-16.
to
major
life in keeping
favorite
unity

their

with

Christian

in the Church

and diversity

Christ
Body
the
of
of

maturing

calling

using

and the role of ministers

so that

it attains

dv(5pa -rActov (4: 13b), and grows up into Christ


exhortation,
not that

it clear that

making

of pagan

Gentiles.

sections

subsequent

(in
infinitive
7TcpL7TaTc'tu

one's way of life. 8 In 4: 4-16 he develops

denoting

metaphors

live
his
Paul
to
a
readers
7TapaKaAt5o'UP,
exhorts

of Paul's

paraenesis:

specify

on the virtues

it means

to put away

characteristic

was

to

of the "new man, " while

in 4: 25-5: 2

of the "old man"

the vices characteristic

n52 for references;

calling

to

in 5: 2), 5: 3-14
4: 25-5: 2 (7T6-PL7TaTdTC

7BDF, 451,1; A. T. Robertson, A Grammar


Historical Research, 4th ed. (Nashville, TN: Broadman,
1 Cor. 8: 4; 11: 20. See ch. 4,201 n14.
8See ch. 4,210

17 he returns

key
link
a

(7TcptTraTc-tTcin 5: 8), and 5: 15-20 (Trcpt7TaTd-rc in 5: 15). The exhortations


what

(4: 13a), Cis-

to his readers'

The use of 7Te-pt7Tar6jalso provides

of

to the

faith
the
of

(4: 15). Then in verse

his
one of

the theme

in contributing

to the unity

the way of life appropriate

form),

and put

5: 3-14 and 15-20 reinforce

the

Light
Greek
New
Testament
in
the
of
of
1923) 1191-92; note the same use of ov'v in

also note ch. 2,95

n9l.

252

distinguish
between the thinking and conduct of Christians and nonto
need
Christians. Thus, it is important to note that 4:17-24, along with the emphasis on
the nature of the Church in 4:1-16, provide the theological basis and frame of
reference for the rest of Paul's paraenesis in this letter.
5.2.2 Ephesians

4: 17-19: Description

of Pagan Gentiles

Several additional observations on 4: 17-19 are important before we proceed


further.

Paul resumes his hortatory material with added emphasis using the

demonstrative pronoun TobTo,9 employing a compound predicate involving two verbs


has
forceful
of speaking in which the second verb (papT'UPOP
aL)
a more
meaning,
10
"
"to
implore
insist,
and repeating the phrase V KVPL,q) from 4: 1 (cf. 5:8). 11
namely,
or
He insists that they should no longer
Gentiles
live
pagan

(P 77K6'Tt)

live (7cpt 7=elv)

(7TCPL

12
The
infinitive
7=6).

just as (KaOblcat')the

76-pt 7Ta'FC-tV with

'
an accusative UPds,

(4: 17) cannot properly be called an imperatival infinitive. 13 Rather, it stands in


direct
to
the
apposition
TobTo,which serves as
object of the compound predicate
mentioned above. Robertson treats the infinitive

(after
indirect
discourse
clause as

Mya)) in apposition to Tob-ro,although he says it is indirect command, not indirect

9ToOTohere is prospective
I. b.9; cf. Eph. 3: 8;
pointing to what follows, BAGD, s.v. ov"To'5.,
5:5; E. Best, Ephestans, ICC (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1998) 416.
10BAGD, s.v. pap-r6pottat, 2; Strathmann, TDNT, 4: 510-11;
see also BDF, 392, Ld for
My&) used to denote giving a command. The only other NT occurrence of this usage is in 1 Thess. 2: 12.
11W. Kramer, Christ, Lord, Son
of God, SBT 50 (London: SCM, 1966) 177-79. Paul
prefers this formula in ethical contexts regarding relationships and actions in the day-to-day life of
believers (cf. 1 Thess. 4: 1; 5: 12; 1 Cor. 7:22,39; 9: 1-2; 11: 11; 15:58; Gal. 5: 10; Phil. 3: 1; 4: 1-2,4;
Eph. 4: 1,17; 5:8; 6: 1,10,21). The phrase refers to life under the authority of Christ the risen Lord.
12BAGD, s.v.
Kai, 11.3; in sentences denoting a contrastive comparison Kai strengthens
Ka%;s- but often is pleonastic and can be omitted in translation. The verb is singular following a
(cf.
BDF, 133).
plural
subject
neuter
13Pace Barth, Ephesians, 2:499,
who implies this by citing BDF, 389. However, BDF
state that this usage is limited in the NT to two passages in Paul, both without a subject, i. e.,
Rom. 12: 15 and Phil. 3: 16.

253
14
This
is
because
also
ofpapTv'popat, a verb of beseeching that Paul added
assertion.
in order to create a construction here similar to the one he used in 4: 1.
However, it is better to take the infinitives

in 4: 1 and 4: 17 as epexegetical

(complementary) of content to the immediately preceding verbs of exhortation with


direct
the
object of these verbs rather than treating them as conveying
vyd,,- as
indirect discourse or, more specifically, indirect command. 15 Indirect discourse is
reported speech or thought, but Paul is not quoting himself or anyone else directly in
these verses. 16 Rather, he implores his readers declaring what he wants them to do
positively (4: 1) and negatively (4: 17) by the respective infinitive

The
clauses.

imperatival sense, therefore, lies in the finite verb and other contextual elements
rather than in the infinitive itself
The tenses of the infinitive

refer to different aspects or kinds of action, and

if time is involved, it must be inferred from the immediate context. 17 In 4: 1, Paul uses
the aorist infinitive to represent the verbal action as a whole and as undefined (no
reference to duration, completion, or resultant state) in regard to Christians "walking"
But,
in
he
4:
17,
infinitive
their
to represent the
the
of
calling.
worthily
uses
present
durative
in
longer"
(as
"walking
they once
to
their
specific regard
no
verbal action as
did) as pagan Gentiles "walk" (7Tcpt7TaTc-L,
a durative or customary present tense).
This discussion has some bearing on our understanding of the infinitives

used in 4: 22

14Robertson, Grammar, 700,1078, but


note 1034-36,1046; see also BDF, 392, Ld for
Ay&)followed by t"Paor an accusative with an infinitive in which ACytois used as a verb of command.
15D. B. Wallace, Greek Grammar Beyond the Basics: An Exegetical Syntax
New
the
of
Testament (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996) 652.
16Robertson, Grammar, 950, claims, however, that
when a command is not quoted
directly (cf. 2 Thess. 3: 10), it may be expressed as an indirect command either by an infinitive as in
Acts 21: 21, by Fva (not 67t) as in Mark 6: 8, or by using a deliberative question as in Luke 12:5.
This is true if a command is being reported (thus it is indirect discourse as in 2 Thess. 3: 10 where a
6Tt occurs), but not if a command is being given by the speaker or writer. In this case, a Fkaclause
or an infinitive clause give the content of the command or exhortation.
171bid., 1080; 856-58.

254
and 24 as we shall see later.
It also appears that Paul resumed his presentation of hortatory matters in
foundational
a rather general,
way in 4: 17-24 before launching into specific
exhortations in 4: 25ff. He perhaps did this because he was somewhat removed from
his exposition of the believer's personal and corporate standing in Christ given in
he
2,
chapter
and
perceives the need for a summary recall of it. Thus, 4: 17-19
reflects 2: 1-3 and 11-12, and 4: 20-24 reflects 2:4-10 and 14-18. Furthermore,
he anticipates drawing upon traditional

since

paraenetic material, 18his concern is to give

his readers a proper theological base. There seems to be more and closer integration
of theological themes with ethical teaching in Ephesians than in Romans and
Colossians, although ethical teaching is theologically based there as well. This may
be due to the fact that in Ephesians Paul is not directing his comments to any
specific moral crisis and thus is giving general ethical instruction to Gentile
Christians. 19 The basic danger facing many of them was a moral relapse into their
former pre-Christian

ways.

Consistent with this observation is the fact that, in his description of pagan
Gentiles in 4:17-19, Paul refers both to their status and to their conduct. In fact, the
former is the basis of the latter and is the reason he could speak about them in such
strong terms without qualification. He says they live in Vv, sphere) purposeless
futility (paTat07-rO resulting from their "mind-set";20and they exist in a state of

181t is widely recognized that


some of Paul's ethical instructions come from common
ethical material contemporary with him. See V. Furnish, Theology and Ethics in Paul (Nashville:
Abingdon Press, 1968) passim; Martin, "Haustafeln, " NIDNTT 3:928-32; and J. D. G. Dunn, The
Theology of Paul the Apostle (Grand Rapids / Cambridge: Eerdmans, 1998) 661-67.
19SeeJ. L. Houlden, Paul's Letters from Prison: Philippians,
Ephesians, WPC (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1977) 316-17.

Colossians, Philemon,

20BAGD, s.
1: 551-52-)
TDNT, 4: 522-23; Tiedtke, NIDNTT,
v. MaTat6T77s-;Bauernfeind,
Best, Ephesians, 418. This noun forms part of the vocabulary for Jewish and early Christian
idolatry.
In
the LY-X it is a description of the emptiness of those who reject
pagan
against
polemic
God and go after false gods (cf. Esth. 4: 17 and Jer. 2: 5; 8: 19).

255
darkened understanding (perfect passive paraphrastic participle,
PI

blindness
that
causes
r6y)21
op,
participle,
inherent

to the truth.

eaKo7col-levot
...

They are excluded (perfect passive

d7AAoTpttqpCPo0 from the life of God22 because of (84

the ignorance of God

23
in them, and because of (8ta) the hardness (iTtJp(OoLV)
hearts.
their
of

Because they are in a morally

calloused or insensitive

have
(aM7ArqKOTCS-),
they
state

given themselves over (cauTow 7mp&Kav) to wicked conduct: 24 licentiousness


ducAyet'g), the pursuit

of immorality

Vpyaol'av aKa0apaia,.), and insatiable

25 Each of these nouns is comprehensive


(7TACOVCejq).

in character

(71-7

greed

involving

the whole

21BAGD, s.v. oKoT6&);Conzelmann, TDNT, 7:441-43; Hahn, NIDNTT, 1:423-25; for this
imagery note T. Dan. 2.4; T Levi 14.4; Josephus, Ant. 9.4.3; 1QS 3.3; 1QM 11.10; 15.9-10; 1 Clem.
36.2; 2 Clem. 19.2. It is "walking in darkness" as opposed to "walking in light" (Eph. 5:8). The
perfect passive participle puts the focus on an existing state or condition (BDF, 341,352).
22BAGD, s.v. d7TaAAo-rpt6ta;
Biichsel, TDNT, 1:265-66; Bietenhard, NIDNTT, 1:684-85.
The translation "excluded" or "without a share in" is justified because they had never before been
included in the "life of God" as the usual rendering "alienated" might imply; see Col. 1:21; Barth,
Ephesians, 1:257. The perfect passive participle puts the focus on an existing state. The &4 of God
is "life that comes from God" and is likely equivalent to salvation in light of 2: 1-5; see Barth,
Ephesians, 2:502; and Best, Ephestans, 420.
23The first 6id phrase (v. 18b) is paratactic to the second 8td phrase (v. 18c) and they are
to be taken together as a unified statement; see R. Schnackenburg, Ephesians. A Commentary,
T. & T. Clark, 1991) 197. Both are causal in force, and in
trans. H. Heron, EKKNT 10 (Edinburgh:
combination they provide the reason for the preceding three clauses that relate to the status of the
lack of knowledge that amounts to
Gentiles. Ignorance of God is a volitional (vs. intellectual)
God and His revelation and thus ignoring Him. The noun mqpouts-is derived from
repudiating
"to
harden
means
or petrify, " and in medical terminology refers to calloused,
which
7T&)p6tj,
insensitive tissue; see BAGD, s.v. 7n6poiats-;Schmidt, TDNT, 5: 1026-28; Becker, NIDNTT,
2: 155-56;
Barth, Ephesians, 2: 501-502; and Best, Ephesians, 420-21. Paul sees pagan ignorance of God and
deliberate refusal of God's revelation to them in creation and
immorality
as willful and culpable-a
conscience (cf. Rom. 1: 18-25 and eavTo&s- 7mp&Kav, Eph. 4: 19).

24The perfect passive participle d7MAyqK6-rcspoints to the present state of pagan


Gentiles and is taken in a causal sense; see BAGD, s.v. d7mAy&. This verb occurs only here in the
NT. In Rom. 1:24,26,28, God delivered the rejectors over to their behavior, whereas here they
have given themselves (avTobg vap&Kav, consummative aorist) to wicked behavior, which shows
their "death" in sins even though they are physically alive (Eph. 2: 1-5).
25The word doOycta means "debauchery,
sensuality, " and often alludes to sexual
depravity but is not limited to it; see BAGD, s.v. do,Aycta; Bauernfeind, TDNT, 1:490; also, Mark
7:22; Rom. 13: 13; 1 Pet. 4: 3. The word dKaOapot'ameans "impurity" and is used of sexual vices,
BAGD,
not
exclusively;
see
s.v. dKaOapuia, 2; Hauck, TDNT, 1:427-29; Link and
although
Schattenmann, NIDNTT, 3: 102-08. The word vAcovceia is preceded by ip, suggesting that their
in
is
the sphere of an insatiable desire to have one's own way regardless
carried
out
conduct
wicked
of the consequences (note, however, 5:3,5 where it denotes a vice, i. e., greed); see BAGD, s-v.
TDNT,
Delling,
6:
271-74;
Selter, NIDNTT, 1: 137-38.
vAcovceia;

256
futility
For
Paul,
Christ
is
in
the
whole person outside of
a state of
person.

without

the life of God and under judgment (cf. 2:3). This person in his or her totality is called
the "old man" in verse 22. The "old man" cannot be repaired or restored but only
by
"new
"
in
22-24.
Paul
the
man,
clear
verses
as
relinquished and replaced
makes
The difference between the "old" and the "new" is like that between "death" and "life"
(2: 1-5) or between "darkness" and "light" (5:8). Both non-Christian

Christian
and

(vs.
from
in
(vs.
described
theological
terms
thus
absolute
a
relative)
existence are
sociological) perspective.
5.3 Exegesis of Ephesians

4: 20-24

We now turn to Ephesians 4: 20-24 where we might expect Paul to describe


Gentile Christians in a manner parallel to his description of Gentile pagans in 4: 17-19,
both
their status and conduct.
presenting
5.3.1 Ephesians

4: 20: You Learned

Christ

VV
In
RKE
17.
&
&
Tt
dsThe beginning words &
dstake
the
of verse
up
y
UP

by
its
the
('
is
to
status and
contrast
presence
position)
and
emphatic
eis- emphatic
Gentile
Christian
described
Paul's
Gentiles
just
(vv.
17-19),
readers
conduct of pagan
26 The description in verses 17have learned something entirely different (ov'T0V"-rtOS-).
19 is not the life that answers to their calling in Christ (4: 1). A change has occurred
did.
did
However,
live
Paul
in
they
to
they
the
that
once
not
are not
same way
now
so
by
discussing
itself
the
the
or giving a corresponding
contrast
change
present
description of Christian conduct. Instead, he reminded them of what they had
learned, which was the reason for the change and the basis for their conduct.
2606XoTwsis an emphatic litotes, a figure that indicates a more forceful contrast than is
Ephesians
Critical
K.
Abbott,
A
T.
Exegetical
Epistles
Commentary
the
to
the
and
on
expressed;see
Salmond,
ICC
F.
Colossians,
(Edinburgh:
D.
7th
S.
T.
Clark,
&
134;
the
T.
1897)
to
ed.
and
and
"The Epistle of Paul to the Ephesians," in The Expositor's Greek Testament, vol. 3, ed. W. R. Nicoll
(London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1903) 3:340. Codex Claromontanus followed by some recent
This
full
Christ
"but
learned
You
have
after
places
a
stop
oT&js-:
commentators
not so you.
....
makes the statements uncharacteristically abrupt.

257
The object of what they learned is said to be T6PXptoTOP. In light of the
following

form
His
(v.
21),
XptuTW
indicates
777oob
the
that
office as the
probably
-r(15

Anointed

One is in view here. He is the One through

have
been
believers
set
whom

free from both the bondage and the guilt of sin described in verses 17-19. The use of
is
the
of
person
an
accusative
as
object
most unusual,
yapOdptowith
New
Testament
in
the
parallel

and in pre-Christian

Greek literature.

being without
27 This has

Christ
is
learned
in
is
the same sense
that
the
to
the
content of what
given rise
view
that other texts declare that Christ is "preached"

(Acts 5: 42; Gal. 1: 16; 1 Cor. 1: 23;

15: 12; 2 Cor. 1: 19; 4: 5; 11: 4; Phil. 1: 15); "gained" (Phil. 3: 8); "known"

(2 Cor. 5: 16; Phil.

3: 10; cf. John 14: 7,9); "received" (Col. 2: 6); or "believed" (1 Cor. 15: 1-2,11; Phil. 4: 9;
Eph. 1: 13). 28 The closest parallel

is Colossians 2: 6 where 7TapeAdgeTeT6PXptoTbv

be
"you
[the
tradition
777010DV
rendered
received
T6VK'UPtop could

Christ
Jesus
about]

the Lord" (cf. Col. 1:6-7). In both these passages, then, "Christ" stands for traditional
teaching about Him that is directly related to Christian conduct, and both these
items are associated with being taught (cf. Col. 2: 7). But probably more is intended.

The statement "assuming you have heard Him and were taught in Him" in
Christ
"you
20.
further
learned
Christ"
in
21
was preached and
verse
explains
verse
believed; He was taught and became known; and all this is summarized as "you
learned Christ. " Since the living, risen Christ is the sum and substance of the gospel,
"to learn Christ" is not only to know about Him but to be reoriented and shaped by
Him, the mediator of a new relationship with God and the source of a new way of life.
is appropriate for in no other learning is a person so
This unique use of yavOdv(u
27Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 134; Barth, Ephesians, 2: 529; A.
The
Roon,
van
Authenticity
of Ephesians, trans. S. Prescod-Jokel, NovTSup 39 (Leiden: Brill, 1975) 177. The
by
but
jpob,
Jesus,
discipleship,
in
in
Matt.
29
11:
to
spoken
occurs
a call
clause paOc-re- av'
followed
by
is
this
verb
else
an accusative object of person as here.
nowhere

28Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 134-35; H. Schlier, Der Brief


Ein
Epheser:
die
an
Kommentar, 7th ed. (Diisseldorf. Patmos, 1971) 216; BAGD, s.v. pavOdvto, 1, "Christian teaching. "
Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 340-41, says the sentence cannot refer to the doctrine of Christ or
to learning to know Christ for there are no relevant examples of such uses.

258
directly and fully the object. It can also be argued that the aorist tense points to the
time of conversion, and thus Christ was the content of the preaching they heard then
29
knowledge
instruction
the
they
the
gained subsequently.
and
substance of
as well as
To learn Christ, then, is to accept Him as the One through whom Christians have
freed
from
former
(cf.
bondage
1:
7)
the
their
are
and
pagan condition
redemption
of
life
(4:
17-19).
and way of
5.3.2 Ephesians

4: 21: Truth

in Jesus

The emphatic conditional clause introduced by ct',yOOimplies that Paul did


he
but
(cf.
2),
had
3:
instructed
his
know
them
personally
readers personally nor
not
did not call into question the fact that they had learned Christ because he assumed
that "they had heard him and were taught in him" by others. The object of the verb
his
31
Paul
that
XptoTOv.
is
to
-r6v
was not suggesting
77Kovua-rc a70V, a reference
during
His
Jesus
heard
earthly ministry.
readers actually

Rather, it is to be

from
heard
One
Christ
those
they
the
that
who
about whom
was
understood
Christ
heard
in
this
that
they
to
them,
the
since
and
gospel
sense
proclaimed
proclamation was ultimately

His own proclamation (cf. Luke 10: 16; 2 Cor. 13:3; Eph.

29Best, Ephesians, 426-27. However, Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 341, states that
the aorists are not to be pressed as a reference to the time of conversion. Rather, they indicate the
definition
fix
further
does
the
since
a particular moment. Yet pqK-rt of
not
context
past without
Rom.
have
its
(cf.
6:
6)
to
17
conversion
as
unless we assume that the
point
seems
of
reference
v.
description in vv. 17-19 was true of Paul's Gentile readers for a time following their conversion. But
this undermines the contrast (4-Ids- 8) he established between 4: 17-19 and 4: 20-24.
30This restrictive
conjunction has the idea "if at least ..., " pointing to the minimal
"if
by
It
be
3:
2.
his
translated
a writer of
readers, cf.
could
amount of content required or assumed
indeed, or assuming that; " see Robertson, Grammar,
1027 and 1147-49; BAGD, s. v. Y, 3. a; and
Barth, Ephesians, 2: 504, who suggests, "if as I assume to be the case. "
31The

verb dKo6to is usually followed by the genitive case when referring to a person.
Here the accusative is used. BDF, 173,1, state: "The classical rule for dKO66tv is: the person
heard
in
the genitive, the thing (or person: E4: 21 abT6V 4Ko6aaTc) about
stands
are
words
whose
hears
intended
in
(or
the
is
distinction
This
one
accusative
whom)
always
not
which
classical
...
."
in NT usage but seems admissible here; see also Robertson, Grammar,
506-07.

259
in this verse, to hear Christ
2: 17).32 In light of 1: 13 and the aorist tense of Kov'ua-reChrist
is,
initial
to
the
that
to
the
as
accept
message,
reception of
primarily refers
become
Christian.
in
thus
to
the
a
gospel and
proclaimed

In Romans 10: 17 Paul

declared that "faith comes from hearing" Ve dKoiiO. Hearing awakens faith, a heeding
8
Rom.
1:
Thess.
1:
8;
(cf.
1
Christ
is
(uvaKO77')
the
proclaimed gospel whose content
of
10:
16).
16:
19;
1:
5
with
with
Not only is Christ the subject matter of their initial hearing (and receiving),
but He is also the sphere within

instruction
Wv
5)33
subsequent
which
av'-n,

(MtMXOTc, aorist passive). The underlying

idea points to union with Christ.

teaching given was in the context of fellowship

in Christian

truth. 34 A significant

The

Body,
His
Christ
of
as members
with

in Him they were instructed

that is, as believers incorporated

was given

by Christian

teachers

is
taught
they
summarized
part of what
were

linked
2:
5-6
to
the
If
22-24.
these
parallel
and
are
verses
verses

in

in
passage

Colossians 2: 20-3: 11, then it could be argued that Paul assumed his readers had
learned that union with Christ was participation
resurrection,
crucifixion

death
His
in
Him
and
with

Christ
the
20)
(learned,
those
that
accepted
v.
who received
and
Col.
Gal.
24;
5:
(cf.
Rom.
6:
6;
Him
his
"old
practices with
man" and
of the

3: 9-10) and also a resurrection

to newness of life (Rom. 6: 4; Col. 3: 1,10,11).

historical
because
the
of
possible only

death and resurrection

32Barth, Ephesians, 2: 530; C. L. Mitton, Ephesians,


1981) 163; and Best, Ephesians, 427. See also ch. 3,185-86.

This is

of Jesus, which seems

NCB (Grand

Rapids: Eerdmans,

33An instrumental
ev, translated "by him" (AV) and making an explicit reference to
Following a passive verb such as MtMX0777c, one would expect
Christ as the teacher, is less likely.
/
If
1v
if
intended.
instead
instrumental
8id
respect
a
reference
of
an
meaning were
phrase
a v7r6or
(concerning)
be
then
meant,
7Tcpi
would
more suitable.
were
meaning
34Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 341; J. A. Robinson, St. Paul's Epistle to the
Macmillan,
(London:
Exposition
Notes,
2nd
Ephesians. A Revised Text and Translation
ed.
with
and
1909) 190; F. F. Bruce, The Epistles to the Colossians, to Philemon, and to the Ephesians, NICNT
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1984) 357. Best, Ephesians, 428, claims that this interpretation
would
if e8t&X67-rc were to be taken as a divine passive, "you were taught by God in
be strengthened
Christ; " but this is not a credible option here.

260

to be the reason for the reference to "truth in Jesus" in verse 21.


omv dA40cta6P TtIj
The latter part of verse 21 contains the clause: KaOa
I qooD. This clause is somewhat ambiguous and so unusual in Paul's letters that it
has proved difficult to understand.

Some interpreters have wished to treat it as a

Others
difficult
35
but
the
there
that
clause.
are no manuscripts
omit
marginal gloSS,
take it as part of the original text but understand its connection and meaning in
36
different
ways.
several
For our purposes, several observations are appropriate.

First, theKaffi

Barth
21.
takes
(not
is
integral
to
the
thought
as
KaOa
parenthetical)37
of
verse
clause
introducing a quotation rather than a comparison or a reason. 38 This view assumes
that Paul is about to quote traditional

material.

eo,-rtv is seen as a formula in


KaO&

has
been
the
"affirmed,
"
"said"
quotation
and
omitted
or
which a past participle such as
begins with the exclamation, "Truth in Jesus! " and ends with the words "in
in
Barth's
Despite
in
24.
holiness
the
truth"
observations
verse
of
righteousness and
ignores
it
here,
the
is
it
this
and
syntactically awkward and artificial
view,
support of
for
be
A
Colossians
3:
9-11.
to
made
similar objection can
relationship of these verses

35B. F. Westcott, St. Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians, ed. J. M. Schulhof (London:
Macmillan, 1906) 70-71, records a dialog with F. J. A. Hort who held this view on v. 21.
36C. A. Scott, "Ephesians IV. 21: 'As the truth is in Jesus, "' Expositor, 8th Series, III
(1912) 178-85. Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 341, notes 12 different views including his own,
following
in
instruction
believers
the
indicates
the
that
these
the
received,
as
expressed
clause
viz.,
infinitive clauses, was in accord with truth embodied in Jesus. Barth, Ephesians, 2: 533-36,
in
Christ
is
be
distinct
the
trusted
Jesus
truth
three
1)
to
saving
views:
enumerates and critiques
faith and followed in obedience. 2) Jesus'teaching during His ministry on earth is the essence of the
Church's proclamation and doctrine and as such is the "truth. " And, 3) truth in v. 21c denotes an
faithful
Jesus.
i.
true
to
and
e,
conduct
ethical attitude,
37Pace Westeott, Ephesians, 67.
38Barth, Ephesians, 2: 505,533-36, where he contends that the whole quotation (vv. 21c24) had its origin, place, and function among wise men, and Paul used it to urge believers to conduct
themselves "not as fools but as wise men (5: 15). " He cites 1:4; 5: 2,25 as possible parallels for this
-.
use of KaOa;,

261
linking the Ka%-clause with the following infinitive clauses.39
It is better to connect the KaOd6-clause with both 77'KOv'oaTc
and &MXtTe

of

the preceding clause. As such, rather than a comparison with ("just as. ")40or an
..
for
("for.
")
j,,
is
introducing
the
the
action,
reason
verbal
explanation of
KaO(,
causal
..
("because )41the action of these verbs, and this clause stands in contrast to o6x
...
Him
in
had
heard
had
been
Paul's
in
20.
Christ
ri
taught
readers
about
and
ouTws- verse
becauseChristian truth is summed up and found in Jesus. This instruction contrasts
Gentile
life
depicted in 4:17-19.
the
pattern
of
pagan
sharply with
y/
is an anarthrous
Second, aA770cia

42
light
In
of this, some
abstract noun.

interpreters claim that it has to be the subjective complement (predicate) following


43
be
An
impersonal
from
if
to
the
supplied
context.
co-rtv and, so, a subject needs
44
Jesus,
"
The
in
here.
"there
indefinite
is
too
truth
only other
seems
subject,
[Christ]
is
"He
Christ
from
be
to
the
a reference
preceding clause,
possibility would
truth in Jesus. "45 But, as Lincoln argues, without further unwarranted punctuation
little
that
the
this
translation
assumption
makes
sense even on
unlikely
changes,

39Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 135. C. A. A. Scott, Christianity According to St.


Paul (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1927) 36-37, connects the clause with the following
Jesus,
"that,
translates:
the
ye put off the old man ... ;" see
as
was
actually
case with
verses and
Colossians,
Philemon
in
Letters
from
Caird,
Paul's
Prison:
Philippians,
G.
B.
Ephesians,
the
also
Revised Standard Version, NCB (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1976) 80-81.
40BAGD, s.v. KaCg, 1; Lincoln, Ephesians, 283. It is difficult to see with what a
comparison is being made here.
41BAGD, s.v. KaOtis-,3; Best, Ephesians, 429; cf. causal KaOtis-in 1:4. Robinson,
Ephesians, 148, sees the KaOosclause as explanatory but such a use is not attested elsewhere.
42BDF, 258; Wallace, Grammar, 243-45,249-50. The article is often omitted with
"grace"
"faith"
in the Pauline corpus.
as
or
abstract nouns such
43Caird, Paul's Letters, 80; J. Gnilka, Der Epheserbrief, 2nd ed., HTKNT 10.2 (Freiburg:
Herder, 1977) 228, n3; 1. de la Potterie, "J6sus et la vdrit6 d'aprbs Eph 4,21, " AnBib 17-18 (1963)
45-57, esp. 48.
44Westcott, Ephesians, 67,70. Hort
by
Westcott
impersonal
the
calls
subject as proposed
Ila strange understatement" (cf. Westeott, Ephesians, 71).
45De la Potterie, 'Usus et la vrit6, " 48;
also Schlier, Epheser, 216.

262
this is a polemical
no compelling

statement

grammatical

the KaOaclause: "truth

46
Gnostic
Alternatively,
chriStology.
against a

reason why dA40c-tacould not be taken as the subject of

is in Jesus. "47 This translation

(cf.
NAS)
NRSV,
NKJV,
and correctly
sense
Christian
of
content

truth

there is

appears to make the most

conveys the thought

of the clause that the

is summed up in Jesus. Here it is probably equivalent

to

the gospel (cf. 1: 13).


Third,

the change

from

be
(v.
21)
(v.
to
20)
777cob
XptOI70P
to
seems
TO'P
Ti

deliberate and theologically significant. 48 This is the only occurrence of the name
"Jesus" by itself in Ephesians (cf. "Lord Jesus" in 1: 15).49 In fact, it rarely occurs
to
but
Paul's
does,
is
in
it
it
to
attention
call
writings,
when
used
without qualification
for
by
itself
50
Here,
Paul
the
the
the central events of
a
name
evidently used
gospel.
theological reason. There are two views of what this reason is. The first view argues
drove
Gnostic
is
that
teaching
that the KaOa
a wedge
clause a polemic against
between the heavenly Christ and the earthly Jesus of history. 51 However, such a
letter
does
is
in
to
that
combat
appear
a
not
unlikely
cryptic polemical point

46Lincoln, Ephestans, 281.


47C. F. D. Moule, An Idiom-Book of New Testament Greek, 2nd ed. (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1959) 111-12, states concerning the use or non-use of the Greek article
that "each instance needs to be discussed on its own merits. .. ." See also Lincoln, Ephesians, 28081, and Best, Ephesians, 429.
48Pace Bruce, Epistles, 357, who states:
it is difficult to discern any distinction in
Christ'
'in
'in
Ephesians,
282,
between
the
Jesus;...
Lincoln,
the
and
of
who
use
and
views
emphasis
is
Christ
be
"to
learn
tradition
in
to
taught
the
and
or
concludes:
gospel
variation
name as a stylistic
to be taught the truth in Jesus. "
491n the NT Epistles the name "Jesus" always stands without the article, except for
2 Cor. 4: 10-11 (D FG omit the article); Eph. 4: 21; 1 Thess. 4: 14; and 1 John 4: 3; see MHT, 3: 167.
The use of the article in these passages probably puts some emphasis on the historical Jesus.
50Foerster, TDNT, 3: 298. See 1 Thess. 1: 10; 4: 14; Gal. 6: 17; 1 Cor. 12:3b; 2 Con 4: 5,
10,11,14; 11:4; Rom. 3: 26; 8: 11; and Phil. 2: 10. In some of these texts Paul is likely drawing on a
traditional formulation.
51Schlier, Epheser, 217; Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 228;
la
,
J6sus
de
la
Potterie,
by
et
opposed
"
v6rit6, 53-55.

263
fl__
elsewhere.
-Tnosticism
context.

Furthermore,

a misguided

The second view is more compelling.

[risen] Christ to the earthly


His earthly ministry:
that Christian
the historical

instruction

christology

It argues that Paul wished to link the

Jesus in order to focus attention

His teaching, redemptive

in all its aspects, including

The tradition

was the one that acknowledged

on the central events of

death, and resurrection.

Jesus who experienced the humiliation

the resurrection.

is not at issue in this

52 The point is

has
in
its
teaching,
roots
ethical
of the cross and the exaltation

of

Christ
legitimate
Paul
that
true
about
and
considered
Him as the incarnate,

crucified

and resurrected

Jesus.

declares
found
Jesus
in
The KaO&
then,
that
the
truth
was the
clause,
as
in
by
dA77,
he
for
Paul's
instruction
Though
Octa
the
received
used
standard
readers.
53
(cf.
it
in
in
the
this
to
teaching
gospel
context
points
ethical
rooted
various ways,
1:13; Col. 1:5-6). This truth stands in contrast to the deception and delusion of pagan
futility (cf. 4: 17; Rom. 1:25) that underlies the description of pagan Gentiles in 4: 1719. Paul's Christian readers had heard about Christ and had been taught in Him
the
truth
to
the
the
tradition,
as
namely,
proper
content
of
apostolic
according
different
found
Jesus.
be
in
Consequently,
lives
their
now
should
summed up and
from what they once were.
5.3.3 Ephesians

4: 22-24: The Three Infinitives

In contrast to the parallel passagein Colossians 3:9-10 where two aorist


"put
imagery,
/
to
Greek
the
the
text in this
express
are
used
off put on"
participles
has
infinitives:
67ToWoOat,
infinitive
three
passage
an aorist middle

(v. 22), dpave-oba0at,

52Robinson, Ephesians, 107; Abbott, Ephesians


and Colossians, 135; Mitton, Ephesians,
Ephesians, 199; and Best, Ephesians, 429-30. See footnote 50 above for
163; Schnackenburg,
references.
53Various uses Of dA40CLa are discussed by Bultmann,
TDNT, 1: 238-47; Thiselton,
3: 874-901, esp. 884-88; and J. Murphy-O'Conner,
NIDNTT,
"Truth: Paul and Qumran, " in Paul
Scrolls,
Sea
Dead
1st
York:
(New
COL
the
J.
H.
Charlesworth,
ed., ed. J. Murphy-O'Conner
and
and
Crossroad, 1990) 179-230, esp. 208-10.

264
(v.
23),
P&uao-Oat,
infinitive
infinitive
and
an aorist middle
a present passive

(v. 24).

This sequence of infinitives is tied together by & (v. 23) and Kat'(v. 24). Thus, they are
' ds-in verse
to be viewed as paratactic having the same contextual connection with VY
22 that serves as the "subject" of all three. 54 What is the syntactical connection of
these infinitives in this context? Four main options have been proposed.
First, these infinitives are sometimes viewed as equivalent to independent
imperative

New
few
in
55
However,
the
in
the
places
verbs expressing commands.

Testament

that have an imperatival

a finite verb and without

it is either completely

independent

of

Phil.
15,
12:
(only
Rom.
twice;
and
an expressed subject

3: 16), or it follows an explicit

imperative

23: 23-24; Titus 2: 1-2). 56 Neither


it is unlikely

infinitive,

that an imperatival

Acts
(e.
Luke
9:
3;
its
takes
g.,
mood
and
on

of these alternatives
infinitive

Furthermore,

have
an expressed accusative
would

"subject" as here ('V11


ds-, v. 22). These observations
Second, these infinitives

is the case here.

eliminate

this option.

(v.
be
dependent
jpd6c-re20),
the
specifying
on
could

distance
Paul's
"learned
Christ.
"57
However,
the
readers
content acquired when
between eyd0e-re-and d7roWoOaLis substantial

(though not prohibitive),

if
this
and

54MOst grammarians speak of this use of the accusative as the "subject" of the infinitive,
Grammar,
Robertson,
489-90,
We
it
to
accusative
of
general
prefers
an
reference.
call
although
designation
"subject, " but with the understanding that it refers to the
the
convenient
shall use
being
have
infinitive,
infinitive
the
the
the
action
of
non-finite,
a
with
cannot
since
agent associated
in
the technical sense.
subject
55RSV, JB, TEV translations; D. Daube, "Participle and Imperative in I Peter" in
Selwyn, St. Peter, 480-81, argues that a variety of imperatival forms, including participles and
infinitives, is typical of Hebrew ethical codes. The infinitive as an imperative is common in PseudoPhocylides (ca. 30 BC-AD 40). Several MSS (e.g., p46) and Latin and Greek versions understood the
infinitives here as having imperatival force. The RSV starts a new sentence at v. 22, treating
diToOo,
Oat as though it were a direct command to the readers: "Put off your old nature
... ."
56BDF, 387,3; 389; also Moule, Idiom-Book, 126-27; Robertson, Grammar, 943-44;
Moods
Syntax
Tenses
Burton,
E.
D.
in New Testament Greek, 3rd ed. (Edinburgh:
the
of
and
and
T. & T. Clark, 1898) 146. See previous footnote.
57j. Murray, Principles of Conduct: Aspects BibliCal Ethics (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
of
1957) 214-19, esp. 217 n6. However, he does not think the governing thought is affected if the
infinitives depend on e&8dX69tTc(v. 21) instead.

265
connection is granted, it tends to make verse 21 parenthetical to the argument.

This

is not an impossible view, but unlikely, since 67ToWa0aL


would be dependent on a
negatively qualified verb Wx ou'rws-pd*Tc), and this could confuse or even contradict
Paul's intended meaning. In addition, ou'Twsback
to the preceding verses
points
following
has
its
XpioTOP
than
to
the
ahead
rather
as
ones, and c'pdOcTc-r6p
already
These
object.
objections seem strong enough to eliminate this option.
Third, these infinitives could be dependent on dA*ta

in the preceding KaOds-

58
(v.
its
21c)
in
taken
content.
clause
and
an appositional sense making explicit
Despite the analogous formations cited by Barth'59 the major objection to this
the
is
21c)
(v.
it
that
that
the
relates
possible connection
minimizes
role of Kaot,
clause to what precedes rather than to what follows it. The connection of the
infinitive to a noun rather than a finite verb is less common, and here it is less natural
syntactically.

These objections seem strong enough to eliminate this option.

Fourth, there remains the view that these infinitives are dependent on
&MX077Tc(v. 21), making explicit the content and effect of what Paul's readers were
taught. 60 It might be objected that this connection makes Wds. (v. 22) superfluous,
but the New Testament writings show a marked increase in the use of the accusative
"subject"
infinitive
the
as
of
case

infinitive
the
though
the
and
governing verb
even

' d,,- with the infinitive


have the same subject. 61 The accusative VY

is what would be

58H. A. W. Meyer, Critical and Exegetical Handbook to the Epistle to the Ephesians, trans.
J. C. Moore, KEKNT 9 (New York: Funk & Wagnalls 1884) 244-46; Abbott, Ephesians and
Colossians, 135; Barth, Ephesians, 2: 506; Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 229. Both Abbott and Barth wish to
for
imperatival
infinitives.
the
sense
an
retain
59Barth, Ephesians, 2: 506 n38; see
also BDF, 393.3,5-6; 400.1-2.

60G. B. Winer, A Grammar of the Idiom


Testament,
New
7th ed., trans. and rev.
the
of
J. H. Thayer (Andover: Draper, 1874) 321-22; Robertson, Grammar, 1089; Burton, Moods and
Tenses,150-51; Moule, Idiom-Book, 127,139; Robinson, Ephesians, 190; Westcott, Ephesians, 67;
Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3:342; Caird, Paul's Letters, 80; Houlden, Paul's Letters, 318;
Mitton, Ephesians, 164; Bruce, Epistles, 358 n127; Lincoln, Ephesians, 283-84; and Best, Ephesians,
430. Note a similar construction in Luke 1:54,72-73,79; Eph. 3:6; and Heb. 5:5.
61Robertson, Grammar,

1038; MHT, 3: 148; pace Caird, Paul's Letters, 80; and Abbott,

266
following
infinitive
in
like
e(5t6dX0qT6-.
In addition,
the
this
clause
use of
expected
a verb
rvpds-clarifies the agent involved in the verbal action following the reference to Jesus
in the intervening KaOd6clause.
On balance, it seems that relating these three infinitives to MtMX6Tc (v.
21) is the most natural and suitable syntactical connection. How, then, do they
function in relation to this verb? There are three reasonable possibilities.

First, the

in
infinitives could be part of a lengthy purpose (final) clause: "You were taught
...
(v.
(v.
22)
be
23)
the
that
off
and
put
on
you might put
old man
order
renewed
...
...
This rendering gives the infinitives imperatival force.
the new man (v. 24).
.. ."
However, it is doubtful that Paul intended to give the purpose or goal of the teaching
here. Furthermore, the infinitival

to
the
use of
alternative
construction serves as an

tva introducing an object clause, especially following verbs of commanding, exhorting,


teaching, etc. in which case the t"Paclause expresses "what" (content) rather than
"why" (purpose). 62
Second, the infinitives

could be part of a lengthy result (consecutive) clause:

(v.
22)
"you were taught
have
the
the
that
are
old
man
result
off
with
you
put
...
...
"63 This rendering
have put on the new man (v. 24)
being renewed (v. 23)
and
....
...
have
force.
Paul
infinitives
indicative
Even
to
the
though
one
might
expected
gives
(
"so
6'o-rc
that") to make clear he intended to give the actual result of the teaching
use
here, the result use of the simple infinitive

is an acceptable but less common

64
alternative.
Ephesians and Colossians, 135. Cf. Acts 25: 21; Hermas, Man. 12.6.4 and 1 Clem 62.3. In light of
this, the construction here should not be labeled "not at all clear" as is done in BDF 406.2.
62Robertson, Grammar,

991-94; Wallace, Grammar,

475; BAGD, s.v. rVa, II.

63j. Eadie, A Commentary on the Greek Text


of the Epistle of Paul to the Ephestans, 3rd
&
T.
Clark,
T.
1883)
Murray,
346;
(Edinburgh:
Principles of Conduct, 214-19, esp. 215 n5,
ed.
however, he favors relating the infinitives to eydOcTc(v. 20). On the infinitive of result, see BDF,
391; Burton, Moods and Tenses, 147-51; Robertson, Grammar, 1089-91; and Wallace, Grammar,
592-94.
64BDF, 391; Robertson, Grammar,

1089-91, claims that the NT has but twelve

267

Third, these infinitives, then, could be understood as infinitives of indirect


discourserelated to &MXtTc (v. 21), giving the content of the instruction that Paul
assumed they had received: "You were taught ... that you put off the old man (v. 22)
being renewed (v. 23)
(v. 24)
"65 The
the
are
you
and
you
put
on
new
man
...
...
....
fact that the Kaffi-clause of verse 21 already modifies &MX077-rc
likely
it
that
makes
these infinitives are to be viewed as providing the content of the teaching Paul's
These
infinitives
readers received.
could also be understood as epexegetical of content
66but the lexical nature of this verb makes the indirect discourse
following (51,5dXtTe-,
function a better choice.
Granted that the infinitives of verses 22-24 provide the content of the
instruction given (v. 21), there is still the question as to whether they refer to 1) the
teaching of a prospective ethical duty-"that

you are to (should) put off .. ."


(imperative force),67or, 2) the teaching of an accomplished theological fact-"that

examples of the simple infinitive with the notion of result and these are usually hypothetical
(intended) rather than actual result.
65Wallace,

Grammar,

603-605, states that this use of the infinitive


follows a verb of
and, technically, it is a subcategory of the direct object function;
perception or communication
further, he says that the infinitive
of indirect discourse usually "retains the tense of the direct
discourse and usually represents either an imperative
(Grammar, 604, emphasis his).
or indicative"
Burton, Moods and Tenses, 53, claims: "There is apparently no instance in the New Testament of
in indirect discourse representing the Aorist Indicative of the direct form. " So
the Aorist Infinitive
also Robertson, Grammar, 858. However, Wallace points out that, even though all the aorist
discourse
in
indirect
infinitives
in the NT (ca. 150) appear to support Burton's claim, "all of the
used
controlling verbs in such instances imply a command or exhortation" (Grammar, 605, emphasis his).
This is not the case here with 8t8doKt,).

66Moule, Idiom-Book, 127,139.4;


cf. BDF, 394; Robertson, Grammar, 1086-89; Lincoln,
Ephesians, 283-84; and Best, Ephesians, 430. See discussion of the infinitives in 4: 1,17 on pp. 25253 above.
67Robinson, Ephesians, 190; Bruce, Epistles, 357-58,
esp. n127; Schnackenburg,
Ephesians, 199-200; Lincoln, Ephesians, 283-84; Best, Ephesians, 430-31; C. E. Arnold, "Letter to
the Ephesians, " in DPL (1993) 118-20,143; B. M. Fanning, Verbal Aspect in New Testament Greek,
OTM (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990) 358 n35 with 363; D. L. Bock, "'The New Man' as
Community in Colossians and Ephesians" in Integrity of Heart and Skillfulness of Hands: Biblical
and Leadership Studies in Honor of Donald K Campbell, eds. C. H. Dyer and R. B. Zuck (Grand
Rapids: Baker, 1994) 162-63; and most English translations of 4: 22-24. The imperatival force
could possibly be understood as the initial gospel summons (i. e., an alternate way of saying, "repent
and believe") that the Ephesian believers obeyed in conversion-initiation, but this is unlikely
following yd0c-rc (v. 20) and M18dx077Tc(v. 21).

268
have
68
(indicative
force).
The
first
from
the
put
off
you
can
claim
support
option
.. ."
Ephesians
4-6, the more immediate paraenetic material in
wider ethical context of
4: 17-5: 2 where 4: 25ff spell out in detail the general exhortation given in 4: 22-24, and
the order of the infinitive

tenses: aorist (v. 22), present (v. 23) and aorist N. 24). In

this view, the 7TaAato5'dPOpw7Tosand theKatv6s- dpOpmTo5'


are usually taken as a
depicting
behavior
(deeds) of one's pre-conversion and postthe
metonomy of subject
69
However, following Mi6dX077Te
life
(a non-command verb)
conversion
respectively.
(or
&T
the
of
a similar word) if the idea of obligation were
use
one would expect
intended. 70 As noted above, 4: 17-19 deal with both the status and conduct of pagan
Gentiles, so such a combination would not be out of place in 4: 20-5: 2. The order of
discussed
be
/ Katv6!5- dPOpa)7To,,
the infinitives and the use of the 7TaAaL65- metaphor will
in due course (see pp. 269-73 and 278-84).
The second option can claim support from the aorist tense of the "put off
infinitives,
put on"

factors,
Colossians
in
the
contextual
passage
other
and
parallel

3:9-11. The aorist infinitives represent an indicative base of instruction concerning


their status that Paul assumed his readers had been given. Upon this base he gave
beginning
(v.
25)
4:
25ff,
in
&0
that
their
conduct
with
specific exhortations regarding

68Eadie, Ephesians, 338; Murray, Principles of Conduct, 214-19; Wallace, Grammar, 605;
H. C. G. Moule, Studies in Ephesians, KPCS reprint (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, 1977) 11820; R. E. Howard, "Some Modern Interpretations of the Pauline Indicative and Imperative, " WThJ
11 (1976) 38-48, esp. 39 n15,46; and H. W. Hoehner, "Ephesians, " in The Bible Knowledge
Commentary: New Testament Edition, ed. J. F. Walvoord and R. B. Zuck (Wheaton: Victor Books,
1983) 636-37.
69Fanning, Verbal Aspect, 363. Lincoln, Ephesians, 285, acknowledges that both Rom.
6:6 and Col. 3:9 declare that "the definitive break with the old person has been made in the past"
(indicative), but Ephesians shifts the emphasis and extends the indicative / imperative tension to
the idea of putting off the old person (imperative force). This is not an exhortation to repeat what
has already taken place in conversion-initiation, he says, but an exhortation "to continue to live out
its significance by giving up on that old person that they no longer are. They are new people who
become
God
in
has already made them, and that involves the resolve to put off
practice
what
must
the old way of life as it attempts to impinge" (285-86, italics mine). However true this may be
theologically, it can be questioned exegetically whether this is the author's point in this text and it
calls into question the discontinuity between the "old" and the "new man. "
70For discussion of &F,
see Robertson, Grammar,

919-20; BAGD, sx. 86.

269
introduces a strong inference drawn from 4: 20-24. Ato may well have been chosen
instead of oV'Vbecause o6Vwas used in a resumptive sense in verse 17; but in verse
25 Paul clearly intended an inferential sense and so to avoid confusion used 810.71
This approach is consistent with Paul's thinking elsewhere, especially in the context
of the parallel passage in Colossians 3: 9-10. In Colossians 2: 7 Mi6dxO7776refers to
teaching that established the Colossian believers in the faith, and what they received
Christ
Lord
(2:
Jesus
6a)
ev
basis
for
Paul's
imperative:
the
the
concerning
was
ab7t,
"put
/
The
(2:
6b).
on
put off"imagery
7rept7m-rei7c

itself in Colossians 3: 9b-10 is

basis
by
the
that
aorist participles conveying antecedent action
serves as
expressed
for Paul's imperative in verse 9a. 72 Furthermore, implicit in the assumption Paul
is
fact
21
in
Ephesians
4:
his
in
the
that
taught
those
as
makes
when
readers were
Christ, they learned that they had put off the "old man" and had put on the "new
between
former
(4:
life
17-19)
"
The
their
and their present
man.
strong antithesis
former
believers
(4:
20-24)
indicates
description
their
that
the
preof
existence as
conversion life is not an appropriate one for believers and is not applicable to them.
For these reasons this option makes good sense in this context, and, thus, it is
force
direct
hold
infinitives
have
indicative
than
these
to
that
rather
or
preferable
indirect imperatival force.
5.3.4 Ephesians

4: 22: The Old Man Put Off

The infinitive a7roWuOat


is the first member of the triad of infinitives
22-24.
As
dependent
in
is
it
(v. 21); its
argued above,
occurring verses
on Mt8dX077TC
formally
(v.
22);
it is an aorist middle, stressing the punctiliar,
"subject" is v'pd,,
reflexive nature of the verbal action; and it has the character of an indicative in this
Colossians
Again,
in
3, there appears to be a combination of two images
as
context.

71BAGD, sx. 8t6; see footnote 117 below.


72For discussion of this
passage see ch. 4,215-22.

270
here that functioned independently for Paul earlier, namely, the "put off / put on"
clothing metaphor73 and the "old man / new man" metaphor.
As discussed in chapter 1 (pp. 51-58), the identity of the "old man / new
man" has been understood and expressed in various ways by interpreters of Paul.
The fact that the context here (as in Colossians 3) is ethical and that the "new man"
is being renewed (v. 23) points to the individual person who is identified either with the
old order of existence along with all those who share in it (old humanity), or, with the
74
The
humanity).
(new
it
in
along
with
all
others
new order of existence
who share
"old man" (v. 22), then, refers to the person who is identified with and conducts his or
her life under the dominion of this present evil age and its powers along with all others
been
believer,
have
For
"old"
identity
the
this
this
existence.
and status
who share
decisively put off at conversion. 75 This indicates that the "old man" with reference to
the individual believer no longer exists.
The KaTaphrase of verse 22 qualifies the infinitive

not the
d7TOW90M,

following -r6P7TaAat6P
&Opmwv. It supplies the fact that the putting off was related to
(KaTa)their former manner of life. 76 This suggests that in their former way of life
has temporal force,
believers were clothed with the "old man. " The adjective Trpo-re'pav
denoting the idea of a time previous to the present. 77 The noun aa
P 07poo'means
77
"way of life, conduct, behavior, " and, depending on contextual modifiers, it can denote

73For a discussion of the clothing metaphor in the ancient world,


see ch. 1,43-45.
74Lincoln, Ephesians, 285. Pace Barth, Ephesians, 2:538-39,
who identifies the old / new
Christ
Adam
as representatives of the old and new orders. See ch. 1,50 n149.
as
and
man

227-28.

75See the discussion of the "old


man" in Rom. 6:6 in ch. 2,105-11, and Col. 3:9 in ch. 4,

76KaTd is
used here in the sense of "with regard to, " or "in reference to, " not "in conformity
with, " or "in accordance with; " see BAGD s. v. KaTa, 11.6; Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 342.
77This is the only NT
It has surrendered the meaning
use of 7Tp6,
rcpog as an adjective.
"the first of two" to 7rp(L-ros-,and now simply means "earlier, or formerly existing; " see BDF, 62;
280,283,662;
Robertson, Grammar,
and Hermas, Man. 4.3.1,3.

271

78
bad
behavior.
In this passagethe modifier 7TpoTE'paP
indicates that it
good
either
or
is a reference to behavior prior to the time when epdOcTc-r6pXpto,76P(v. 20), which
behavior is described in verses 17-19 (cf. 2:3). Such conduct arises out of a
correspondingpagan condition in which they once conductedtheir life, and thus
"former behavior" has a negative connotation.
Markus Barth claims that this KaTaphrase (v. 22a) is the poetic antithetical
24,
depicts
the
OcOV
to
theKa-ra
the
phrase
of
essence
of
parallel
verse
and each phrase
"old" and "new man" respectively. 79 But this is not likely since theKaTa phrase of verse
22a precedes the reference to the "old man, " is attached to the infinitive,

is
and not a

likely
A
24.
theKaTa
phrase
parallel
with
of
more
verse
much
conceptual parallel
between
the adjectival participle 76V0061POlIctopwith theKa-rd phrase of verse
occurs
24b
22c, and the adjectival participleT6v
theKa-rd
as
of
verse
phrase
KTtoWv-ra
with
...
firstKa-rd
With
in
Paul
22a,
the
phrase
picks up the main thrust of
verse
we shall see.
his topic in this paragraph. He urges his readers to live no longer( Y17
C as the pagan
K'Tt)
Gentiles live (v. 17)-in

futility, etc. They did not learn Christ in this way W"Tois',v. 20),

former
(7TpoTe'pav)
(v.
(Ka-rd)
21)
the
taught
that
to
they
way
were
with regard
assuming
have
(v.
life
22).
the
they
off
old
put
man
of
...
The "old man" is described by a present passive adjectival participle and a
(v.
22c).
The
phrase
present tense of the participle '0061pope-pop
expresses
secondKa-ra
is
80
d7ToOoOat.
If the
taking
that
the
the
time
place at
action of
action
same
as

78BAGD, s.v. dvaoTpoft Bertram, TDNT, 7:716-17; Ebel, NIDNTT, 3:933-35. The word
back
"a
"
hence,
turning
to"
"dwelling
in
thus
Aeschylus (5th century
meant
and
a
place;
originally
BC) used it of a "haunt. " But it occurs later in the senseof "way of life, " "behavior" (Polybius 4.82.1;
Epictetus 1.9.5; 3.15.5) and human conduct (Tob. 4: 14,19 and 2 Macc. 6:23).
79Barth, Ephesians, 2: 506.
80Essentially,

the participle is timeless, denoting instead the kind of action (Aktionsart)


However, the tenses of the participle may be
as either completed, durative, or a resultant condition.
to the principal verb (Wallace, Grammar, 614-15). The
used to express relative time in relationship
durative
expresses
participle
action with relative time that is simultaneous with the action
present
of the controlling verb, although sometimes this relative time may be antecedent to the action of the
(a
idiom),
classical
especially where an adverb or adjective of time (i. e., vp&repov, cf. John
verb
main

272
infinitival

has
action
occurred, then the time of the descriptive clause must be seen

from that standpoint.

The "old man" Paul's readers have put off was being corrupted

by desires that came from deceit. The adjective 7TpoT6'Pav


(v. 22a) confirms this past
time orientation.

The RSV (but not the NRSV) translates the participle as durative

in
action
present time, suggesting that the "old man" lingers on and is the cause of all
kinds of former evils to reappear in the lives of believers. That sins occur in believers'
lives corresponds to human experience and is recognized by Paul (e.g., Gal. 5), but this
does not seem to be what he intended by this formulation.
In light of the KaTaphrase following it, 00c-tpopemok,
here carries the thought of
Cor.
(cf.
2
11:
3)
moral pollution
and decay leading to divine judgment (cf 1 Cor. 3: 17b;
2 Pet. 2: 12).81 It carries on the idea implied in 7TaAatW.The "old man" walks on the
decay
pathway of moral
and ruin that eventually leads to (final) destruction.

Paul

gave a detailed description of this destructive moral decay in Romans 1:20-32. The
corrupting process occurs "in accordance with" or "because of' (KaTa)82the desires of
deception (d7Td7s-).83 This is the cause of which 'ro'v00cipopepol,is the effect. The
genitive noun d7a7,5- can be viewed as an attributive

genitive, "deceitful desireS"84or,

preferably as a subjective genitive, "deceit that governs desires, " in which d7a7 is
deceptive
personified as a
power (cf. Col. 2:8; 2 Thess. 2:9-10; Heb. 3: 13; 2 Pet. 2: 13;

9: 8) helps to show this.

See Robertson, Grammar,

1115-16.

81BAGD, sx. 00cipa), 2; Harder, TDNT, 9: 102-05; Merkel, NIDNTT,

1:467-70.

82BAGD, sx. Ka-rd, II. 5. 6,


a. state that often the norm is at the same time the reason for
"in
that
so
accordance with" recedes, leaving KaTd to mean "because of, as a result of, on
something
the basis of'(cf Rom. 2: 5; 1 Cor. 12:8; Eph. 1:5; Phil. 4: 11; 1 Tim. 5: 21; 2 Tim. 1:9; Titus 3:5;
PhIm. 14).

NIDNTT,

83BAGD, sx.
a7ra777,1;pace Oepke, TDNT, 1:385, "pleasant illusion; " Gtinther,
2:459-60. See also 2 Clem. 6.4; Hermas, Man. 8.5; 11.12; Sim. 6.2.1; 6.3.3; 6.4.4.

84MHT, 2:440,445, treat this


as a "Hebraic genitive, " a non-idiomatic use of the genitive
of definition; BAGD, s.v. mOvpia, 3, call it a genitive of quality, thus: "deceptive desires; " also Best,
Ephesians, 434, "deceitful desires
[that] bring corruption and ultimate destruction. "
...

273
Matt. 13:22 / Mark 4: 19) that uses "desires" as its means of expression. 85 The "old
is
in
man"
a process of moral corruption and advancing ruin that exists and ends in
death (cf. Eph. 2: 1,5) because of desires controlled by the deceptive power of sin.
This reflects Paul's earlier portrayal of his Gentile readers' past in which the desires of
the flesh characterized their old life (Eph. 2:3; 4: 17-19). This corrupt condition on
account of deception stands in sharp contrast to the "new man" and its renewal
by
(4:
21,24).
truth
effected
This contrast is reinforced by the parallel participial

clauses and

prepositional phrases attached to the terms "old man" (v. 22) and "new man" (v. 24).
In both cases these explanatory additions help to describe these terms more
precisely. This observation plus the fact that these terms do not occur elsewhere in
New Testament paraenesis point to the probability

that these designations were not

in common use (at least not in the sense Paul intended) and that Paul was the first to
in
them
ethical contexts. They are appropriate for him because they serve as a
use
cogent theological summary on which to base his ethical exhortations.

5.3.5 Ephesians 4:23: Being Renewed In Your Mind


The & of 4:23 introduces additional material that Paul assumed his readers
but
it also signals a contrast to verse 22, focusing attention on the other
taught,
were
86
The movement is from a negative to a positive condition. The
the
side of
picture.
infinitive
tense
present

dPaPco&gOa,

87 is

the second member of the triad of infinitives

85Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 137; Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 342. The
verbal noun emOvptas-would support such a view of the genitive. It could also be a genitive of
source, "desires which come from deceit, " Lincoln, Ephesians, 286; also Murphy-O'Conner, "Truth, "
207-10. See comments on e7n0upt'ain Rom. 6: 12 in ch. 2,131-32.
86A

8 as "but"
contrast is evident between vv. 22 and 23 that justifies translating
(BAGD, sx. 8, 1); thus: "you were taught (v. 21)
but
that you put off
the old man (v. 22)
...
...
...
"and" for & is
you are being renewed (v. 23) ... ;" although in an indirect discourse construction,
also possible.

imperative

87p46 D1 K 33 17 47 69 it
and the Syriac, Coptic and Vulgate versions have the
verb dvavcoDoOe-here, but this is clearly an interpretive
designed to make
modification

274
in verses 22-24. With indicative force, as argued above, it stresses the continual
It
Christian
Paul's
is
that
to
readers.
is
going
on
now
with regard
process of renewal
form
but
in
N.
22),
(v.
"subject"
dependent
21),
its
j&MX6-rc
is
'
this
dson
VV
also
infinitive could be either middle or passive voice. The passive sense, "are being
found
because
transitive
the
is
"
is
the
with
active
voice
not
often
preferred
renewed,
in
"
"renew;
transitive
the
this
capacity
middle
voice
serves
consequently,
meaning
88
did
Paul
be
("renew
in
than
expected.
yourselves") as might
a reflexive sense
rather
in
be
interpreted
is
the
the
an
renewal
agent of
unless Ttpmle6paTt
not say who
instrumental

below).
(see
is
Spirit
but
God,
to
the
this
unlikely
of
sense as a reference

However, he did make clear that his readers, those who have "learned Christ, " are the
this
b,
be
22
is
dsthe
the
to
the
of
subject
as
read
of verse
renewal since
objects of
infinitive as well. He stressed the importance of present renewal by making it an
independent (paratactic) element in his discussion here in contrast to its dependent
Colossians
3:
10.
in
role
Testament,
the
here
New
in
The verb dpaveOOJ
the
although
occurs only
6,
(Heb.
6:
to
to
renew
again
elsewhere:
occurs
dmaKatmi&
concept of renewal
Col.
3:
10,
Cor.
inner
(2
4:
16,
dmaKat
the
renewal of
person;
renewal of
MGW
repentance),
the new man), and diaKaimtauts-(Rom. 12:2, renewal of the mind; Titus 3:5, renewal of
believers).

does not appear in the New Testament. The qualitative


Amailetouts-

brought
life
the
these
to
new
character
about
words gives expression
of
significance of
by the death and resurrection of Christ. In spite of the prefix atd, one must not think
former
lost
the
to
this
of
or
restoration
affairs
a
a
primitive
renewal as
state
of

state.

Such a meaning is doubtful in New Testament usage because the newness it depicts
clear an imperatival

sense.

88BAGD, s.v. apapeoto,1; Behm, TDNT, 4: 900-01; Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 342;
("recent")
Ephesians,
Schnackenburg,
200
Originally
the
temporal
dvavcOW
n2l.
and
emphasized
(Col.
3: 10 parallel) stressed the qualitative ("superior in value") element of change,
dvaKatp6o)
while
but, like the adjectives vc6s-and Katv6s-,this distinction is not maintained and the two terms are
likely used interchangeably; see ch. 4,227 n109 and 229 n116.

275
is unprecedented. What Paul had in mind in this passage is a change from "old" to
is
and
renewal
new,
attached to the new condition (cf. Col. 3: 10), not to the
former
(old)
restoration of a
condition. His readers are undergoing renewal as those
have
"new
the
put on
who
man. " The ava prefix simply emphasizes the change
involved that, for Paul, is nothing less than a new identity and status, not the renewal
of the old status. In his writings he did not speak of the glory of Adam before the fall,
but of Christ, the "last Adam, " and the glory of the new creation (cf. 2 Cor. 5: 17; Gal.
3: 27; 6: 15).89
The process of renewal is said to take place -rtj 7mc6 a-rt -robvoo's-ujitup
(v. 23b). Some recent interpreters

understand TP7vcv'Va-rtas a reference to the

divine Spirit. 90 In this view, Tq)vvcqpaTt is taken as an instrumental

dative and ToD

(or,
place where) genitive; thus, the clause would be translated:
PoO.
51as an objective
"but you are being renewed by the Spirit bestowed upon (or "in") your mind. " Several
reasons are given in support of this view. First, nowhere else in Ephesians does
divine
human
in
letter
it
is
to
the
the
the
spirit, and elsewhere
always
vvcDparefer
Spirit who controls believers (cf. 1: 17; 3: 16; 4: 3; 5: 18; 6: 18). Second, the absence of a
1:
13
is
to
preposition (e.g., E091 preceding -r6 m,,c6,
UPaTt analogous
where unmistakable
I
it
Spirit.
Since
divine
instrumental
to
the
make
a
clear
reference
modifiers
a simple
dative is used there to describe the Spirit's work, the same could be true of 4: 23 also.
Third, Paul made a distinction between "my spirit" and "my mind" in 1 Corinthians
14: 14 and between the Spirit Himself (divine Spirit) and "our spirit" in Romans 8: 16.
Fourth, in Titus 3:5 the divine Spirit is the explicit agent of renewal (also Rom. 7:6; 2

89See further

comment

on p. 282, esp. footnote

108.

90E.g., Schlier, Epheser, 220; Gnilka, Epheserbrief, 230; Houlden, Paul's Letters, 319;
F. Mussner, Der Brief an die Epheser, OTKNT 10 (Wurzburg: Echter Verlag, 1982) 137.
91p49 B 33 1175 1739 1881
and a few others actually do insert the preposition ell,
indicate that they
probably as an attempt to resolve the problem, but this does not automatically
understood this as a reference to the Spirit (pace Barth, Ephesians, 2: 508 n50).

276
Cor. 3:6,18). And, fifth, the human spirit and mind are corrupt and cannot be the
in
Thus,
the
Eph.
Rom.
this
(cf.
4:
17;
1:
21,28).
view,
means of spiritual renewal
imparted Holy Spirit is the agent of renewal who renews believers by enlightening
Rom.
Gal.
5:
16,18,25;
in
life
(cf.
their
their mind and empowering
new way of
TwctLa
8:6,13-14, all verses in whichvvcCpa is unqualified). 92
Because of the strength of these reasons and yet the presence of the
troublesome

modifier

the
is
to
this
that
a reference
clause
-rob Poo's-upc5p,some argue

divine Spirit united with the regenerate human spirit. 93 In this variation
instrumental
is
taken
as an
view, -rtDvvc'VPa-rt

of the above

/ as a possessive
dative and 770bPoOS'

by
the
being
be
"but
translated:
the
thus,
renewed
you are
clause would
genitive;
Spirit possessed by your mind. " The vob-,then, is the receptacle of the TrvcD[L
ain 4: 23.
However, most of the above arguments do not apply to 7n1cDpa
&
is
Holy
Spirit
be
it
the
that
Against this view
U11
tip or
never called T6 7TVcDjIa
said
can
be
this
Testament,
New
'
in
the
would
the
nor
elsewhere
vo6s(jv
VP
-rob
7TPcDI-La
-r6
even
be
in
Spirit
94
Holy
to
for
Paul.
Neither
is
designation
the
union
said
acceptable
an
Cor.
6:
191
(Rom.
8:
9;
believers
in
Spirit
dwells
believer's
the
although
spirit,
a
with
"
Spirit
in
"the
"
"the
20). Here the text refers to
your mind.
spirit of your mind, not
Also, had Paul intended "renewal of the mind by the Spirit, " he likely would have used
ev
keeping
the
in
p
the words
standard
rrvev, a-rt phrase
with
paT-LTobvo65-up6p
Trvcq,
for instrumental

Even
3:
the
(cf.
2:
22;
5;
5:
6:
18;
18).
Ephesians
in
so,
usage elsewhere

V'P6Pstill remains problematic.


genitive -roDPoO'S'

Though the Holy Spirit is the means

92These references tell against Barth's


intended
Paul
(Ephesians,
2:
if
508)
that
argument
have
Spirit
Holy
he
the
to
the
with clear
qualified 7TPED11a
renewing
mind,
would
a reference
4:
30.
Eph.
1:
13
in
and
modifiers, as
93Schweizer, TDNT, 6: 445 n773; Schnackenburg,
Ephesians, 200, states: "What must be
"
6.18).
by
5.18;
Christian
divine
(cf.
3.16;
4.3;
the
Spirit
is
the
guided
mind
meant
94Abbott,

be
it
Also,
165.
Colossians,
Ephestans,
Mitton,
must
137;
and
and
is
because
is
that
genitive
view
objective
an
of
ToD
vo6sTTvcDpa not a verbal noun and
noted
suspect
the idea of "bestowed upon" is imported into the phrase.
Ephesians

277
here
(e.
Cor.
Paul's
from
2
3:
18),
texts
is not on
emphasis
g.,
other
of renewal as seen
the means-hence,

he does not mention it-but

location
the
of renewal.
on

In light of this, many interpreters understand 7TPcvl-La


as a reference to the
human spirit that is distinguishable
is
Oy
understood
aTt
7TPc
appositional

from, but related to, the mind.

In this view, Tq)

/
dative
of
as a
reference
respect andTob Poos-as an

be
translated:
the
thus,
clause would
genitive;

"but you are being

(human)
to
the
spirit, namely or specifically,
renewed with reference

"95
your mind.

Both terms, spirit and mind, then, are a pleonasm for a person's inner being, that is,
the "inner person" (cf. Eph. 3: 16; 2 Cor. 4: 16) that requires and experiences ongoing
best
96
free,
Though
the
2).
12:
(cf.
Rom.
this
view provides
not problem
renewal
resolution

for the various exegetical difficulties,

it
is
thus,
preferred.
and,

Though the focus for renewal at present is the inner person, the mind (cf
Rom. 12:2) and not the physical body, such renewal has determinative

consequences

for external actions expressed by the body (cf. Eph. 4: 24,25-32; 5: 1-5). This renewal
futility
determinative
the
to
in
to
the
role given
contrast
stands

4:
17.
in
the
mind
of

Though the means for effecting this moral change is not stated directly in verse 23,
the present passive infinitive

is
24
indicate
that
a continuous
renewal
and verse

himself,
including
the
from
believer
involves
the
that
all
above
agents
outside
process

95Schweizer, TDNT, 6: 444-49; Dunn, NIDNTT, 3: 693-707; see also Robinson, Ephesians,
325; Barth,
191; Westeott, Ephesians, 68; Mitton, Ephesians, 165; van Roon, Authenticity,
Ephesians, 2: 509; Lincoln, Ephesians, 287; and Best, Ephesians, 436. Pace BAGD, s.v. PODS,3, "you
Ephesians
Colossians,
137,
"
Abbott,
NIV.
and
and
of
mind;
similarly,
must adopt a new attitude
Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 343, take ToD vo6,,- as a subjective genitive, i. e., "renewed with
further,
by
is
but
is
"
to
the
which your mind
governed,
7TvcDMa not a verbal noun and,
spirit
respect
"the
that
If
it
the
the
is
the translation
mind
should
read:
order.
genitive
reverses
subjective,
"the
by
is
"
As
these
the
the
spirit
actually objective:
genitive
stated
commentators,
spirit.
governs
that governs your mind, " but, again, vve-Dpa is not a verbal noun.
96Van Roon, Authenticity,
SNTSMS
Anthropology,
Pauline
on
Philo, Cong. 97, "the person within

327; R. H. Gundry, S5ma in Biblical Theology with Emphasis


Press, 1976) 135-37. In
29 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
the person" is related to the voO,5-. See ch. 6,301-07.

278
Spirit (ef 2 Cor. 3: 17-18). 97 So, it can be noted that the believer as a "new man" is
finally
being
"new.
"new"
is
"
He
is
though
totally
not
yet
and
and
renewed.
genuinely
Note also that the (human) spirit and the mind continue from the "old" to the "new
from
"new"
"
"old"
is not a constitutional
to
thus
the
change
man,

(ontological) change

in a human being.
5.3.6 Ephesians

4: 24: The New Man Put On

is the third member of the triad of infinitives


The infinitive vdv'uao-Oat%
As
22-24.
its
in
with
antithetical
verses
occurring

(v.
22),
it
is
counterpart, d7ToWOOat

b ds-(v. 22), it has the character of the


dependent on i6t6dXtTc (v. 21), its "subject" is VP
indicative, and formally it is an aorist middle, stressing once again the punctiliar,
durative,
This
the
the
passive
verbal action.
contrasts with
reflexive nature of
it
is
if
(v.
24)
23)
the
awkward
and makes
connectingKat'(v.
nature of apapcoba0at
("and").
If
that were the case, one might
conjunction
understood as a coordinating
is
24
However,
23.
the
24
to
as argued above, verse
precede verse
expect verse
theological basis for verse 23, and thusKat' could well be understood as having an
(60
"But
be
function,
"in
"99
it
Thus
translated:
that.
you
would
meaning
epexegetical
have
inner
(Kat')
in
in
being
the
that
put
on
new man
you
your
person
renewed
are
It should be noted from the parallel in Colossians 3: 10 that it is, in fact, the
"new man" who is being renewed.
The placement of dpawobgOat(present infinitive)
(aorist infinitive)

in 4: 23 preceding JP(56uauOat

and the mention of the "new man" in 4: 24 probably occurs because

97R. Scroggs, The Last Adam: A Study in Pauline Anthropology


Newness, 77.
Press, 1966) 70-71; and Harrisville,

(Philadelphia:

Fortress

98The imperative
D2
K
B*
104
v(56oao* is read by some important
p46
K
manuscripts:
See
the
323 1241 1881 it syr. Again, as in v. 23, it appears to be an interpretive
modification.
discussion of this verb in ch. 1,43-45.
99For epexegetical Kai,
see BAGD, s. v. Kai, 1.3; BDF, 442,9; Robertson, Grammar,
172-73. See ch. 1,21 n58 on Eph. 1: 1, and ch. 3,167 n55 on Eph.
1181; and Moule, Idiom-Book,
2: 14 plus additional references.

279
"old
"
in
4:
22
describes
00etpopepop
the
that
the
man,
a
present
participle
of
description that does not appear in the Colossian parallel.

In contrast to the decaying

"old man" who has been put off, Paul's Christian readers were taught that they are
have
because
The
is
the
they
put
on
process
whole
reversed
now undergoing renewal.
"new man. " Like the perishing of the "old man, " who has been put off, the renewal of
the "new man, " who has been put on, is a gradual process. It may be noted that the
23
in
22
in
24
the
verse
verses
and
and
renewal mentioned
clothing metaphors
The
"put
/
infinitives
interpret
another.
one
off
put
on"
mutually
instruction
the
convey
and
a gradual process)

(vs.
affirm an event

that a decisive change has occurred:

the "old man" has been put off, the "new man" has been put on, and, in light of this,
the believer as a "new man" is being renewed in "the spirit of your mind, " affirming a
(vs.
an event).
gradual process

24), denoting qualitative newness as a characteristic


The adjective KaLPOS(4:
into
(Col.
3:
denoting
10),
temporal
that
newness as a coming
which exists, and vc'os,
of
being of that which was not or not yet in existence, appear to be used as synonyms
(e.g., 1 Cor. 5: 7; Col. 3: 10 with Eph. 4: 24). 100 It could be argued, however, that Paul
intends both ideas in Colossians 3:9-10 and Ephesians 4: 23-24.101 In the former
[avOpmTov]
dvaKatvov1-LEvov,
having
he
the
T6v
put on
speaks about
T6v vc6p
passage
blids(presently)
fact
he
latter
0aL
that
in
the
the
passage
speaks about
dVaVcoDo,
and
having already put on the T6PKatv6v dvOptovov.Thus, both terms (and their cognate
in
in
these
texts:
the
the
of
newness
reality
present as
VCOSI
stresses
are
used
verbs)
former
in
the new
time,
the
quality
of
newness
and Katvo.,stresses
compared with a
divine
by
initiative
condition created

On
as compared with a previous condition.

100R. A. Harrisville, "The Concept of Newness in the New Testament, " JBL 74 (1955)
69-79, argues that both of these words can have either qualitative or temporal connotations; also
Haarbeck, Link, and Brown, NIDNTT, 2:669-76; Barth, Ephesians, 1:309; Bruce, Epistles, 358
Ephesians,
286;
Lincoln,
and Best, Ephesians, 435. See discussion in ch. 4,227-32.
n126;
101Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 138;
200.
Ephesians,
Schnackenburg,
and

280
balance, however, the variation is probably stylistic since both words can have either
a qualitative or a temporal connotation.
The identity of the "new man" corresponds antithetically

to the identity of

the "old man" discussed in verse 22. The "new man" (v. 24), then, is a reference to the
dominion
his
is
identified
her
life
the
the
of
new
and
conducts
with
or
under
who
person
For
its
the
this
along
powers
with
all
others
existence.
and
who
share
creation
believer, this "new" identity and status have been decisively "put on" at conversionThis indicates that the "new man" with reference to the individual believer

initiation.

in
2:
15,
does
So
"new
the
the
corporate aspect of
man" mentioned
presently exists.
Christ
Jesus
created the two-Jews
where

Gentiles-into
and

"one new man. 11102

In 4: 24, the "new man" is described as -r6pKa-rdOc6pK-no-Wpra. The Ka-rciOcop


Corinthians
2
in
phrase also occurs
"in a godly manner"
proper interpretation

7: 9-11 where it means "according

(cf. NRSV, "godly").

Abbott,

to God, " that is,

among others, sees this as the

be
it
here
translated:
that
this
phrase
and suggests
of

"according to God's will" or "in God's way. "103 However, Barth rejects this as a
because God as creator always carries out His creative work in His own

tautology

He
9).
10;
3:
(e.
His
Eph.
2:
to
prefers, correctly,
own plan
g.,
way and according
understand

to

the phrase as a reference to the "new man" created after the "image" of

the creator in light of the Colossians 3: 10 parallel,

KaT'Ct'K6Va TOVKTtUaVToS-avTov, with

104
its allusion to the language of Genesis 1:26-27 and its use of the word ct'KO)'V.

The preposition Kard can also be used to express "similarity"

or "likeness"

(cf. Gal. 4:28; Heb. 8: 5; 1 Pet. 1: 15; 4: 6), 105and thus here the phrase KaTd Oe-OV
would
102See ch. 3,174-81, for treatment

Col.
in
for
4,227-32,
Eph.
2:
15
the
parallel
and ch.
of

3: 10.
103Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 138; Moule, Idiom-Book, 59, takes the Ka-rdin a
transferred sense of "in accordance with; " see also MHT, 3: 268; and Mitton, Ephesians, 165.
104Barth, Ephesians, 2: 509; Bruce, Epistles, 359;
and Lincoln, Ephesians, 287.
105BAGD, s.v. Ka-rd, H. 5.b; and Moule, Idiom-Book,

59. See Josephus, Ant. 4.6.10.

281
by
is
"
This
likeness
God.
"like
God"
"after
(image)
the
supported
or
of
mean created
the use of the aorist passive participle K7to&v7a, a term already marked by the use of
Christ
God
Christ)
(a
in
2:
(a
15
in
2:
10
creative act of
and
creative act of
K71CO)
Himself). In the New Testament this verb and its derivatives are used almost
Pauline
God's
in
there
though
the
are
creative work and
epistles,
exclusively of
the
to
first
(e.
Rom.
1:
20,25;
8:
19-22,39),
the
to
new
references
g.,
creation
references
Eph.
2:
10,
Col.
3:
10;
Gal.
6:
15;
(e.
Cor.
Christ
2
5:
17;
begun
in
predominate
g.,
creation
15; 4: 24). 106 The new creation is new by virtue of a new relationship to God that is
bound up with Christ through whom it has entered into and become history. The
decisive factor for entrance into the new creation is the acceptance in faith of this
"
"new
in
becoming
"new
God
that
to
man.
creature" or a
sense
a
and
new relation
This new relationship status, in turn, affects one's present conduct.
This passage emphasizes the creative activity of God with regard to the
this
that
creative
suggests
KTLoWv-ra

"
The
"new
the
aorist participle
man.
genesis of
be
either antecedent
act could
antecedent,
Ephesians
historical

to or contemporaneous

If
the
0,a0,0at.
action of 6'V8V,
with

the emphasis lies on the prior existence of the "new man, " as in
2: 15 ("one new man" corporately),

in connection with the redemptive-

death of Jesus, assuming eP86oaa0at is given indicative

is a reference to the believer's conversion-initiation


imperatival
given

(faith / baptism),

force. More likely, however, the aorist participle

expresses contemporaneous

force. Otherwise,

if jV860'aa0at is
KTWOP-ra

107
believer's
to
the
is
action
and
a reference

has
indicative
eP86crao,
0at
since

conversion

force as argued above. At conversion-initiation

"new man, " created after the likeness of God, is put on by the Christian.
participial

it

the

This

God
by
implies
"new
the
the
the
original
after
creation
man"
clause
of

106BAGD, S.V. KTiCo) and


KTL'ots-;Foerster, TDNT,
See further discussion in ch. 3,174-76, and ch. 4,233-39.

107Robertson, Grammar,

3: 1028-35; Esser, NIDNTT,

1112-14; Wallace, Grammar,

614-15. See ch. 4,235.

1: 383-87.

282
Christ,
however,
in
"new
"
implied,
It
is
the
prototypical
pattern
man.
not stated or
that the image of God in which man was first created was totally lost and is only
Christ.
first,
in
in
Rather,
like
this
the
conformity
stands
new creation,
recovered
108
likeness.
divine
image
the
and
with
The "new man" has been created by God to be like Him "in (P, with regard

observations

" Several
(dA77OCt'aS-).

(8tKaLoo,VVq
' ) and holiness (OM07-RTL)of the truth

to) righteousness

'
both
here.
First,
&KaLoo,
this
VVRand
of
phrase

show the importance

109
They
forensic)
(vs.
to
the
in
in
this
refer
ethical
an
context.
sense
outo7s- are used
moral and spiritual

uprightness

of life appropriate

to the person who has been put

"
"new
Him,
has
God
is,
the
to
that
man.
one who
put on
and set apart
right with
Some interpreters

in
is
relation
right
what
in
relation
right

between the terms whereby &Katou' UPRis doing

distinction
see a
to humanity

(moral uprightness)

to God (personal piety). 110 But such a distinction

because each term has both moral and religious


Testament,

is
doing
is
what
and 00767"-

connotations.

be
sustained
cannot

Within

the New

linked
is
it
here
Luke
1:
75
in
with
again
where
and
ouLo7,,- occurs only

&Katou' VVR When used together,


.

these two terms probably had become familiar

"a
as

108Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 334. Pace E. F. Scott, The Epistles of Paul to the
Colossians, to Philemon, and to the Ephesians, MNTC (New York: Harper & Row, 1930) 219, who
been
before
has
Fall
that
the
the
that
and
pious
originally
man's
upright
character
was
suggests
Christ.
(cf.
is
Gen.
That
1:
26-27)
through
to
the
creation
original
and
man
KTt'Cw
recalls
restored
"new
designate
"new
does
the
the
that
the
to
genesis
of
mean
man"
not
man" shares an
used
identity with Adam before the Fall. For Paul, the image of God in Christ is more glorious than
See
further
had.
discussion in ch. 1,49-52, and ch. 4,233-39.
Adam
anything
109See BAGD, sx. 8tKatoo,6P77,2;Schrenk, TDNT 2: 202-10; Seebass
and Brown,
NIDNTT, 3:362-73. On 6ot67-77s-,
see BAGD, sx. 6ot67s-; Hauck, TDNT, 5:491-93, who says the
meaning is ...personal piety'which acts out of regard for eternal [divine] ordinances" (5: 493); and
in reference to God's activity
Seebass, NIDNTT, 2: 236-38. Characteristically, Paul used &Katoo,6P77
Rom.
(cf.
in
His
Himself,
to
a
relationship
people
right
a
right
gift of
relationship
with
or
of putting
1:17; 3: 21-22,26; 9: 30; 10:3; 2 Cor. 5:21); but here and elsewhere (cf. Rom. 6: 13,16,18-20; 2 Cor.
6: 7,14; 9: 10; Phil. 1:7; 4: 8; Eph. 5:9; 6: 14) he uses the term in the ethical sense of moral
See
2,136.
ch.
uprightness.
110E.g., Schlier, Epheser, 221-22. This distinction
Gorg.
Plato,
in
found
be
earlier
can
507B; Polybius 20-10.7; and Philo, Mr. 208.

283
human
summary of
virtue. "111 This may also explain why a form of ayLaopos-,a more
common Pauline term for "holiness, " is not used here.
Second, this phrase follows immediately
Paul
that
suggesting
viewed these ethical qualities

("created"),
after K7'LuWv7a
as originating

in God's creative

line
believers
for
in
2:
10
Christ
Jesus
be
"created
in
to
with
where
are said
good
work
beforehand
God
light
in
"
In
in
that
them.
that
prepared
works
of
order
we might walk
this, righteousness

specifically.

holiness
and
serve as a summary

Christian
of

virtue

112

Third, the use of righteousness and holiness as the ethical qualities that
been
Christian
has
Paul's
"new
the
that
virtue
underscores
man"
summarize
point
Deut.
because
both
(cf.
LXX
God
God
Himself
be
like
to
are characteristic of
created
32:4 and Ps. 144: 17; also Rev. 16:5). The "new man" created in God's likeness, then,
is to be righteous and holy even as God iS.113 These qualities are essential to the "new
man, " forming the content of his renewal (v. 23) and thereby demonstrating that the
final
has
"new
has
(v.
24)
the
salvation
already put on
man"
one who
not yet attained
in
(moral)
is
Here,
divine
image
the
the
while
glory.
ethical
aspect
emphasized,
or
of
the Colossians 3: 10 parallel the intellectual aspect (knowledge) is emphasized.
Fourth, the virtues that characterize the "new man" come from the truth.
The genitive dA770et'as-114
modifies both preceding nouns (pace AV) and is best

111Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 139;


Barth,
Ephesians,
2: 510-11; Lincoln,
also
Ephesians, 288; and Best, Ephesians, 437, who calls them an ethical word pair "describing personal
God's
in
with
will. " This usage appears in Plato, Ap. 351); Cri. 5413;Tht. 172B;
accordance
piety
Wis 9:3; and Philo, Sac. 57; Spec. Leg. 1.304; Virt. 50 where both terms together denote virtuous
living.
112Schnackenburg, Ephesians, 201.
113R. A. Wild, "'Be Imitators of God': Discipleship in the Letter to the Ephesians, " in
Discipleship in the New Testament, ed. F. F. Segovia (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1985) 127-43, esp.
134-35.
114D* FG it and a few other
but this appears to be a
manuscripts read Kat' dAqOe-t'a,
deliberate attempt to make this term parallel to the two preceding dative nouns. The better
is
the genitive Ts,dA7706iasthat stands as the antithesis of -rs-d7Td7g (v. 22).
reading
attested

284
from
("righteousness
holiness
that
the
come
and
understood as a genitive of source
truth")115 rather than an attributive

holiness,
"
("true
e.g.,
genitive
righteousness and

NRSV, NIV). 116 As argued above, the truth is found in Jesus as disclosed in the
Cor.
4:
2;
5:
7;
2
Gal.
2:
5,14;
(cf.
Eph.
1:
13;
4:
21;
tradition
the
also
apostolic
gospel and
13:8). It stands in sharp contrast to the deceit (d7m7-77)
that corrupts the "old man" (v.
22), and is the source and support of righteousness and holiness that characterize the
"new man" N. 24).
5.3.7 Ephesians

4: 25a: Falsehood

Put Off

Having laid the necessary theological groundwork using the "old man / new
man" antithesis

in 4: 17-24, Paul moves on in 4: 25ff to give specific exhortations.

&0 of verse 25a is a strong inferential


of ethical injunctions
the information

conjunction

((5t16)117that introduces

The

a collection

based
topics
that
on and specific applications
various
are
on

The
20-24.
in
4:
repetition
given

of

22),
(from
form
v.
of dTro-rtO77yt
of a

the contrast between -r6 0686.5- and aAq'Octa(v. 24), and the repetition
from
24
21
25
and
provide additional
verses
verse

of dAOCta in

links between these two

paragraphs.

If what Paul's readers were taught as expressed by the infinitive


22-24) is imperatival

triad (vv.

in character, then the inferential &0 would lose much of its

force. The exhortations of 4: 25ff would be based on the "indirect" exhortations of


for
Paul.
Even
if
be
8to
22-24,
this
were
would
and
an unusual procedure
verses
22in
e6t8dXtTeback
21,
the
to
problem since verses
verse
one cannot escape
related
Truth often stands in opposition to "sin, deceit" in the Qumran documents: e.g., 1QS 4.17,24; 5.10;
1QH 1.26-27,30; 4.10; 7.14,28-30; 1QM 4.6.
115Salmond, "Ephesians" in EGT, 3: 344; Abbott, Ephesians and Colossians, 138; and
Lincoln, Ephesians, 288. On the genitive of source, see Wallace, Grammar, 109-10.
116Moule, Idiom-Book,

174-76; and Best, Ephesians, 438.

117BAGD, sx. 8tO; BDF, 451,5; 8t'6 is literally,


basis
for
22-24
the
4:
to
as
what follows.
specifically

"on account of which, " and refers here

285
24 spell out what was taught.

Furthermore,

25a) would be somewhat presumptuous,


It denotes antecedent

in
relation
action

the aorist middle participle

if based on infinitives
to the following

67ToWpepot(v.
force.

with imperatival

imperative
tense
present

AaAel-rc;thus, it should be rendered: "since you have put off. "118 What has been put
(collective
Oe-D&sis
singular).
off summarized as TO'

This term is not only an

1
2:
11-12;
Thess.
2
25;
1:
Rom.
dA770ciasin
24
(cf.
to
verse
Tijappropriate antithesis
John 2:21,27), which is the source of the conduct of the "new man, " but it is also an
"
"old
the
former
the
description
the
man.
auspices of
existence under
whole
of
apt
Paul measured a believer's present existence by "truth in Jesus, " while his whole
"the
have
believers
lie
/
falsehood.
"
Since
"the
defined
is
former existence
put off
as
lie, " they are to speak truth to one another in daily conversation.

In Colossians 3:9

"old
had
the
lie
they
his
to
to
Paul exhorted
put off
one another since
readers not
between
link
"
This
to
T6
a
points
man.

both
dvOpmms-,
6
of which
and 7TaAaOs'

believers have put off (same verb in vv. 22a and 25a).
Paul probably encountered some of the ethical material in 4: 25ff in various
did
he
that
119
is
It
Jewish, Hellenistic, and Christian sources.
generally acknowledged
lists
(such
day
his
and
the
virtues
as
of
of
ethical
wisdom
conventional
not change
Christian.
be
that
could
considered exclusively
vices) to reflect ethical values

What is

118jt cannot be translated


it
the
imperative
present
precedes
and
since
modifies
as an
Ephesians, 206; Lincoln,
imperative AaAci7c, pace Barth, Ephesians, 2: 511; Schnackenburg,
Ephesians, 300; and Best, Ephesians, 445. Lincoln acknowledges that the aorist participle can be
form
in
because
it
"the
infinitive
decides
indicative
force
but
translated as a participle with
against
But
force"
this
(Ephesians,
300).
had
imperatival
in
4:
22
[putting
the
old person] occurred
off
which
has
been
in
22
in
4:
infinitive
the
called
question above.
view of

119The material in Eph. 4: 25-5: 2 is a collection of ethical sentences, often using


imperatives, that give rules for conduct in daily life. Composition of such material was common
Epictetus,
Diogenes
Laertius,
Plutarch,
(e.
Democritos,
Isocrates,
Hellenistic
g.,
philosophers
among
Seneca; cf. Berger, "Hellenistische Gattungen, " 1049-74) and had been adopted by Hellenistic
Judaism (e.g. Wis. 14:25-26, Philo, Sac. 20-45). The route by which this material entered into
Christian usage continues to be debated (see Lincoln, Ephesians, 296-97). This pericope (Eph.
4: 25ff) continues to show correspondence with Col. 3 (specifically 3: 8-9,12-14) along with additional
ideas
traditional
OT
(e.
from
LXX
25-26)
Zech.
in
4:
the
Ps.
4:
5
8: 16 and
traditional material
and
g.,
from Hellenistic Judaism (e.g., for the idea of the imitation of God in 5: 1, see Philo, Spec. Leg. 4.73;
Virt. 168). See Dunn, Theology of Paul, 661-67 for additional discussion and references.

286
distinctive is the overall context in which they are placed, one that relates them to
the christological and eschatological dimensions of his gospel. Vices are
life
the
old sinful order of
and are to be "put off. " Virtues are
manifestations of
life
inaugurated through Christ and are to
the
new spiritual order of
manifestations of
be "put on. " For Paul, the accomplishment of these ethical demands does not depend
but
has
human
resolve and effort
already been set in motion because of
on mere
in
Christ.
believer's
every
new situation
In light of these things, it is reasonable to conclude that Ephesians 4: 20-24
(if not 4: 17-24) serves as the theological
following

ethical material

use of additional

backdrop

(the imperative).

for the

(the
basis
indicative)
and

This observation

is reinforced

by Paul's

imagery later in the letter to serve the same purpose, such as 717'Te

for
&
basis
the exhortations
06,18),
is
the
CVKUPL'(0(5: which
yap vorc oKo7os-,VDV
7. This aligns the "old man / new man" metaphor
/
his
"already
than
rather
not yet" motif, although
within

with Paul's

of 5: 3-

"once / now" motif

the "new man" also functions

the latter motif.

5.4 Concluding Observations on the "Old Man / New Man! '


In this passage,which has several parallels to the "old / new man" text in
Colossians 3, the designationsO 7TaAaw'Sl
dtOpmmsand 6 Katpo'sd'V0p(J
7MCappear
together once again at the outset of a predominantly paraenetic section of the letter.
Four factors influence Paul's use of these terms here: 1) the contrast between the
Gentiles
(vv. 17-19) and the status and conduct of
of
pagan
and
conduct
status
Christians who are exhorted to live ("walk") no longer (Y?
like
7K6'-r0 them; 2) a
fact
believers
that
have "learned Christ" (v. 20), which suggests a
to
the
reference
(baptismal)
3)
setting;
corporate associations that are implicitly evident
conversion
in the vices that characterize the old pagan way of life and in the virtues of the "new
divine
design
("put
to
(v.
4)
24);
the
according
off
and
clothing metaphor
man" created

287
/ put on") involving aorist infinitives that are descriptive of a contextually-defined
"new.
"
from
"old"
to
change
(v. 22) and cv8v'oaoOat(v. 24) along with the
The aorist infinitives d7ToWoOat
intervening present infinitive

(v. 23) are viewed best as having indicative


dvave-ouOat

force, giving the content of what Paul's readers were taught as relatively new
Christians, namely, the affirmation

than
theological
rather
reality
of an accomplished

former
duty.
In
they
their
were clothed with
pagan
existence
a prospective ethical
leading
to
deceit
in
by
desires
being
"old
and
the
corrupted
originating
man" who was
divine judgment.

They were active participants in the corporate structure of the old

instead
Now
(v.
22).
"put
But
they
the
of
man"
off
old
at
conversion
order or realm.
(v.
inwardly
being
from
deceit,
desires
by
they
that come
being corrupted
renewed
are
in
being
is
"put
the
they
23) in that (Kat')at conversion
renewed
new man" who
on
They
(v.
24).
Jesus
found
in
from
holiness
truth
are
that
as
come
and
righteousness
is
This
/
in
the
the
realm.
order
new
of
structure
corporate
participants
active
now
their
time
the
taught,
conversion-initiation.
they
of
presumably at or near
were
what
Upon comparison, it is evident that there is a connection between

the
"new
designation
The
include
the
24.
4:
and
2:
15
Ephesians
man"
similarities
and
is
In
2:
15,
differences.
the
But
there
emphasis
are
some
significant
motif.
creation
the
two
His
death
Christ,
through
the
created
alien groupscross,
on
corporate.
Jews and Gentiles-into "one new man, " making peace. The corporate entity is the
Body of Christ, the Church. In 4:24, the emphasis is on the individual within the
"put
The
Christian
the
man"
new
on
at
conversion-initiation
community.
corporate
for
"new
Paul,
Thus,
His
the
God
in
like
be
to
man"
moral perfections.
created
humanity
individual
both
has
corporate and
associations-the corporate new
concept
"new
"
individual
person.
embodieseach
Once again, as in Colossians 3 though less explicitly, the change from "old"
to "new" is aligned with the contrast between the believer's former ("once") and

288
("now")
existence with conversion-initiation
present

as the point of transfer.

Similarly, renewal is attached to the present condition of the believer who is already a
"new man" though not yet in the complete and perfect eschatological sense. Thus,
here,
is
depicting
the
the
case
change as
common clothing metaphor
when used with
the "old man / new man" metaphor is aligned with Paul's "once / now" rather than his
"already / not yet" motif even though the latter comes into play in the renewal of the
"new man. " Similarly, the "once / now" connection places the "old man / new man"
Paul's
in
"indicative"
"imperative"
the
than
the
the
ethical
rather
side of
metaphor on
teaching although the latter also comes into play in the renewal of the "new man. "
Since this metaphor does not occur elsewhere in New Testament paraenesis, Paul
first
it
in
it
theological
likely
to
the
a
cogent
as
ethical
serves
use
contexts where
was
bases
his
he
ethical exhortations.
summary on which
In this passage, then, the "old man" refers to the believer in his or her former
(pre-Christian)

Adam
the
corporate structure of
and
of
existence
aligned
with
state

the old order / realm. The "new man" refers to the believer in his or her present state
Christ
the
Christian
the
new
of
structure
corporate
and
existence aligned with
of
/
At
their conversion-initiation
order realm.

believers "put off the old man" and "put

from
"old"
"new.
"
This
is
the
definitive
"
They
to
the
made a
change
new man.
on
theological reality, Paul claims, about which they were taught as Christians and it
"
basis
for
befits
"new
that
the
the
conduct
man.
necessary
and motivation
serves as
At this point we are ready to gather together the findings of our study in this
/
"old
draw
in
texts,
the
man
new
conclusions
man"
some
answer to the
other
and
and
in
raised
questions
chapter one.
programmatic

CHAPTER
CONCLUSION:

THE OLD ALAN / NEW ALAN IN PAUL

Our study of the "old man / new man" in the Pauline corpus has focused on
designations
both
these
four
in
detailed
investigation
the
of
passages which one or
of
a
has appeared. The results of our study of each passage have been summarized in the
last section of each corresponding chapter: Romans 6 (2.5), Ephesians 2 (3.6),
Colossians 3 (4.5), and Ephesians 4 (5.4). We are now in a position to use these
few
light
in
to
the
on a
shed
chapter one and
questions raised
results to answer
in
for
this
begin
We
by
the
Pauline
in
theology.
issues
motif
setting
reviewing
related
Paul's theology (6.1). Then we shall present our conclusions on the meaning and
function of the "old man / new man" metaphor (6.2), the relationship of this antithesis
the
indicative
by
Paul
(6.3),
the
the
dv0po)7To,,
and
to other
role of
- antitheses used
imperative in Paul's ethics (6.4), and, finally, a brief summary of the argument of our
thesis (6.6).

6.1 Setting in Paul's Theology


At the outset of this study we noted the redemptive-historical,
death,
1
He
the
Paul's
theology.
resurrection,
advent,
saw
eschatological character of
history
fulfilling
in
God's
Christ
Jesus
the
activity
as
revelation of
and exaltation of
(Gal.
4:
4;
the
time
inauguration,
though
the
of salvation
not yet completion, of
and as
2 Cor. 6:2). With the Christ-event, a great change has come about that Paul referred
have
in
"old
have
things
"new
things
to as a
passed away and new
creation" which
from
derived
is
That
"old"
"new"
the
is
Cor.
5:
17).
(2
eschatological
which
and
come"
God's
light
in
framework
the
he
terms:
these
of
within which
uses
perspective and
is
/
that
inaugurated
Christ
in
the
that
and established
new age realm, all
activity

lSee ch. 1,38-41.

289

290

tied to the previous and existing age / realm is "old. " It is a matter of two different
both
in
a redemptive-historical,
worlds,

in
an individual
eschatological sense and

distress
in
its
"old
The
to
the
things"
sin and
relate
unredeemed world
salvific sense.
diabolical
"new
the
to
the
things"
the
new creation
relate
powers;
control of
under
has
dawned
Christ's
that
resurrection and
renewal
with
realm of salvation and
is
lordship.
From
His
individual
this
existence never
perspective,
operates under
isolated but is always viewed from the perspective of the world to which one belongs.
This means that humanity-individually

and corporately-is

in
the
up
always caught

been
has
Since
the
new creation
cosmological conflict of opposing powers.
inaugurated through Christ and the Spirit, the person who is "in Christ" is a new
from
God
in
belongs
is,
to
this
new world order
and
one who participates
creation, that
(cf. Eph. 2: 10,15; 4: 24; Col. 3: 10).
This distinctive character of Paul's theology emerges from the tension that
fulfillment
between
aspects of
exists

On
his
in
one
eschatology.
and expectation

hand, he speaks of the fullness of time that has taken effect and of the new creation
that has begun; but, on the other hand, he is clearly conscious of still living in the
).
In
Rom.
8:
18;
12:
2,
(e.
it
the
time
one
et al.
g.,
corresponding with
present world and
has
from
Christ
"the
he
which
present evil age" as a situation
speaks of
place
delivered believers (Gal. 1:4; cf. Col. 1: 13), while elsewhere he speaks of the present
live
lives
in
believers
the
the
the
service of
must
godly
as
place
world
where
of
and
age
the Lord (Phil. 2: 15; cf Tit. 2: 12-14). Thus in certain contexts Paul qualifies life prior
to the redemptive event as "once" (iroTc) or "at that time" (Rom. 11:30; Gal. 4: 8-9;
Col. 1:21-22; 3: 7-8; Eph. 2: 1-2,11-13; 5: 8), in contrast with the present "now" (VDV)of
the new creation, the time of redemption and fulfillment

(Rom. 3: 21,26; 6: 21-22; 7: 5-

6; 11:30; 1 Cor. 15:20; 2 Cor. 6: 2; Col. 1:22; 3: 8; Eph. 2: 13). This reflects his "once
now" motif

Elsewhere, however, the "at present" or "now" (Pbv) indicates the

291

defined
by the present world over against the
the
mode of existence
continuation of
"then" (To-rc)or "not yet" of the glory still to come (Rom. 8: 18-25; 1 Cor. 3: 22; 4: 5;
13:10,12; 15:54; Phil. 3: 10-14; Col. 3:4). This reflects Paul's "already / not yet" motif
It is this unusual flexibility

"now,
"
"already
time
the
the
of
salvation
now"
namely,
of

that has begun and the "even now" of present world time that still continues, that
its
distinctive
"overlap
An
the
two
Paul's
to
ages"
of
character.
eschatology
gives
takes place, since he views the first advent of Christ as the breaking through of the
through
is
All
takes
into
that
this
the
place
passing away.
present age
coming age
Jesus Christ who has come and is yet to come again (Gal. 4: 4-5; 1 Thess. 1:9-10;
4: 13-18).
In Christ's resurrection the new creation dawns, bringing at the once / now
level for believers individually

from
to
the
decisive
the
transfer
old
and corporately a

its
derives
Cor.
17;
15).
This
(2
5:
/
transfer
meaning and stands
cf. v.
new age realm
Corinthians
In
1
Christ
Adam.
is
in
in
set over against
passages which
out

15:45-47

Paul speaks of Adam as "the first man" and of Christ as the "second man, " "the last
Adam. " His resurrection from the dead established Him as the "last Adam, " and
through it the new life of the new creation has already come to light and become a
Adam
In
Christ
in
this
this
and
stand over against one
regard,
present era.
reality
divinely
two
the
of
realms-life
appointed
representatives
another as

Just
death.
and

into
death
the
Adam
is
through
through
the
sin
world
whom
and
one
sin
entered
as
(Rom. 5: 12), so Christ is the One who brings righteousness and life (Rom. 5: 15-19). In
his role of representing humanity, Adam is called the type of "him who was to come"
(5: 14), namely, a type of the second man, the last Adam, who represents the new
humanity.

Christ, the One who was to come and who has come, is the head of the

has
broken
into
that
the
age
present.
coming

292

The Adam-Christ typology not only casts light on the significance Paul
Christ
Himself,
but
it also illuminates the way in which he sees those who
to
gives
belong to Christ as involved in Him and with Him in His redemptive work. This
comes to expression in the words of 1 Corinthians 15:22: ". .. for as in Adam all died,
Christ
be
"in
Adam.
"
Just
in
"
"In
Christ"
is
to
all
as
so also
shall
made alive.
parallel
"in Adam" all who belong to him died, so "in Christ" all who belong to Him shall live. It
is this corporate connection of the "all in one" that Paul applies to Christ and His
people and from which the statements concerning dying and rising "with Christ"
should be interpreted as is evident from the close connection between Romans 5: 1221 (Adam and Christ) and Romans 6: 1-14 (being crucified with Christ and walking in
2
life).
newness of
The death and resurrection of believers with Christ is, however, a matter of

God'sdecision to seethem as having died and risen (proleptically) with Him in His
death and resurrection at the redemptive-historical, corporate level until through
faith / baptism (conversion-initiation) they are united with Him and accept the divine
died
Christ
level.
Because
it
individual
to
them
the
provision as personally applies
at
"buried
humanity,
they
the
also were
with
and rose as
representative of redeemed
Him and raised with Him" in faith / baptism (Col. 2:12). When through faith as
baptism
founder
in
they
Him
the
are
attested
united with
as
of the new humanity,
they participate in that which happened to Him: His death becomestheir death, and
His resurrection becomestheir resurrection to walk in newness of life now (Rom. 6:4)
His
life
fully
future
(Rom.
in
8:18-25). This puts an end
to
the
resurrection
and share
to the old life separated from God, and begins a new one established in Christ.

2See ch. 2,67-73.

293

The Adam / Christ typology, then, with its redemptive-historical,

"realized"

frame
departure
the
and
point of
eschatological, and corporate associations provides
We
turn
to
/
"old
for
Paul's
the
now
man new man" metaphor.
use of
of reference
in
dual
the
function
this
the
metaphor
of
meaning and
present our conclusions on
Pauline corpus.
6.2 The "Old Man / New Man"in

Paul's Theology

Our investigation of the "old man / new man" metaphor confirms that a
Jewish milieu provides the best conceptual background for this motif in Paul's
thought. He draws on the Adam / Christ typology within his distinctive redemptivehistorical, eschatological perspective to formulate the "old man / new man"
terminology.

Then he uses these terms as objects of the verbal action in the common

"put off / put on" clothing metaphor representing in this case a change of status
(condition) and identity.

As such, without antecedent parallels, the "old man / new

Christian
to
Paul
formulation
that
is
contributed
probably an original
man" metaphor
in
the
3
to
Now
the
questions raised
thought.
answer
results of our study
we offer
4
chapter one.
6.2.1 The Meaning

'Metaphor
Man!
"Old
Man
/
New
the
of

The meaning of the "old man / new man" metaphor is complicated by the
fact that these terms have both corporate and individual

Paul
that
associations

derived from the Adam / Christ typology. Adam is the prototypical "old man, " though
Paul does not use the term in this way. All those in solidarity with Adam (Rom. 5: 12,
19a), namely, all humanity

3See ch. 1,42-52.


4See ch. 1,60-61.

"in Adam, " constitute the corporate "old man; " and each

294

At
"old
"
he
/
"in
Adam"
is
individual
the
man.
she exists
viewed as an
person as
belongs
level,
"old
humanity
to the
that
to
the
man" refers
unredeemed
corporate
by
Adam
/
the
old order realm of existence established
ongoing corporate structure of
in
divine
judgment
by
leading
fall
dominated
death
his
to
the
power of sin and
and
at
the end. In short, the corporate "old man" is the world of unredeemed humanity.

At

the individual level, the "old man" refers to the unredeemed person who belongs to this
futile
life
It
and ultimately
entails a
way of
corporate structure of existence.
individual
6:
6,17-23).
In
5:
12,19a;
death
(Rom.
the
short,
eternal

leads to

"old man" is the

5
is
7:
31).
(1
Cor.
"this
that
passing away
present age"
person of
On the other hand, Christ is the prototypical "new man, " though Paul does
5:
17,
faith
(Rom.
by
Christ
All
in
in
those
this
the
term
way.
solidarity with
not use
19b), namely, the new humanity "in Christ, " constitute the corporate "new man; " and
Christ"
individual
"in
/
is
he
believer
as
an
she exists
viewed
as
each

"new man. " At

the corporate level, the "one new man" (Eph. 2: 15) refers to redeemed humanity that
belongs to the ongoing corporate structure of the new order / realm established by
Jesus Christ in His death and resurrection and dominated by the power of
In
it
divine
in
the
life
Spirit
leading
the
to
through
the
glory
end.
righteousness and
barriers of race, culture, and social status that separate people from one another in
the old order / realm are no longer relevant (Col. 3: 11). In short, the corporate "new
6
"new
At
Church.
individual
level,
is
the
to
the
the
the
man"
refers
redeemed
man"
It
involves
belongs
to
this
existence.
corporate
of
a worthy way
structure
person who
"new
life
In
(Rom.
individual
leads
5:
6:
17-23).
life
17-19;
the
to
eternal
short,
and
of
be
here
"the
Christ
is
is
to
is
in
to
the
that
and
yet
age come"
now
person of
man"

5Seech. 2,140-44.
6Seech. 3,190-92.

295

fully and finally established. 7 The individual as a whole person exists in a dynamic,
determinative relationship to this corporate structure without losing his / her
distinctive individuality.

The terms "old man / new man, " then, have both corporate

and individual application. The context in which they are used is determinative.
This corporate / individual relationship is confirmed by the fact that "old"
and "new" for Paul are both redemptive-historical,
and personal conversion terms (individual).

eschatological terms (corporate)

On one hand, reference to the "old man"

in Romans 6: 6 and to the "new man" in Ephesians 2: 15 relate to redemptivehistorical categories with respect to all that took place once in Christ's death on the
cross. On the other hand, the "put off / put on" references to the "old" and "new man"
in Colossians 3: 9-11 and Ephesians 4: 22-24 relate to personal appropriation
conversion-initiation

at

and the subsequent continuous renewal of the "new man. " For

the believer to have "died with Christ" means that the "old man" has been "put off'
(the negative side of personal conversion). This is possible because "our old man"
(Rom. 6:6) was crucified with Christ at the cross (corporate solidarity), even though
Paul focuses on individual participation in this event at conversion-initiation

in

Romans 6.8 To have been "raised with Christ" to walk in newness of life means that
the "new man" has been "put on" (the positive side of personal conversion). This is
because
"one
the
possible
new man" (Eph. 2: 15) has been created in Christ at the
(corporate
solidarity).
cross

In light of this, the terms "old man / new man" refer to

the whole person in a particular condition or mode of existence rather than a person
who manifests a particular

set of characteristics, habits or deeds in his / her conduct,

former
includes
the
although
and influences the latter.

7See ch. 1,57; ch. 4,243-46,


and ch. 5,286-88.
8See ch. 2,107-11,142.

296

Though the "old man / new man" are linked with Adam and Christ
respectively, they do not refer to Adam and Christ directly as individuals. 9 The "old
man" was crucified with Christ, but Adam was not. The "new man" is said to be
created "after the likeness of God" (Eph. 4: 24), but Paul does not use the verb KTicoito
describe Jesus Christ, nor is it used with Him as the object. Also, the "new man" is
said to be presently undergoing renewal "according to the image of God" (Col. 3: 10;
Eph. 4: 23), which is something Paul does not say of Jesus Christ. However, he does
speak of Christ as the image of God (2 Cor. 4:4; Col. 1: 15) who, like the "first Adam, "
transmits His image to those who belong to Him (I Cor. 15:49) and he speaks of
believers being conformed to His image (Rom. 8: 29; 2 Cor. 3: 18).
Thus, it may be said that the "old man / new man" metaphor fits the
/
Paul's
"once
structure of
now" motif. The time of change between "old" and "new"
occurred in redemptive history at the death and resurrection of Christ on the
corporate level (Rom. 6: 2-10; Eph. 2: 15) and at faith / baptism in the life history of
each believer on the individual level (Col. 3:9-10; Eph. 4: 22-24). This leads us to
consider a related question: Does the eschatological tension in Paul's theology require
or even allow him to regard the believer as both an "old man" and a "new man" at the
same time?
6.2.2 Discontinuity

Between

the "Old Man"and'New

Man! '

It could be argued that Paul is dealing with the definitive crucifixion of the
"old man" in Romans 6: 6 and Colossians 3: 9-10 (indicative force), but in Ephesians
4:22-24 he regards the "old man" as still alive and active and in need of being put off
death
in
daily
to
or put
ethical action (imperatival

force). The ethical context of

Ephesians 4: 22-24 suggests an ethical interpretation

9See ch. 1,50


n149.

of these verses. Thus the time

297

believer's
life,
faith
be
/
baptism
but
the
throughout
at
also
of change would not only
believers
be
daily
the
the
the
against
vices
on
present
of
struggle
emphasis would
and
"old
the
man" and their continual transformation
of

by taking on the virtues of the

"new man. " As such, this reflects Paul's "already / not yet" motif in present ethical
action.
If this is the case, it would be analogous to other Pauline constructions that
involve the "already / not yet" motif (see pp. 290-91). Does the "old man / new man"
have
"put
Does
Paul
You
have
"put
fit
the
this
old man" and
say:
off
motiV
metaphor
"put
"put
the
(indicative);
therefore,
the
the
new
on
and
off
old man"
new man"
on
(imperative)?
man"

Must believers be exhorted to continually "put off the old man"

/
"put
Similarly,
"put
the
off put
are
clothing metaphor verbs
on the new man"?
and
(moving
"new
terms
"old
transfer
out
the
man" as objects used as
man" and
on" with
into
transformation
another),
or
as
and
of one condition

terms (remaining in and

defined
thus
be
in
they
to
are
and
contextually
a given condition), or are
maturing
being
these
to
either
of
situations?
applied
capable of
While an ethical application of the clothing imagery is appropriate in some

the
6:
11,13),
12-14;
Thess.
Eph.
Rom.
13:
1
5:
8;
(e.
we must question
contexts g.,
for
"put
"put
the
interpretation
the
the
on
new man"
old man" and
of
words
off
ethical
/
Paul
both
First,
in
"put
the
uses
off put on"
paraenetic passages,
several reasons.
holistic
"old
/
indicative
force
the
the
together
man new man" as
with
along with
verbs
but contrastive objects respectively. 10 This usage does not lend itself to the view that
the believer is both an "old man" and a "new man" at the same time. With such
"old
does
imagery
indicate
the
taking
the
off
not
a processof gradually
associations
"old
have
the
Rather,
believers
"new
"
the
put off
man" and gradually putting on
man.

1OFor the arguments supporting the "indicative force"


in
Col.
the
aorist participles
view of
3:9-10, see ch. 4,217-22, and of the aorist infinitives in Eph. 4: 22-24, see ch. 5,267-69.

298

become
"new
do
"
They
they
the
are clothed with
man.
not progressively
man" and
the "new man. "
Second, in Ephesians 4, Paul characterizes the "old man" (4: 22) in such a
he
Yet
in
4:
17-19.
description
link
him
the
to
of pagan unbelievers given
with
way as
he
believers
in
despite
fact
this
that
the
was aware of
way
never characterizes
between
(e.
Cor.
fact,
1
3-11,
In
the
them
antithesis
g.,
passim).
sinfulness among
his
he
60
the past and the present is clearly drawn in verse 20 (b
viewed
where
cisV1-t
believing readers as answering to a much different identification.

The description he

(4:
24)
"new
is
"new
that
the
the
shows
antithetical
man"
man"
gives of

to the "old

Cor.
17;
5:
2
Eph.
2:
10;
(cf.
in
be
is
terms
the
to
of
new creation
understood
man" and
Gal. 6: 15). The "old man" designation is no longer applicable to the Christian.
Third, renewal is predicated solely of the "new man. " As the use of

&Opmms-

behavior
the
it
to
the
of a person.
whole person, not simply
suggests, relates
Accordingly, this double metaphor doesnot depict two opposing moral componentsin
"old
"
Rather,
/
designations
the
by
"old
implied
the
nature new nature.
a person as
"alive
God"
"dead
to
is
"this
to
depicts
sin" and
and
present age" who
a person of
man"
On
the
is
in
being
in
the
that
other
corrupted.
continually
processof
condition
who
hand, the "new man" depicts the same individual person with a new identity in a new
"dead
"alive
is
Christ,
"the
to
in
to
to
person
who
sin"
and
a
of
age come"
condition
God" (Rom. 6:11) and undergoing renewal in that condition (Col. 3:10; Eph. 4:24).
This progressive renewal necessitates the continuously operative grace of
God and enlists the responsible activity of the believer (Rom. 8: 12; 12:2). But it is not
"
is
"new
by
Paul
"old
the
the
man, nor
as putting off
man" and putting on
represented
the putting off to be construed as the progressive crucifixion of the "old man. "11 It is

llSee ch. 2,105-07.

299

the "new man" already "put on" who is in the process of constantly being renewed.
Though Paul identifies the "I" Vyto') both with sin (Rom. 7: 14,20a, 25b) and with
former
"old
he
(Rom.
7:
17a,
20b,
25a),
does
the
the
the
and
ego"
not
righteousness
call
latter the "new ego." Similarly, he does not call sin (or, the "flesh") in believers the
"old man. " The "daily struggle" of the new life goes on for the believer as a "new man"
in the conflict of the flesh versus the Spirit (see pp. 313-16), not the "old man" versus
the "new man. "
In light of these factors, we maintain the view that the "old man / new man"
/
"once
/
"already
fits
the
the
the
than
not yet"
structure of
now" rather
metaphor
"new
At
individual
level,
"old"
Pauline
in
the
the
theology.
the
man" reflect
and
motif
two successive stages in a person's life: pre- and post-conversion. Paul's holistic
terminology plus the "put off / put on" clothing metaphor indicate that, for him, the
"old" and the "new man" do not coexist at the individual level. Though there is
"old
the
because
the
the
on
puts
man"
and
same person puts off
continuity of person
"new man, " the emphasis of the metaphor lies on discontinuity-a

in
radical change

displaces
"old
"
The
the
"new
the
the
one who
constitutes
change
man.
man"
which
believes a genuine "new man, " although a "new man" not yet eschatologically perfect.
It is the progressive renewal of the "new man" that takes place within the structure
/
"new
be
"already
Thus,
"old
the
the
not
yet"
motif.
and
man"
man"
must
of
considered soteriological-eschatological

as well as anthropological categories.

6.2.3 The Purpose of the "Old Man / New MaiPMetaphor


Paul used a variety of metaphors to describe the multi-faceted significance
/
"old"
"new.
"
Christ-event
from
The
"old
the
transition
to
the
and
crucial
man new
of
"
function
It
in
though
them.
prominent,
not
was
one
either a corporate,
man,
of
could
redemptive-historical

(Rom.
6 implicitly;
setting

Eph. 2; Col. 3 partly) or an individual,

300

conversion-initiation

(baptismal) setting (Rom. 6; Col. 3; Eph. 4).

The metaphor served at least three purposes for Paul. First, in Romans 6:6
break
definitive
believer's
"our
the
the crucifixion of
with sin as
old man" emphasizes
"in
Adam"
to
/
her
identity
his
thus
enslaved
old
and status
also with
a power and
God
"slave"
but
to
longer
believer
is
to
12
is
The
that the
a
sin
no
a slave
result
sin.
(Rom. 6: 20-22). Second, in Ephesians 2: 15 the creation of the "one new man"
Christ
two
the
alien groups-Jews
solidarity
with
of
corporate
emphasizes
Gentiles-who

and

13
In
God
this
to
to
redemptiveand
each
other.
were reconciled

historical change effected by Christ, Jews and Gentiles now share equally the
blessings of the new era of salvation in the Church. Third, in the paraenetic
the
"old
Ephesians
4:
22-24,
9-11
3:
the
Colossians
and
man" put off
and
passages,
"new man" put on at conversion-initiation

from
the
definitive
transfer
the
emphasizes

death
to
the
and
righteousness
under
realm
new
eternal
and
old realm under sin
/
"old
the
/
Paul's
"once
new
life.
This
man
places
motif
now"
with
alignment
eternal
Paul's
in
(doctrinal
"indicative"
the
affirmation)
man" metaphor on the side of
for
the
basis
it
the
theological
As
motivation
and
such, serves as
paraenesis.
being
is
"new
14
the
At
time,
the same
"imperative" (pastoral exhortation).
man" who
Christian.
identity
is
the
the
of
new
renewed
Having set forth the meaning and function of the "old man / new man" in
to
this
Pauline
the
to
other
antithesis
the
relationship of
comment on
corpus, we wish
Paul
that
uses.
antitheses
dvOpmTos-

12See ch. 2,104-17.


13See ch. 3,174-85.
14See ch. 4,215-22,227-32;

and ch. 5,269-73,278-84,

below.
316-24
and pp.

301

6.3 Relationship
6.3.1 Outer/

to Other Pauline

"AvOpwros-Themes

Inner Man

The adverb eoj occurs five times in the Pauline corpus (1 Cor. 5: 12,13; 2
Cor. 4: 16; 1 Thess. 4: 12; Col. 4: 5), 15 and the adverb cuto appears four times (Rom.
7: 22; 1 Cor. 5: 12; 2 Cor. 4: 16; Eph. 3: 16). 16 Only in 2 Corinthians

4: 16 is jeto used

dV0pW7ToS-,
dvOpmms-)
it
in
/Jtjv
(0
jeto
di*mToscontrast with C'016J
stands
where
with
implied from the preceding construction

In addition,
[dPOpmTos-1).
(o Jaoj 77'1-Lt5v

Romans
in
7:
22
Ephesians
dvOpmmsand
occurs alone with

6'01W

3: 16. All the remaining

Pauline uses refer to those "outside" the church (1 Cor. 5: 12-13; 1 Thess. 4: 12; Col.
4: 5) or to those "within"

the church (1 Cor. 5: 12) respectively.

the dvOpamos-uses and their relationship

Our interest

lies with

to the "old / new man. "

The contrast between the outer and inner man was common in Hellenistic
18
Others
background.
Gnostic
has
17
the
Some
thought.
a
antithesis
scholars claim
favor of
in
influence
Hellenistic
but
discount
Hellenistic
terminology
acknowledge
"those
ew)
(ol'?
15BAGD, s.v.
the
1.9, used substantivally
who
meaning
article
with
Mk. 4: 11);
Col.
5;
4:
Thess.
4:
12;
1
(1
Cor.
12,13;
5:
to
cf.
non-Christians
are outside" with reference
Ly, used as a substitute for an adjective with dvOpanms-meaning "outer, outside" with reference to
i.
dvOpmmr,
2.
Cor.
the
body
(1
4:
16);
"
e.,
i.
man,
11
the
c.
outer
a
s.
v.
and
e.,
outer
man,
our
......
...
Cor.
4:
16
2
his
in
transitory,
and
sinful
aspects
material,
man
... ."
16BAGD, s. v. 1010J,2; used substantivally
"those
(oi
ato)
the
within"
article
meaning
with
dVOpb)7TOIfor
Cor.
(1
Christians
12);
5:
to
an adjective with
and used as a substitute
with reference
"our
inner
(Rom.
Eph.
7:
22;
3:
16)
"the
inner
to
"inner,
and
nature"
within" with reference
meaning
immortal
his
i.
in
inner
dvOp&)7To,
2.
"the
Cor.
(2
4:
16);
man,
e.,
man
spiritual,
and s. v.
5-, c. a,. ..
man"
Eph.
3:
16
God
Cor.
Rom.
7:
22;
2
16;
4:
toward
aspects, striving
......
17E. g., Plato, Rep. 9.589a, o ev76s- dpopmTog; Plotinus, Enn. 5.1.10,6 ct'ato dvopmTog;
Epictetus 2.7.3; 2.8.12-14; Seneca, Mor. Ep. 41.4-5; 102.23-27. Philo, Cong. 97; Det. 22-23; Plant.
13.7-8. See further references in BAGD, s.v. avOpto7Tor,2. c. a; Jeremias,
42; CH 1.15,18,21;
'WvOptoTrog,avOpt6mvog, " TDNT, 1: 365; and Behm, 'Y'atd," TDNT, 2: 698-99.
18R. Reitzenstein, The Hellenistic Mystery-Religions:
Their Basic Ideas and Significance,
Pickwick Press, 1978 [19101)
trans. J. E. Steely from the 3rd German ed., PTMS 15 (Pittsburgh:
Jeremias,
dualism influenced Paul directly via Gnosticism.
354-56, argues that anthropological
This view also
TDNT, 1: 365, accepts Gnostic influence as mediated through Hellenistic Judaism.
Anthropological
Paul's
in
R.
Jewett
history
the
of research
support of
who provides a useful
receives
Terms. A Study of Their Use in Conflict Settings, AGJU 10 (Leiden: Brill, 1971) 391-95. See ch. 1,
22-25.

302

Hebrew thought with its holistic rather than dualistic viewpoint. 19 Others see
Hellenistic influence, but the terminology is derived from Hellenistic Judaism and has
/
for
inner
Paul,
to
formal
the
that
a whole
refers
contrast
such
significance
outer
only
20
from
two
perspectives.
person viewed
What Paul calls "the inner man" corresponds to M ("heart") in the Old
Testament and has formal parallels in the sayings of Jesus (cf. Matt. 23: 28; Mk. 7:21;
Lk. 11:39), but the expression itself and the "outer / inner man" antithesis likely come
from Hellenistic terminology and popular use. However, though he takes up the
language, Paul uses it within the framework of his own theology. Unlike Hellenistic
thinkers, he does not denigrate the "outer man" as evil and elevate "the inner man" as
the essential good part of a person so that immortal life is gained only when the
in
Also,
his
is
the
"outer
off
end.
redemptive-historical,
put
man"
mortal
Hellenistic
frame
thinking.
contrasts
reference
with
of
eschatological
man" is undergoing renewal-not
Gnostic thought-but

The "inner

by absorption into pure spirit as in Hellenistic and

by moral transformation

by the Spirit with the hope of

Cor.
(1
bodily
his
in
future
for
"outer
includes
the
existence
man"
a
resurrection that
15:20-28,35-57; 2 Cor. 3: 18; 4: 16-5: 10; Rom. 12:2).
In spite of these differences, however, Paul maintains "the same basic
distinction between the physical and the non-physical, " between the visible corporeal
in
invisible
the
non-corporeal, which
combination constitute the whole person as
and

19E.g.,W. D. Stacey, The Pauline View of Man in Relation to its Judaic and Hellenistic
Background (London: Macmillan & Co., 1956) 211-13, who concludes that Paul is not a dichotomist,
his
letters"
(213).
into
"on
language
dichotomy
the
though
creeps
rare occasions
of
even
20R. Bultmann, Theology of the New Testament, trans. K. Grobel (London: SCM Press,
1956) 1:203; C. K. Barrett, The Second Epistle to the Corinthians, BNTC (London: A. & C. Black,
1973) 146-47; V. Furnish, II Corinthians, AB (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1984) 288-89; et al.

303

21
for
Paul:
"The
Robert
Gundry
is
declares
true
the
that
man
a psychosomatic unity.
whole man-corporeal

incorporeal
together, the incorporeal acting through the
and

corporeal, each equally deficient without the other. Hence, the true man is not the
inner man alone, for although the body is outward, it is not unessential. The body is to
be sanctified and will be resurrected. "22
Some interpreters deny this dichotomy in Paul by making both "the outer
from
indivisible
inner
to
the
the
without and
whole person as seen
man" refer
and
from within respectively. 23 This sometimes includes equating the "inner man" with
the "new man, " which, in turn, requires equating the "outer man" with the "old man. "
This raises the issue of the relationship between the outer / inner man and the old
24
Pauline
in
the
corpus.
new man
First, is the "outer man" the "old man"? We have argued above that the
"old man" on the individual level is the human person living under the dominion of sin
been
has
Christian,
"old
For
faith
Christ.
in
the
the
to
crucified
already
man"
prior

21R. H. Gundry, Sdma in Biblical Theology with Emphasis on Pauline Anthropology,


Press, 1976) 135-40. He argues convincingly for
SNTSMS 29 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
both
body
living
duality,
i.
and soul along with
e., a
person as a unity of parts,
anthropological
dichotomy
He
finds
for
for
the
a
expressions
person.
evidence
whole
synonymous and synecdochic
Christian
Judaism
human
NT
OT,
in
the
times,
the
the
the
of
early
of
constitution
and
within
unity
See
(83-156).
Paul
in
Hellenistic
including
thought
as
well
as
also ch. 1,25.
writers
221bid., 84.
23Bultmann,
Theology, 1: 203; U. Schnelle, The Human Condition. Anthropology
in the
Fortress Press, 1996) 106-07.
Teachings of Jesus, Paul, and John, trans. 0. C. Dean, Jr. (Minneapolis,
24Some believe the two
sets of contrasts are to be equated or closely related: e. g., J. B.
Lightfoot, Saint Paul's Epistles to the Colossians and to Philemon, reprint of 9th ed. (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan, 1959) 213; Barrett, Second Corinthians,
145-47; S. Kim, The Origin of Paul's Gospel,
WUNT 4 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1982) 321-26; J. D. G. Dunn, Romans 1-8,9-16,2
vols., WBC
38A, 38B (Dallas: Word Books, 1988) 1: 394; J. K. Chamblin, Paul and the Self Apostolic Teaching
for Personal Wholeness (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1993) 88,173, ".
'the inner man' (Rom. 7: 22) is the
..
'the
'
Christ,
Paul
'the
in
'the
'
in
to
old
or
what
elsewhere calls
self
outer man,
contrast
new man,
Jeremias,
Adam
On
'man
in
hand,
the
that
they
man,
other
are not related:
others argue
... ."
TDNT, 1: 365-66; Gundry, S5ma, 135-40; A. T. Lincoln, Ephesians, WBC 42 (Dallas: Word Books,
1990) 204-06.

304

Corinthians
In
2
4:
16,
Christ
(Rom.
(Col.
6:
6)
3:
9;
Eph.
22).
4:
and put off
with
however, the "outer man" is said to be presently wasting away in contrast to the
"inner man" who is being renewed day by day. In this context the "outer man" is not
linked to the enslaving power of sin but to physical frailty, hardship and mortality (cf.
2 Cor. 4: 7-11,17). The designation correlates with the expression "earthen vessels"
(2 Cor. 4: 7), a figure for the physical bodies of those who preached the gospel.25 Thus,
"our outer man" is not to be equated with "our old man" enslaved to sin. Rather, the
is
believers,
including
that
designates
the
subject
corporeal side of people,
expression
to hardship, deterioration and physical death.
Second, is the "inner man" the "new man"? We have argued above that the
"new man" on the individual level is the Christian living under the dominion of grace
God
knowledge
Christ
faith
in
in
the
to
and
of
and undergoing renewal
subsequent
being
is
has
been
"put
"new
The
renewed
on" at conversion and
man"
righteousness.
(Col. 3: 10; Eph. 4: 23-24) in anticipation of final glory (Rom. 8: 18,22-25). In
2 Corinthians 4: 16, however, the "inner man, " subject to psychological feelings (the
but
"in
in
by
day
being
day
is
in
this context),
not
sanctification
revitalized
emphasis
buoyancy of spirit" with the result that "we do not lose heart" (4: 16a; cf. "our hearts, "
4:6; and "in the heart, " 5: 12).26 Thus, "our inner man" is not to be equated with the
"new man" that Christians have put on. Rather, it designates the non-corporeal side
feelings
believers,
is
including
to
that
as well as
psychological
subject
of people,
life.
formation
and
character

25Gundry,

S5ma,

136.

261bid., 136-37. Gundry, however,


life
former
"old
the
the
way
of
as
sinful
man"
views
that is to be put off and the "new man" as the new style of righteous conduct that is to be put on by
the Christian.

305

Similarly, the "inner man" of Ephesians 3: 16 correlates with "your hearts"


in 3: 17 and the "spirit of your mind" in 4: 23.27 In this passage this expression
designates the invisible inward side of a person with reference to believers where the
The
Holy
Spirit
is
the
referent
already at work.
strengthening and renewing power of
debated
"inner
Romans
7:
22
is
in
"inner
the
the
man" correlates with
yet
man"
of
"my mind" and stands in contrast with "my members" in 7:23.28 Again, it designates
the inward side of a person and, as determined by context, may apply to either a
believer or an unbeliever. The correlations and contrasts mentioned above seem to
indicate that for Paul the "inner man" is native to the human constitution as a
"
"
As
"inner
"outer
though
the
to
the
used with
man.
such,
man,
counterpart
is
3:
16
technical
Ephesians
Corinthians
in
2
4:
16
Christians
to
a
not
and
reference
designation for a Christian or the "new man. " Romans 7:22 is disputed, but this
holds.
conclusion still
In these Pauline passages, therefore, the etodveptoTrosare
and kzo dpOpoi7osbut
duality,
designations
not an ethical
reflecting an anthropological
anthropological
dualism in which the body or the corporeal side of a person is evil in and of itself.
Every person possesses both an "outer / inner man" at the same time that together
identified
be
is
ea)
&6mTo5to
living
The
human
being.
not
constitute the unity of a

27See Lincoln, Ephesians, 204-06, for further discussion; also ch. 5,273-78.
28Rom. 7: 13-25 is a widely debated
"I"
between
the
A
vigorous conflict occurs
passage.
"I"
deliver
the
is
to
Mosaic
The
Law,
holy,
just,
indwelling
though
powerless
and good,
sin.
and
from the power of sin (Rom. 8: 3). In 7: 13-8: 4 there is a consistent contrast between "inner man
It
is
"I"
in
/
flesh
body"
the
"members
/
that
sin.
together
with
conflict
constitute
physical
mind" and
likely that this conflict relates primarily
to the devout Jewish person under the Law, like preCompare 6: 12-7: 6 with 7: 7-25 that presupposes subjection to the Mosaic
Christian Paul himself.
law
freedom
from
the
8:
1-4
7:
that
13-25
Law, which is not true of Christians;
of
asserts
and
with
lifethe
future
(8:
fully
10-11)
through
for
in
death
the
the
to
whole person now and yet
sin and
come
Gundry,
further
discussion
Mosaic
For
Spirit,
Law
to
the
see
something
effect.
was powerless
giving
S6ma, 137-40, and D. Moo, The Epistle to the Romans, NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996)
409-96; pace C. E. B. Cranfield, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans,
T. & T. Clark, 1975-79) 1: 363; and Dunn, Romans, 1: 393-94; id., The
2 vols., ICC (Edinburgh:
Theology of Paul the Apostle (Grand Rapids / Cambridge: Eerdmans, 1998) 472-76.

306

/
Nor
is
in
"old
the
to
the
the
age
realm.
old
present
whole person
relation
man" or
as
the I'Vto&*mms- to be identified as the "new man" or the whole person in relation to
the new age / realm.
Though these contrasts are not to be equated, they are, nevertheless,
it
is
living
the
/
"inner
The
the
and
person,
outer man" constitutes a
unity of
related.
"whole person" who has put off the "old man" and put on the "new man. " Thus, the
"new man"-both

"outer and inner man" together-stands

being
human
as a whole

is
"outer
His
for
in
the
God
though
the
to
man"
service even
present age
set apart
wasting away physically.

The powers of the new age mediated by the Spirit are

the
but
"new
in
transforms
that
in
the
outer
man"
not yet
a way
already at work
death
to
"outer
deteriorating
The
is
and subject
man"
corporeal side visible to others.
"
"inner
but
the
Adamic
Fall,
the
lingering
the
non-corporeal
man,
consequence of
as a
being
is
behavior
it
in
the
to
effects outwardly,
others except
side not visible
is
Spirit
formation
by
the
in
the
who
power of
character
revitalized and renewed
believers.
in
already at work
An important element in the instruction that Paul's readers have received
is that they are undergoing renewal in the "spirit of your mind" (Eph. 4: 23). Though
Colossians
3:
9-10
the
in
is
the
"mind"
the
parallel,
not explicitly mentioned
renewal of
This
does
em'yva)utsto
to
point.
not mean,
seems make a similar
emphasis given
however, that the "new man" is to be identified as an inner spiritual nature or a
individual's
is
What
indicate
that
the
inner
these
at present
passages
self.
person's
is
his
in
body,
Christ
does
image
the
take
which
physical
place
of
not
renewal after
the etodi*mTos- (2 Cor. 4: 16), but takes place in his / her heart or mind that
in
does
the
"new
dpOpmTos%
At
&,
the
the
the
time
reside
not
man"
same
w
constitute
heart / mind of the believer, nor does the "old man" reside in the "flesh. " The "outer /
inner man" as a whole person is "old" through sin and liability to death. Similarly, the

307

At
by
Spirit.
life
the
has
become
"new"
the
through
gift of
grace and
whole person
deteriorating,
is
is
body
that
the
the
physical
person as a whole, excluding
present,
(cf. Rom. 12:2). At the
being transformed by the renewal of the &, (o dpopoiTrosparousia this present transformation

into the image of Christ, which takes place now

be
the
to
its
"inner
level
the
the
extended
man" and
outward expressions, will
of
on
body-when
physical

"outer man"-the

Christians put on a resurrection body fully

Cor.
21;
1
3:
(Phil.
fully
Christ
His
image
to
the
resurrection
and share
of
conformed
15:49). The Christian's hope is that his / her "outer man" will be changed according to
the pattern of the physical transformation

that took place in Jesus' resurrection so

20-21).
3:
Phil.
8:
11-23;
longer
/
her
(Rom.
him
death
touch
decay
that sin,
will no
and
This earthly life is running down and wasting away, but eternal life and the destiny
forward.
in
is
the
for
believer
the
making and moving
already
set
Thus for Paul the & / 6'9(0&Opmms-antithesis is describing an
anthropological

duality

functional
than
a
rather

believer) and eschatological

(old vs. new) contrast.

/
"old
to
the
man new man" antithesis
parallel
turn to consider the relationship
antithesis
TrvcvtLaTtKO5,

6.3.2 Natural/

soteriological

(non-believer

vs.

In this regard this contrast is not

in Paul's theology.

In light of this, we

between the "old man / new man" and the OUXtKOS*

that Paul uses.

Spiritual

Man

The adjective 0VXtK0,C occurs only four times in the Pauline


2: 14; 15: 44 twice, 46)29 while the adjective

Cor.
(I
corpus

7TvcvyaTtK0Soccurs twenty-one

30
is
In
four
OVXtKO.
the
contrasted
each of
5it
uses Of
various connections.

times in
with

29BAGD, s. v. OUXtKOS,"pertaining
life
denoting
the
lit.
life,
in
of
to the soul or
always
our
is
the natural world and whatever belongs to it, in contrast to the supernatural
which
world,
Jude
19.
Elsewhere
Jas.
by
in
3:
15
in
it
NT
the
and
7TPcDpa.-- ."
only occurs
characterized
30BAGD,

"pertaining
s. v. 7TPcvpa-rtK6S-,

to the spirit,

spiritual

...

2. In the great majority

308

7TvcvpaTtK0,5'.

In 1 Corinthians 15:44,46, these adjectives modify O'c5pa


setting up a

between
the
contrast

ot5pa0VXtK0v

and the u6pa

7Tve7vpaTtK0Vin

Paul's discussion of the

In 1 Corinthians 2: 14-15, these adjectives

body
in
the resurrection.
the
nature of

between
the
in
2:
15)
(implied
contrast
a
up
setting
with7mcvpaTtK65modify dApmTos[avOpmmd
God's
discussion
Paul's
in
the
wisdom
0vXtK0S'dv6w7To,,
of
m,,cvpa-rtKos- and

Our concern is with the latter

have
Spirit.
Spirit
the
by
to
those
the
who
revealed

"
/
"old
to
the
its
man new man.
relationship
antithesis and
In spite of considerable investigation, no satisfactory parallels to Pauline
in
found
that
been
have
establish
a convincing
usage
language,
and specifically
7Tvcvya-rtKW
antithesis

this antithesis.

OVXLK05,
the
the
of
origin
way
Some scholars claim the

has a Gnostic background. 31 While some comparative

found in Gnostic thought, 32 several objections undermine


Paul's
terminology
origin of
of the mystery religions
Second, such material
situation,
contrasted

or understanding

is fundamentally

material

be
can

its value for establishing

his usage. First, the "pneumatic

different

Gnosticism
that
requires

from the "spiritual

the

man"

33
Paul.
man" of

be presupposed for the Corinthian

but this is doubtful. 34 Third, there is no parallel

where these adjectives are

in a single passage.

Others have sought the background solely in the Old Testament and / or
2:
5
Pet.
twice.
NT
it
in
in
1
the
divine
Elsewhere
it
to
the
only
occurs
7TvcDpa... ."
of cases refers
31R. Reitzenstein, Hellenistic Mystery Religions, 68-70, claimed that the OuXtK6,,
-/

in
the
Hellenistic
be
found
texts
Gnostic
in
in
where
mystery
religion
and
7TvcuyaTtK6s-contrast can
OUX4
divine
the
the
producing a new self.
replaces
spirit
and
enters a person
mystery of rebirth
history
Terms, 340-46,352-56,
Jewett, Anthropological
of research along with
a
useful
provides
have
to
have
Gnostic
hypothesis
the
to
provide
attempted
and
accepted
others who
references
further support for it.

32E. g., Hyp. Arch. 138.13-15; Soph. Jes. Chr. 121.4-6; and Hipp. Ref 5.26.8,25.
33See the critique in Stacey, Pauline View, 151.
34E.g., E. M. Yamauchi, Pre-Christian Gnosticism: A Survey of the Proposed Evidences
in Gnostic
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1973) 39-44. Additional references to OUX4and 7TVCDpa
literature are post-Christian and are likely derived from Christianity.

309

LXX parallels. 35 Even though Paul's use of OVX7J


and m,,cpa reflects the Old
Testament, there is little to support this view. This literature

contains no contrast

between the man of ViM/ OVq-741


derivative
/
do
the
the
71-i
and
man of,
vvcbpa nor
36
Still others have attempted to show that this terminological
adjectives appear.
distinction developed out of the interpretation

Judaism
Hellenistic
Genesis
7
in
2:
as
of

Wisdom
37
Philo
Solomon.
in
But neither of these sources uses the
the
seen
and
of
OvXtKC'6'1

antithesis.
m1cupaTtKos,

between

OVA77'and 7mcbya, such that

Nor do they make an anthropological distinction


the latter

is the higher

part

of the SOU1.38

In light of this, Birger Pearson assigns the terminology to Paul's opponents


in Corinth but still points to a strand of Hellenistic Jewish exegesis of Genesis 2: 7 put
forth by Philo as the proper contextual background. 39 He suggests that Paul's

35H. A. A. Kennedy, St. Paul and Mystery Religions (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1913)
156; W. D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism: Some Rabbinic Elements in Pauline Theology, 4th
Fortress Press, 1980) 193; and W. Gutbrod, Die paulinische Anthropologie,
ed. (Philadelphia:
Kohlhammer,
BWANT 67 (Stuttgart:
1934) 75.

36Stacey, Pauline View, 152. The adjective OuXtK6s-does appear in 4 Macc. 1:32, "Some
desires are mental, others are physical (OuXtKat'),and reason obviously rules over both. "
37j. Dupont, Gnosis. La connaissance religieuse dans les pffres de Saint Paul (Paris:
Gabalda, 1949) 172-80. B. A. Pearson, The Pneumatikos-Psychikos Terminology in 1 Corinthians:
A Study in the Theology of the Corinthian Opponents of Paul and Its Relation to Gnosticism, SBLDS
12 (Missoula, MT: Scholars Press, 1973), revives Dupont's view and develops it. He sees the origin
of this contrast made by Paul's opponents in Corinth in the distinction between the mortal soul and
the immortal spirit reflected in the interpretation of Gen. 2: 7 in some references in Philo and the
Wisdom of Solomon.
38R. A. Horsley, "Pneumatikos
Status Among the
vs. Psychikos: Distinctions
of Spiritual
Corinthians, " HTR 69 (1976) 270-73, gives a critique of this aspect of Pearson's view.

39Pearson, Pne umatikos


ikos,
Philo's
discourse
Det.
86
in
38-39,
to
appeals
and
-Psych
his interpretation of Gen. 2:7 in Leg. All. 1.36 as grounds for the possibility of knowing God and His
wisdom. Thus, for Philo, "man has a higher soul, a voi),5,or vvcDpa, which enables him to rise above
the level of his earthly and sense-perceptive soul and to receive impressions from the heavenly
According
Pearson,
(39).
to
this distinction between man's higher soul and his earthly soul
sphere"
distinction
for
between
Cor.
2:
the
in
13-15.
1
the OuXw6g and 7TvcvMaTLKOs,
account
reflected
natures
See, however, Horsley, "Pneumatikos, " 276-78,284-86; and J. A. Davis, Wisdom and Spirit. An
Inuestigation of 1 Corinthians 1:18-3: 20 Against the Background of Jewish Sapienttal Traditions in
the Greco-Roman Period (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1984) 117-25, who argues that
the Corinthian error comes from Torah-wisdom speculation found in Sirach and Qumran.

310

had
"the
Corinth
in
that
they
potentiality
were claiming
opponents

becoming
of

by
God,
them
by
the
themselves
nature given
virtue of
7rVe-vyaTtK6S7Tve7v/_ta-rtKOLwithin
[OVX10Cd
'psychic'
Wisdom
by
the
they
earthly and
could rise above
and
cultivation of
level of existence and anticipate heavenly glory. "40 In a Christian setting VVEDYa
was
describing
God-given
in
one's
endowment and was set against
considered appropriate
Paul, then, takes up this terminology current among
the natural endowment of OVX747.
the Corinthians and uses it against the very people who claimed a superior spiritual
themselves
as 77ve-vywrtKoil.
and
regarded
wisdom
This may be the background of this terminology since Paul never uses the
his
integral
Corinthians,
indicating
it
1
of
part
OUXtKO,
an
not
was
of
outside
5'category
it
dropped
then
for
he
the
term
took
Apparently
thought.
polemic purposes and
up
form
41
he
Elsewhere
to
hand
of (Tape
use some
prefers
was over.
when the conflict at
(cf.
Cor.
3:
1,3).
1
when making a contrast with iwcDya
Nevertheless, Paul's use0f

OUXtKOSis

distinct.

It reflects the general

background of OvX4in the Old Testament where it translates vj!pand often denotes
humanity in its natural, physical existence.42 Furthermore, Paul places it within the
it
he
his
framework
theology
uses
when
own
of
redemptive-historical, eschatological
in antithesis to m,,cvpaTtK05.Also, m,,cbparefers to God's Spirit, not a higher spiritual
"natural
"
New
Testament
is
that
man.
part of one's makeup even as
capacity
described
19,
it
is
Jude
In
OvXtKot,
illuminating.
the
Paul's
to
as
usage are
parallels
divisions
that
"those who do not have the Spirit" (vvcbpay 6'XOPTec),
who are causing
40Pearson, Pne uma tikos
kind of distinction is similar to contrasts in
ikos,
This
39.
-Psych
Philo between heavenly and earthly, mature and immature, and the idea that a person attains the
former exalted status through possession of wisdom (cf. e.g., Migr. 26-40; Leg. All. 1.90-95).
41Jewett, Anthropological
interest of a Gnostic background.

NIDNTT,

Terms, 355-56, rightly makes this point, although in the

42See the discussion in Schweizer, "OvXw6g," TDNT, 9: 661-63; and Harder, "Soul, OUX4,"
3:676-87.

311

Christian
the
affect

In James 3: 5, Ovxt1cot'is used in a wisdom context to

community.

describe "wisdom" that does not originate

from God. Wisdom in James may well

function in a way that corresponds to Paul's use of 7TvcDya,which fits nicely with the
in
OUXtKOS'l7Tvcvpa-rtKOS'
the wisdom context of 1 Corinthians
contrast

2.

In 1 Corinthians 2: 14-15, Paul is designating people who are not believers in


The
OvxtKoicannot
to
those
contrast
who are.

understand

the things of God because

they do not have the Spirit of God. They know only the "wisdom of this age" (2: 6) and
lives
human
have
level
do
(2:
They
their
13).
those
on
a
merely
not
conduct
are
who
the Spirit and who belong to this age (cf. Jude 19). By contrast,

the blessedness of

the age to come has already been revealed and opened up by the Spirit
7Tvcvya-rtKo1are able to understand

(2: 9-10). The

the things of God because they have the Spirit and

know the mind of Christ, that is, His thoughts

Spirit
(2:
15-16).
by
the
are revealed

The 7Tve-vya-rtK6s&Opmms-, the person with the Spirit, can make judgments
God's ways (2: 10), matters
Spirit.

formerly

hidden by God but now revealed through

Thus for Paul the OVXtKG'!


5'1 Trvcvpa-rtKw antithesis

anthropological

antithesis

/ eschatological
is parallel

is not describing

the

an

but rather the contrast between one who has received the

duality,

Spirit and one who does not have the Spirit,


historical

about all

perspective.

his
redemptiveall of which reflects

In this regard the OVXLKC'SlTrVCvJia'FLKO'

to the "old man / new man" antithesis

in Paul's theology.

The

dvOpmmsOvXLK6s-dvOpmTos-corresponds to the "old man, " and the 7Tvc1)pa7-tK65"new


to
the
man" at the individual
corresponds

level.

However, when Paul addresses the Corinthians


language
in
contrast
uqp
uses
OUXLKOS'iS
synonymous

in 1 Corinthians

to 7TvcDpa.For some interpreters

3: 1-4, he

this indicates

that

with oapKtvos- and oapKIKW (1 Cor. 3: 1,3). 43 But the change

43E. g., Stacey, Pauline View, 148,


and also Jewett, Paul's Anthropological Terms, 354,
It
but only as OlapKtVOFS'.
who states that "he [Paul] could not talk to the Gnostics as 1TvcvMaT1KOF,,

312

be
deliberate
to
appears

different
latter
Paul
the
terms
a
gives
and

here.
nuance

But
Spirit
(2:
14).
the
lacks
describe
the
the
to
VIUXLKOS'was
person who
used
had received the Spirit (2: 12 with 2: 7-10), an indispensable

Corinthians

Christians
were

(cf. Rom. 8: 9); consequently,

though they were acting like unbelievers,


is
language
to
appropriate.
shift
udpe
that they do not have the Spirit;
their sinful behavior.
emphasizing

sign that they

Paul could not call them OvXtKot'even

Spirit.
lack
the
those
who
namely,

So the

On one hand, Paul avoids telling the Corinthians

but, on the other hand, he forces them to confront

They are not only "fleshy" (oapKtVot', made of flesh, 3: 1), a word

humanness
their
especially

but
human
their
the
existence,
side of
and

derived
flesh,
i.
the
(gapKtKot',
is
"fleshly"
in
behavior
the
e.,
manner of
even yet their
from the "flesh, " 3: 3). 44 They are living from the perspective
dominated values and therefore they are exhibiting

its
this
sinage with
of

human sinfulness.

The Corinthians had received the Spirit-they

they
are 7Tvcvpa-rLKot-but

the
behavior
Their
Spirit.
do
have
like
the
reflects
behaving
those
not
who
are
by
term
He
this
(not
OuXLKol').
Paul
fallen
them
clarifies
calls
oqpKtKoL'
so
age
present,
human,
Being
3).
3:
&OpmTov,
(Ka-rd
"mere
humans"
like
behaving
they
that
are
adding
is
What
(3:
1).
being
is
in
itself
not
bad
is
POL'
oupKi
and
sinful
neither
or
of course, not
them
Spirit,
for
believers
have
the
Paul
is
makes
which
to
received
who
acceptable
they
live
human,
"
though
more
"merely
to
to
nothing
were
than
as
continue
more
life
is
in
in
the
Receiving
Spirit
dt*mTot.
the
OvXtKot'
realm
which
new
than
puts one
is apparent from this that Paul thought Of OUXtK6s-as synonymous in significance with uapKIvo,s- or
Paul
did
But
"
to
the
is
basic
The
these
terms
of
mortality.
realm
meaning of
adherence
o,apKtK6s-.
believers
but
Gnostics
(2:
14)
his
OVXtKOi
them
presumably
as
as
nor address
readers
not call
(d6cAooi, 2: 1; 3: 1). He could not speak to them (Ls-iTvcvpa-rtK0T9 (i. e., as he would speak to
They
6).
2:
(rather
than
XptuT6
but
iv
are
TcAciotc,
&SUaffvotg, namely, &5s-P7777-iotg
7Tk,
cvpaTtK0i)
belaving
(3:
2-3).
for
food"
for
"solid
they
KaTd
aveptovoV
are
still
UaPKtK0[
still not ready

44BAGD, s.v. o-aPKLK6S,


'
'fleshly;
topp.
11
'belonging
the
to
on
7TvcupaTtK6S1,
means
uape
the other hand, odpKtvos-is 'consisting' or 'composed of flesh, ' 'fleshy. ' Our lit., or at least its
interchanged
distinction
forms
did
in
The
this
the
are
all occurrences of
not observe
word.
copyists,
in the tradition. " In 1 Cor. 3: 1-4, however, Paul appears to preserve a distinction between the two
terms to make his point.

313

to be lived according to the Spirit and not according to the flesh. Consequently, Paul
by
(live)
for
basic
Christian
the
imperative
the
walk
existence:
elsewhere states
Spirit and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh (Gal. 5: 16).
Thus Paul uses adpe language in contrast to 7mcbpain relation to those who
have received the Spirit but who are behaving
centered, this-world-oriented

manner.

in
is,
"
humans,
that
"mere
a selfas

One who has "put off the old man" and "put on

the new man" has ceased to be the OvxtK6,,- dvOpmTos-of 1 Corinthians

2: 14 and has

dvOpmros-of 2: 15 (cf. Gal. 6: 1), one whose life comes under the
become the rrvcv1-La7LK65indwelling
the
of
control

Spirit as distinct from the natural

lives
the
under
person who

Consequently,
3).
flesh
(Rom.
Cor.
Eph.
2:
8:
5-9;
1
2:
14;
the
control of sin and
man / new man" is parallel

the "old

but
the
dvoptoTro5to the OVXIK05'17TPcvpaTtK6!
uapKW05,
not
5-

This
for
brief
the
consideration
sets
stage
a
apOpmTos-.
7rPe-vpaTtK6s-

in
"flesh"
the
of

to the "old man / new man. "

relationship

6.3.3 The Flesh and the Old Man


At this point it is worth considering the relationship of the "old man" to the

"flesh" since in Romans 6:6 it is the "old man" who was crucified with Christ, and in
Galatians 5:24 it is those who belong to Christ who have crucified the "flesh." Is then
the "old man" to be identified with the "flesh," or, the sinful nature that is often labeled
the "flesh"?
The noun udpeoccurs ninety-one times in the Pauline corpus. Two key
times
twenty
twenty-three
and
prepositional phrases, ev oapKLand Ka-rdadpKa,occur
Paul's
/
is
Itipe
times.
the
twenty
one of
adp 7TvcOpa
contrast occurs
respectively, and
for
is
The
this
terms.
main reason
most prominent and controversial anthropological
its wide semantic usage ranging from a literal sense of the physical material of the

314

body to the morally negative sense of a force hostile to God.45 Over the past century
have
attributed
scholars

this spread of usage to a combination of Jewish (flesh as

Which
God)
influences.
hostile
(flesh
Hellenistic
body)
as
power vs.
and
material
influence is more dominant and more significant for understanding Paul's usage has
been debated. 46 An examination of Pauline usage, however, indicates a Hebraic
background in which udpe denotes human frailty and mortality is the most credible
human
The
to
weakness and corruptibility,
whole person, subject
approach.

gives

47
Sin
is
term.
the
Paul's
its
various uses of
spectrum of meaning and connects
adpe
the pervasive power that exploits and manipulates the "flesh. "
In
this
Pauline
A representative sampling of
perspective.
usage supports
V
living
faith
by
living
between
Paul
01aPKL
Galatians 2:20
and
sees no contradiction
(cf. also Phil. 1:22,24 in contrast to 3:3-4), and in 2 Corinthians

10:2-4 he

distinguishes between living ev uapKL,which is acceptable, and living Ka-rduapKa,which


is not acceptable for Christians.

Nevertheless, in Romans 8:4-9 the same two

5,0ape
Galatians
In
be
interchangeable
to
and equally negative.
phrases appear
God
than
from
fallenness
living
his
in
a
rather
the
to
apart
person
whole
refers
(cf.
Testament
Old
is
This
consistent with
corrupted constituent part of each person.

45BAGD, s.v. orape,list 8 categories of use ranging from the literal use to the view, esp. in
Paul's thought, that "the flesh is the willing instrument of sin, and is subject to sin ... ;" see also
Schweizer, TDNT, 7: 98-151, esp. 125-38; and Dunn, Theology of Paul, 64-66; and ch. 4,226 n104.
46For rival views with references, see Jewett, Anthropological Terms, 50-54, and Dunn,
Theology of Paul, 62-70, who argues that Paul's range of usage grows out of "Ivj:; so also Stacey,
Pauline View, 154-73.
T

47Dunn, Theology of Paul, 66, states: "The spectrum [of meaning] runs from human
human
through
desires,
imperfection
human
through
and
needs,
and
weakness
and
relationships
"
fully
deprecatory
the
to
tone
the
and condemnatory
corruption,
of
sarx-pneuma antithesis.

315

Isa. 40:5-8) and Qumran usage (cf. 1QS 11:9). Paul seesuqpeas a continuing threat
to be avoided (Gal. 5:16-17) even by Christians who have "crucified" it with its
individual,
"fleshly"
is
His
(5:
24).
desires
part of each
concern not with a
passions and
but
the
being
"sin
pervasive
with
or a
nature" component,
such as one's physical
influence of the present age / realm with its human-centered perspective and values.
His reference to crucifying the flesh (5:24) points to a decisive break with such an
influence for all those who enter the new creation. However, at present, since the old
live,
Christ
in
"new"
Christians
in
must
people
as
age continues as the sphere which
into
drawn
"flesh"
by
be
danger
the
that
they
is
and
there always the
enticed
will
behavior.
leading
into
them
its
sinful
perspective and values
adopting
from
the
distinguish
Paul
the
to
In light of this,
TTaAatO'5'dv0p&)TTo5- gape
appears
The
Adam-Christ
they
are related.
although

12-21
5:
Romans
in
makes
comparison

This
fall.
theme
Adam's
disastrous
enables
has
the
that
of
effects
escaped
no one
clear
24),
5:
(Gal.
"flesh"
6:
6)
the
(Rom.
"old
Paul to talk of the crucifixion of the
and
man"
living
ev
longer
description
Christians
those
his
behind
who are no
as
of
which stands
thing
is
the
flesh"
in
this
be
"in
For
Paul,
as
8-9).
the
same
8:
to
7:
5-6;
(Rom.
sense
o,apKt*
"old
(corporate
humanity
man")
"
Adam,
the
to be "in
old
and thus a member of
8:
9),
(Rom.
though
jv
this
Christians
death.
sense
uapKiin
are not
enslaved to sin and
have
thrown
that
they
disembodied
he
does
that
they
off
by this
or
spirits
are
not mean
their (fallen) human nature. Neither is the "old man" to be equated with the
designation I am fleshly" (Rom; 7: 14) or "my flesh" (Rom. 7: 18).48
For Paul, "flesh" is often associated with the present evil age since it stands
in contrast to the Spirit and the eschatological events of the gospel. Several times in
48Pace T. K. Abbott, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistles to the
T. & T. Clark, 1974 [18971)
Ephesians and to the Colossians, ICC, reprint of 7th ed. (Edinburgh:
136. Gundry, S6ma, 137-39, argues that beginning in Rom. 7: 13 Paul uses adpe for 016[Laand
it
inherently
but
desires,
because
easy
making
evil
as weak
of physical needs and
views adpe not as
for doing evil.
prey for sin to control and use as an instrument

316

Galatians the cross serves as the symbol of the end of the old era / realm (cf 2: 19-20;
5: 11; 6: 14-15). In light of the cross and the gift of the Spirit, Paul can already
But,
(6:
14).
the
flesh
(5:
24)
the
the
the
and
O'dpe
and
of
world
announce
crucifixion
Paul's
in
thought
The
disappeared.
have
in
tension
eschatological.
not
reality
Koupos,
that recognizes the overlap of the two ages accounts for the fact that 0ape continues
it
flesh
indicates
that
the
though
the
threatening
no
crucifixion of
reality, even
as a
longer has controlling or dominating authority over the Christian's behavior.
Furthermore, the "self, " understood negatively as the egocentric, self"
"old
Christian
is
deny
is
(Mark
8:
34),
the
life
to
the
that
man, and
not
centered
in
to
"self'
is
the
the
order
person one must affirm
understood positively as
neither
have a positive self-image. On the other hand, accepting one's self as created, cared
for, and redeemed by God is not the "new man. " In Christ, the "old man, " one who
/
his
her
/
life
her
in
his
to
pre-conversion mode of existence,
accord with
used conduct
is gone, and the "new man" has already come, but even in the new order of life, the
"self' and the "flesh" continue their negative influence. Since the conflict inaugurated
by the resurrection has not yet been resolved, it can be easily understood why the
flesh continues to threaten and to tempt the Christian and why the eschatological
Spirit.
The
in
the
be
in
daily
the
worked out
obedience of walking
conflict continues to
does
dpOpWITos.
but
/
"already
the
fits
the
then,
not.
7TaAat6snot yet" motif,
within
(Tape,
however, operates within this motif but has the Spirit who
TheKatVO'S'lV60S'dv0pcu7os-,
brief
investigation
finally,
leads,
"flesh.
to
This
"
the
a
opposes and wages war against
broader
Pauline
key
that
scale.
shapes
construct
ethics on a
of a
6.4 Indicative

and Imperative

in Paul's Theology

A major component of Paul's theology is his dynamic theological ethic.


Scholars often use the indicative-imperative

grammatical

construct as a theological

317

declaration
his
between
describe
in
theological
the
tension
to
ethics
paradigm
(indicative) and moral exhortation (imperative). 49 In brief, the "indicative" presents
forth
"imperative"
for
believers,
has
done
God
Christ
in
the
what
sets
while
what
believers must do in response. Customarily, Paul rests his moral imperatives on
theological indicatives. A characteristic example of this is found in Romans 6 and
50
in
The
the
have
relationship
of
nature
seen earlier
our study.
elsewhere, as we
between the indicative and the imperative in Paul's thought has an extended history
for
few
high
We
the
debate.
touch
to
our comments on
context
set
on a
points
shall
of
the relationship of this construct to the "old / new man. "
Near the end of the 19th century, Paul Wernle took the position that there
imperative,
between
indicative
the
the
irreconcilable
tension
a
creating
and
was an
double-ethic-an

that
(imperative)
(indicative)
and an ethic of will
ethic of miracle

Paul simply placed beside one another. 51 This was a radical conclusion at the time.
Prior to Wernle, most interpreters viewed the new life in Paul's writings as sort of a
52
Wernle
human
"fusion"
God's
rejected
Will.
and
of
a
power
of
spontaneous result
such an interpretation

by positing two separate ethical ideals that essentially

49See V. P. Furnish, Theology and Ethics in Paul (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1968) 242-79
for a survey of 19th and 20th century attempts to interpret Paul's ethic; also H. Ridderbos, Paul: An
Outline of His Theology, trans. J. R. DeWitt (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1975) 253-58; W. Schrage,
The Ethics of the New Testament, trans. D. E. Green (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1988) 167-72;
R. Bultmann, "The Problem of Ethics in Paul" (1924), trans. C. W. Stenschke, 195-216, and
M. Parsons, "Being Precedes Act: Indicative and Imperative in Paul's Writing" (1988), 217-47, both
(Grand
Century
Approaches
Understanding
Twentieth
Paul's
S.
Rosner,
Ethics:
B.
in
ed.,
essays
Rapids: Eerdmans / Carlisle: Paternoster, 1995); and Dunn, Theology of Paul, 626-31.
50See ch. 2,125-27; ch. 4,221; and ch. 5,268-69,285-86.
Note esp. Gal. 5:25 where
this same construct applies to Paul's teaching on life in and by the Spirit: "Since we live by the
Spirit [indicative], let us also walk by the Spirit [imperative]. "
51p. Wernle, Der Christ und die Siinde bei Paulus (Freiburg im Breisgau: J. C. B. Mohr,
1897) 89. See also the assessment of Wernle in Furnish, Theology and Ethics, 247.
52E. g., H. von Soden, "Die Ethik des Paulus, " ZThK 2 (1892) 145. Also, Furnish,
Theology and Ethics, 245.

318

double-ethic
His
contradicted each other.
set the stage for a debate about the
relationship between the indicative and the imperative.
Shortly after, Hermann Jacoby rejected Wernle's view and concluded that
Paul used the imperative to exhort believers to accomplish in fact what God's grace
had provided for them in principle (indicative). 53 Rather than two separate
Jacoby
contradictory concepts,
saw Paul's ethic as a contrast of "principle"
(indicative) and "actuality" (imperative) operating within a single ethical framework
God.
believer's
"Principle"
(the indicative) referred to the
the
with
of
relationship
benefits of God's grace that the believer can never in fact realize or experience unless
he / she brings them into actualization (imperative) by submission to the presence of
the Spirit in his / her life.
Wernle's double-ethic and Jacoby's dialectical distinction of "principle" and

"actuality" as well as the understanding that the indicative and the imperative were
20th
Paul's
into
the
total
century.
ethical structure continued
merely one aspect of
In 1924, however, Rudolf Bultmann wrote an article in which he described the
indicative and the imperative as the basic structure of Pauline ethics. This essay is
54
Since
in
interpretation
this
turning
the
construct.
of
point
widely recognized as a
Bultmann, most scholars agree on the centrality of the indicative and the imperative,
do.
believers
God
for
has
done
is
basis
that
that
the
must
which
which
namely,
Indeed, Paul's moral exhortations cannot be separated from his theological
affirmations.

316-17.

53H. Jacoby, Neutestamentliche


Ethik (K6nigsberg:
Also Furnish, Theology and Ethics, 250.

Thomas und Oppermann,

1899) 291,

54R. Bultmann, "Das Problem der Ethik bei Paulus, " ZNW 23 (1924) 123-40, trans.
and
reprinted as "The Problem of Ethics in Paul, " in Rosner, ed., Understanding Paul's Ethics, 195-216.
See also Bultmann's later treatment in Theology of the New Testament, 330-40.

319

Bultmann opposed Wernle's formulation of a contradictory double-ethic by


insisting that Paul based the imperative on the fact of justification,
imperatives from the indicatives.

deriving the

The believers' new creation is an accomplished fact

in which the "old man" has actually passed away so that the believer is a "new man, "
from
behavior.
In light of this, Bultmann saw
this
comes
and
newness
ethical
Jacoby's concept of "principle" (indicative) that must be realized in the ongoing
"actualization"
ethical process of

(imperative) as influenced too much by idealism.

Rather, the indicative is the foundation for the imperative.

On the other hand, the

indicative appears to depend in some sense on the imperative in Bultmann's view.


That is, the indicative can only be realized in the Christian's experience by the
imperative-the

daily existential decision to walk in obedience to God. The new

becomes
a reality only insofar as love is really present via obedience to
creation
God.55 In essence, then, the indicative and the imperative become merged in each
ethical decision a Christian makes. Ultimately,
dialectical and distinctively

existential.

then, Bultmann's interpretation

is

He appears to see less of the transforming

56
Paul
in
Christian's
indicative
life
than
the
the
affirms.
experience
effect of
Nevertheless, his formulation

is an advance on those previous to him and, most

basic
he
indicative
imperative
the
the
the
structure of
saw
as
and
significantly,
Pauline ethics. From Bultmann's

1924 essay onward, most Pauline interpreters

have attempted to reformulate his understanding in either structure or content. 57

55R. Bultmann, Existence


and Faith, trans. and ed. S. M. Ogden (London: SCM Press,
1964) 145,245; id., Theology, 1: 332-33. See the critique in W. D. Dennison, "Indicative
and
The Basic Structure of Pauline Ethics, " CTJ 14 (1979) 55-78, esp. 60-63, and in
Imperative:
Parsons, "Being Precedes Act, " in Rosner, ed., Understanding
Paul's Ethics, 221-24.
56Bultmann,
Ethics,

138,264.
57Concerning

emphasized

Theology,

1: 338-39,156.

See also the critique

in Furnish,

Theology and

structure, some, though acknowledging both the indicative and imperative,


one over the other. For example: A. Schweitzer, The Mysticism of Paul the Apostle,

320

The key issue in subsequent discussion on this subject is the nature of the
relationship between the indicative and the imperative.
How do the Indicatives

Specifically the question is:

faith"
faith"?
justify
Michael
"imperatives
the
the
the
of
of

Parsons has sketched the history of the research since Bultmann and in response to
this question classified the positions of Pauline scholars into the following three broad,
but distinct, categories. 58 First, some maintain that the indicative and the
imperative are so distinct that they are virtually

59
Second,
to
other.
each
unrelated

indicative
the
that
some maintain
and the imperative are so closely related that they
60
Third,
fused
into
love.
become
deeds
in
a unity reflected
virtually
of
words and
Paul's
in
indicative
imperative
the
that
the
others maintain
and
are closely related
thought but remain distinct without separation or fusion. 61 Following an analysis of

trans. W. Montgomery (London: A. & C. Black, 1931) 293-96, stressed the indicative, while
H. Windisch, "Das Problem des paulinischen Imperativs, " ZNW 23 (1924) 265-81, emphasized the
imperative. Of those who accepted Bultmann's conclusion regarding the basic, balanced structure of
Paul's ethics, some did not agree with his dialectical existential understanding so they reformulated
the content; for example: Furnish, Theology and Ethics, 224-27; and Ridderbos, Paul, 253-58.
58Parsons, "Being Precedes Act, " in Rosner, ed., Understanding Paul's Ethics, 218-32.
59Parsons justifiably places C. H. Dodd, Gospel and Law (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1963) 3-20,66-67, in this category as an influential example. See also the
both
indicative
believed
the
Dodd
Though
Theology
Ethics,
in
Furnish,
106-14,273.
and
critique
he
held
them
importance,
Paul's
imperative
to
thinking
apart as
essential
were
and
and of equal
distinct, separate aspects of Paul's thought.
60Parsons correctly places Bultmann, Theology 1:332-33,338-39, in this category.
Though Bultmann argues that the imperative stems from the indicative, his existential framework
makes the indicative depend on the imperative in the end. The indicative gets "fused" into the
imperative as the "indicative imperative. " Furnish, Theology and Ethics, 137-38; 225-26; 239; 262,
who takes a more moderate position, also belongs in this category. He argues that the imperative is
not based on the indicative nor the result of it, but is fully integral to it. Progressive "achievement"
in the Christian life is wholly given, not attained. The imperative gets "fused" into the indicative as
the "imperative indicative. " This is the opposite of Bultmann's emphasis, even though Furnish
agrees with Bultmann that love is the command inherent in the gift (indicative).
61Parsons places
several scholars in this category though he acknowledges that the
interrelatedness
of the indicative and imperative is expressed in various ways. For example:
G. Bornkamm, Paul, trans. D. M. G. Stalker (New York: Harper & Row, 1971) 201-205; R. N.
Longenecker, Paul: Apostle of Liberty (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1964) 174-80; and T. J. Deidun, New
Covenant Morality in Paul, AnBib 89 (Rome: Pontifical Biblical Institute,
1981) 78. However,
Deidun's emphasis on "letting God be what he is" in effecting his demands moves one close to

321

three key examples (Rom. 12: 1-2; Phil. 2: 12-13; Gal. 5: 25) and a longer passage (1
Cor. 6: 12-20), Parsons concludes that the relationship between the indicative and
imperative in Paul's writing is best reflected by the third position mentioned above.
He states: ". the indicative and the imperative are closely linked yet distinct
..
indissoluble-they
is
The
thought
the
and writing.
connection
apostle's
aspects of
Pauline
by
This
be
usage and also
position seems warranted
cannot
separated.
imperative,
the
fusion
indicative
the
the
the
and
of
possibilities of
strongly counters
"62
irrelation,
the
hand,
their
on
other.
virtual
and
on one
In light of all this, the answers to two important questions assist us in
imperative.
indicative
the
interrelatedness
the
the
and
of
understanding

First, why

lies
in
the
The
imperative
the
indicative
both
the
answer
needed?
and
are
"eschatological tension" of redemptive history in Paul's thought.
above the redemptive-historical,

We have noted

63
For
Paul's
thought.
framework
of
eschatological

Jesus
death
in
the reality of the
him, the indicative is grounded
and resurrection of
Him
they
Him
that
have
been
believers
Christ and the fact that
with
so
united with
6:
2-4).
(Rom.
life
in
have died to sin in order that they might walk
now
newness of
believe
Christ
in
Christians have entered the "new creation" established
already and
(Rom.
6:
8;
in
Christ
He
live
that they will yet
a glorified existence
resides
with
where
Col. 3: 1-4). Meanwhile, the "old age / realm" continues as the sphere in which the
be
Christians
danger
that
lived,
be
is
life
there
the
Christian
will
constant
and
must
"
Paul's
imperative,
"the
by
the
age.
present evil
powers and perspectives of
enticed
in
to
this
the
indicative,
the
the
experiences of
response
expresses
proper
grounded on
"fusing" the imperative into the indicative. To this category could be added J. M. G. Barclay,
Obeying the Truth: A Study of Paul's Ethics in Galatians, ed. J. Riches (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark,
1988) 212-15; 225-27.
62Parsons, "Being Precedes Act, " in Understanding Paul's Ethics, 246-47.
63See ch. 1,38-41; and pp. 289-93
above.

322

life (Rom. 6: 11-13; Col. 3: 1-2). Thus it is the "eschatological tension" between the
present and the future-the

"already" and the "not yet"-that

necessitates the

imperative as well as the indicative. 64 Both must be held together without


diminishing the force of either. John Barclay makes this point: "The indicative
declares what God has done in Christ (set us free, given us life in the Spirit) or what
believers have done in their involvement in this act (crucified the flesh); and this does
by,
imperative
be
less
the
to
to
contradicted
or
not appear
render any
necessary,
flesh.
"65
for
freedom
the
the
to
preservation
of
which appeals
or continual resistance
Consequently, one cannot reduce the indicative to opening up the mere "possibility" of
Bultmann),
life
(the
tendency
of
new
nor reduce the imperative to a passive
(the
divine
tendency of Deidun).
action
acceptance of
Second, what unifies this indicative-imperative

it
construct and safeguards

from "separation" on one hand or "fusion" on the other hand? The answer lies in
Paul's understanding of the Spirit as the fulfillment of new covenant promise. Life in
the "new age" is life in the Spirit who is the source and power of new life. The Spirit is
the link between the indicative of Christian reality and the imperative of life
former
the
He
is
the
the
motivating
and
once
new covenant gift of
at
experience.
(indicative),
Spirit
by
Since
believers
God
latter.
have
life
the
the
the
gives
enabler of
they are to live the life God demands by the Spirit (imperative). What He demands
He effectively enables. Thus the indicative enters into the realization of the
imperative-the

power of the Spirit enables what God demands. In this sensewe can

lordship
Ernst
insight
Christ
Kdsemann's
the
that
the
usefulness
of
of
appreciate
includes both gift and demand-the necessity of obedienceand the empowering of the

64Various
174-76; Barclay,

scholars emphasize this point: Bornkamm,


Obeying the Truth, 212-15.

65Barclay,

Obeying the Truth,

226.

Paul,

201-205; Longenecker,

Paul,

323

believer to obey.66 In light of this, Paul's overall indicative is a dynamic concept. It is


not only what God through Christ has done for the believer but also what He continues
to do in and for the believer through the Spirit. Though distinct, yet equally
important, his imperative is grounded on the reality of the indicative and brings its
demands to expression in life experience by divine enablement.
What, then, is the relationship between the indicative-imperative

construct

and the "old man / new man" metaphor? We have concluded above (pp. 291-98) that
the transfer from "old man" to "new man" constitutes an important
indicative that serves as the basis and motivation for his imperative.

Paul's
in
element
But the

indicative- imperative construct itself does not signal such a transfer from the "old"
(once) to the "new" (now). Rather, it operates on the "already / not yet" side of
Christian existence. As such, it applies fully to the "new man" who is being renewed
in
life
Christ
living
the
his
/
her
lordship
the
service
and
of
while
earthly
under
out
indicative
"
Paul's
"old
For
"new
"
the
the
the
man,
midst of
enticements of
age.
declares what God has done for him / her in Christ and continues to do through the
Spirit as well as what he / she has received and continues to receive as a result of
At
Christ
Spirit.
the same time, with
the
the
and
work of
participation with
his
/
her
"new
Paul's
to
imperative
to
the
enjoy
man"
undiminished urgency,
appeals
freedom in Christ responsibly and to resist the desires of the "flesh" continually.

This

between
interplay
the sovereign grace of God and the obedience of the "new
constant
is
a characteristic
man"

feature of Paul's ethics (cf. Phil. 2: 12-13; 1 Cor. 15:9-10).

What unifies and at the same time safeguards the indicative and imperative from
contradiction, separation, or fusion is his eschatological understanding of the Spirit

66E. Ktisemann, "'The Righteousness God'in Paul, " in New Testament Questions
of
of
Today, trans. W. J. Montague (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1969) 168-82, esp. 175. He argues
that at faith / baptism the gift of the Spirit establishes Christ's lordship that both transforms a
person's life and requires continual obediencefrom the believer.

324

indicative
imperative
by bringing life to the believer through
the
the
who unifies
and
the redemptive-historical

work of God through Christ and sustaining it through the

Spirit.
the
work of
6.5 Summary

Argument
the
of

Paul himself formulated the "old man / new man" terminology by drawing on
the Adam / Christ typology within his own redemptive-historical,

eschatological

fits
This
the structure of his "once / now" motif and operates
metaphor
perspective.
On
level,
levels.
the
two
the "old man" is the world of unredeemed
at
corporate
humanity in solidarity with Adam, the prototypical "old man, " while the "new man" is
the Church, the world-wide community of redeemed humanity in solidarity with
Christ, the prototypical "new man. " On the individual level, the "old man" is the
Adam,
/
head
is
identified
the
the
the
rule of sin
with
under
person who
realm
era
of
old
is
"new
/
belongs
"the
death.
He
"
Correspondingly,
the
to
man"
and
she
present age.
the believer who is identified with Christ, the head of the new era / realm under the
has
Christ,
in
life.
He
/
Spirit
belongs
"age
that,
to
the
to
the
come"
rule of
and
she
"new
but
"
is
Christ
"old
in
begun.
The
is
longer
man"
now a
man,
now
person
no
an
His
God
being
is
in
knowledge
the
and
ways.
who
progressively renewed
of
Putting off the "old man" and putting on the "new man" are actions the
believer has already taken at conversion-initiation.

They are not actions he or she

Christian
life
be
do.
is
The
in
be
to
to
the
exhorted
not
must still
conflict with sin

between
"new
"
but,
"old
the
the
as
a
struggle
understood
man,
man" and
rather, as a
between
"flesh"
the
struggle
and the Spirit who indwells the "new man. " All this takes
place within the corporate structure of the "one new man" created in the Christ-event
and constituted a community of many persons, both Jews and Gentiles together, who
have been reconciled to one another and to God by Jesus Christ.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Sections:

1. Primary Sources and Translations


........................
2. Reference Works, Commentaries and Books
...............
3. Essays in Books
........................................
4. Periodical and Major Dictionary Articles
...................
1. PRIMARY

325
328
356
366

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W. Adlington (1966). Revised by S. Gaselee. LCL. Cambridge: MA: Harvard
University Press, 1977.
Barrett, C. K. The New Testament Background: Selected Documents. Rev. ed. San
Francisco: Harper & Row, 1989
Barth6lemy, D. and J. T. Milik et al., eds. Discoveries in the Judean Desert. 5 vols.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1955-68.
Black, M., ed. Apocalypsis Henochi Graece. PVTG 3. Leiden: Brill, 1970.

Braude, W. G., ed. Pesikta Rabbati. 2 vols. YJS 18. New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press, 1969.
Brenton, Sir Lancelot C. L., ed. The Septuagint with Apocrypha: Greek and English.
London: Samuel Bagster & Sons, 1851. Reprint, Peabody, MA: Hendrickson,
1986.
Charles, R. H., ed. The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament. 2 vols.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1913.
Charlesworth, J. H., ed. The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha. 2 vols. Garden City, NY:
Doubleday, 1983-85.
Colson, F. H. et al., trans. and eds. Philo. 10 vols. with two supplements. LCL.
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Danby, H., trans. and ed. The Mishnah. 8th ed. London: Oxford University Press,
1964.
De Jonge, M., ed. The Testamentsof the Twelve Patriarchs: A Critical Edition of the
Greek Text. PVTG 1/2. Leiden: Brill, 1978.

325

326
Dionysius. The Roman Antiquities of Dionysius of Halicarnassus. Translated and
by
Cary.
E.
LCL.
Cambridge,
7
MA: Harvard University Press,
edited
vols.
1937-50.
Dittenberger, W., ed. Sylloge Inscriptionum Graecarum. 3rd ed. 4 vols. Leipzig: A. S.
Hirzel, 1915-24. Reprint, New York: G. Olms, 1970.
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4. PERIODICAL
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42 (1996) 75-89.

AND AUJOR

DICTIONARY

ARTICLES

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Barclay, J. M. G. "Paul and the Law: Observations on Some Recent Debates."


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Barrosse, T. "Death and Sin in Romans." CBQ 15 (1953) 438-59.
Barth, M. "Traditions in Ephesians. " NTS 30 (1984) 3-25.
Bauckham, R. "Pseudo-Apostolic Letters. " JBL 107 (1988) 469-94.
Baumgarten, J. "KaLPOS,KTA." EDNT 2 (1991) 229-32.

Beasley-Murray, G. R. "The Holy Spirit, Baptism, and the Body of Christ. " RExp 63
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"Baptism. " DPL (1993) 60-65.

367
"Dying and Rising with Christ. " DPL (1993) 218-22.
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Behm, J. 7'01W.
"
TDNT
(1965)
3
447-54.
Katpos-.

TDNT 4 (1967) 896-901.


Beker, J. C. "Contingency and Coherence in the Letters of Paul. " USQR 33 (1978)
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"Paul's Theology: Consistent or Inconsistent? " NTS 34 (1988) 364-77.
"Paul the Theologian. Major Motifs in Pauline Theology. " Interp 43
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"Who Used Whom? The Relationship of Ephesians and Colossians. "
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Black, C. C. "Pauline Perspectives on Death in Romans 5-8. " JBL 103 (1984) 413-33.

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Black, M. "The Pauline Doctrine of the SecondAdam. " SJT 7 (1954) 170-79.
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Bouttier, M. "Complexico Oppositorum: sur les Formules de 1 Cor. xii. 13; Gal. iii. 26-8;
Col. iii. 10,11. " NTS 23 (1976-77) 1-19.
Boyer, J. I. "The Classification of Infinitives:
35-54.

"A Classification

A Statistical

Study. " GTJ 6 (1985) 3-27.

Imperatives:
A Statistical
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Bradley, J. "The Religious Life-Setting of the Epistle to the Colossians." StBibT 2


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Brandenburger,

E. "Cross (9-ravpos-)." NIDNTT

1 (1975) 391-403.

Branick, V. P. "Apocalyptic Paul?" CBQ 47 (1985) 664-75.


Bratcher, R. G. "The Meaning of SARX ("Flesh") in Paul's Letters. " BiTr 29 (1978)
212-18.
Bratsiotis, N. P. "'i's." TDOT 1 (1974) 222-35.

368
Bray, G. "The Significance of God's Image in Man. " TynB 42 (1991) 195-225.
Briggs, F. J. "Ephesians 4: 20-21. " ExpTim 39 (1927-28) 526.
Bromiley, G. W. "Psychology. " ISBE 3 (1986) 1043-48.

"Sin. " ISBE 4 (1988) 518-25.


"
NIDNTT
' and dvOpmTo
Brown, C., H. Vorlander and J. S. Wright. "Man (d vqP
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(1976) 562-72.

Brown, R. B. "Ephesians Among the Letters of Paul. " RExp 60 (1963) 373-79.
Bruce, F. F. "St. Paul in Rome. 3. The Epistle to the Colossians. " BJRL 48 (1966)
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"St. Paul in Rome. 4. The Epistle to the Ephesians. " BJRL 49 (1967)
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