by
Elodie Ballantine Emig, Denver Theological Seminary
The most natural place to turn, after
an examination of Paul's vice list in I Corinthians,
is to his vice list in I Timothy. Since the early 19th.
century, it has been alleged that Paul couldn't possibly
have written the Pastorals. The most common objections
are:
- The writing style and word choices are different
from Paul's earlier letters.
- The Pastorals don't fit with what we know of Paul
from Acts.
- The heresy combated is second-century Gnosticism.
- The church is too developed for the first century.
- The theology of the Pastorals lacks Paul's distinctives.
- The Pastorals are not contained in the oldest (mid-third-century)
codex we have of the Pauline epistles.
Before briefly answering these objections, I must state
my conviction that the burden of proof is on the scholar
who denies Pauline authorship to books regarded as genuine
for eighteen centuries. I Timothy claims to have been
written by Paul, and it was preserved and canonized
on that basis. If someone else wrote it, I want proof,
not mere suggestion, moreover a motive for the falsification.
1. The Pastorals taken together, much less taken individually,
are not long enough for statistical studies to be meaningful;
the sample size is too small. Even so, the differences
in purpose and subject matter between Paul's earlier
correspondence and the Pastorals can account for the
change in vocabulary. I certainly vary my word choices
depending on to whom, or for what purpose I am writing.
2. Acts does not go beyond Paul's "first"
Roman imprisonment, but Paul did. There is nothing that
demands that Paul was martyred at the end of the imprisonment
of Acts 28. Given the opinions of Agrippa and Festus,
that Paul had done nothing worthy of death or imprisonment
(Acts 26:31), there is reason to believe that Paul was
released, left Rome and went east.
3. The Pastorals do not say enough about the heresy(s)
they combat to pin-point full-blown, second-century
Gnosticism. There were early forms of Gnosticism already
plaguing the Colossians, and we know from I John that
the area around Ephesus had problems with incipient
Gnosticism some thirty years later. The heresy at Ephesus,
which I Tim. addresses, seems more Jewish than Gnostic
in character anyway.
4. There is nothing in the Pastorals to demand a developed
episcopate with "a single bishop" who "has
primary authority in the church, with elders and deacons
under him" (Fee, 20). Paul uses the terms elder
(presbyteros) and overseer (episcopos)
interchangeably and doesn't make much of a distinction
between the roles of overseers and deacons. The Pastorals
fit the early to mid 60's when church polity was developing
rapidly, better than the rigid second century.
5. The Pastorals were written to Timothy and Titus,
long-time companions of Paul who were well acquainted
with his theological distinctives. Timothy did not need
a discourse on justification by faith alone, but encouragement
and advice as he tried to deal with very specific church
problems. Also relevant to the question of authorship
is the fact that there is nothing in the Pastorals which
could be described as anti-Pauline.
6. The Chester Beatty Papyrus, our oldest Pauline codex,
is incomplete. It is possible that the Pastorals were
squeezed onto the missing sheets. If they were not,
it does not necessarily follow that they were unknown
in the third century.
This all matters because, if Paul didn't write I Timothy,
it was accepted into the canon of the New Testament
under false pretenses. Moreover, if I Timothy does not
really belong in our canon, its teaching is not binding
upon us. For those who hold to the authority and inspiration
of Scripture, this seemingly arcane debate about authorship
is vital. Quite frankly, if Paul didn't write I Timothy,
I don't particularly care what it has to say about homosexuals,
or women teaching, or anything else. (Those who hold
to pseudonymous or deuteron-Pauline authorship can at
least affirm with Robert Gagnon “that Paul’s
opposition to homosexual behavior continued in the early
post-Pauline churches” [Robert Gagnon, The
Bible and Homosexual Practice (Nashville: Abingdon,
2001), 332].) Since I am persuaded that Paul did write
it, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, I am compelled
to care about what it says.
Because I touched on a number of background issues,
in no particular order, treating the objections above,
it might be helpful to reorganize and supplement the
material. Paul was released from his first Roman imprisonment
after the Acts narrative ended, about A.D. 62. Because
he had changed his mind about going West to Spain, he
returned with two close friends to Asia Minor (Philem.
22). At least he and Titus ended up on Crete, where
he left the latter in charge, and went on with Timothy
towards Macedonia.
Apparently they stopped in at Ephesus to check up on
things. This is not surprising since Ephesus was a key
church to Paul's missionary strategy and one about which
Paul had given a disturbing prophecy. Paul and Timothy
found the church in serious trouble and the prophecy
of Acts 20:30 being fulfilled, "I know that after
my departure savage wolves will come in among you, not
sparing the flock; and from among your own selves men
will arise, speaking perverse things, to draw the disciples
after them."
With some sense of urgency, Paul went on to Macedonia
from Ephesus. But because the Ephesian church was in
mortal danger, after he excommunicated the chief trouble
makers, Alexander and Hymenaeus, he left Timothy there
to deal with what remained of the problem of elders
teaching heresy (wolves from among them, speaking perverse
things). Once he was settled, Paul wrote both Titus
and Timothy from Macedonia to help them cope with their
respective situations. I Timothy, then, is a personal
letter from an apostle to his emissary, but a personal
letter we can assume Paul intended to be read publicly.
The purpose of the letter was to encourage and equip
Timothy in his struggle to rid the church of heresy
and to let the Ephesians know that he had Paul's full
support as he did so. (The substance of my chronology
comes from Gordon Fee's introduction to his commentary
on 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus in the New International
Bible Commentary (Hendrickson, 1984) series.)
Again, expecting to be read not only by Timothy, but
also by the entire church (or house churches), Paul
wrote to encourage Timothy and give him authority to
"command certain men not to teach false doctrines
any longer nor to devote themselves to myths and end-
less genealogies" (I Tim. 1:3). For whatever reason,
Paul did not see fit to make the nature of the heresy
much clearer than this. Still, it would be good to list
what of its distinctives we can define with some certainty.
Gordon Fee is surely correct in his assessment that
the heresy had "a behavioral as well as a cognitive
dimension" (Gordon Fee, "1 And 2 Timothy,
Titus," in New International Biblical Commentary,
ed. W. Ward Gasque (Peabody: Hendrickson, 1988), 8).
It also seems evident, from all three Pastorals, that
behavior was more of an issue to Paul than the actual
content of the heresy. From the very beginning of his
letter to Timothy, Paul was concerned with the lack
of love in the Ephesian church (I Tim. 1:5ff.). Rather
than loving one another, at least some in Ephesus had
turned away from a "sincere faith" to "meaningless
talk" (I Tim. 1:6), "controversies and quarrels
about words" (I Tim. 6:4), "godless chatter
and the opposing ideas of what is falsely knowledge"
(I Tim. 6:20). Not only were they conceited, divisive
and argumentative (I Tim. 6:4), but they were going
to opposite extremes in their understanding and practice
of Christian liberty.
Probably because the heresy was so speculative (I Tim.
1:4; I prefer to take ekzeteseis as speculations (NASB,
RSV) rather than controversies (NIV)), it led to a variety
of behaviors. Donald Guthrie makes an extremely compelling
point when he says, "The teaching was dangerous,
more because of its irrelevance than because of its
falseness" (Donald Guthrie, "The Pastoral
Epistles," in Tyndale New Testament Commentaries,
ed. Leon Morris (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1990), 42.
Its irrelevance may also account for the fact that Paul
is annoyingly vague in discussing it. Apparently it
was enough for him to write its content off as meaningless
drivel and focus his energies on correcting the activities
of its proponents. And again, some of these activities
were diametric opposites. Irrelevant speculation led
some to shun marriage and certain food (I Tim. 4:1-4),
and others, it seems, to wanton living (I Tim. 5:20-22;
it is not clear from the context what sin Paul has in
mind, only that it is ongoing).
In terms of the "cognitive" content of the
heresy, we can only generalize. Some scholars believe
the heresy was full-blown Gnosticism. Although Paul
does mention "what is falsely knowledge,"
there is nothing in his letter which demands that it
be taken as "gnostic" knowledge. In fact,
the myths and genealogies of chapter 1 have far more
in common with rabbinic Judaism than with second-century
Gnosticism. We can be positive that however much of
an incipient gnostic element it contained (II Tim. certainly
points to dualism and a disdain for the material world),
the Ephesian heresy had a strong Jewish bent. Because
the false teachers set themselves up as teachers of
the Law (I Tim. 1:7), we can understand myths and genealogies
as references to "allegorical or legendary interpretations
of the O.T. centering on the pedigrees of the patriarchs"
(J.N.D. Kelly, "The Pastoral Epistles," in
Harper's New Testament Commentaries, ed. Henry
Chadwick (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1960), 44).
This makes far more sense than an allusion to Gnostic
emanations, concerning which the terms myths and genealogies
are never elsewhere used. So we are left with a Hellenistic
Jewish heresy concerned more with speculation and profit
(I Tim. 6:5) than with the gospel as preached by Paul.
As we turn our attention to the vice list in chapter
1, we need to consider the false teachers as would-be
teachers of the Law. Though Paul does not explain exactly
what these people are teaching with their myths and
genealogies, he is extremely clear on one point. These
teachers have entirely missed the point of the Law.
In characteristic fashion, Paul digresses from his polemic
against the false teachers to discuss the Law. He makes
the case that although these teachers do not know what
they are talking about, because they use the Law as
it was never intended to be used, the Law is good. The
Law ought not to be used to create myths and genealogies,
but as God intended it to be used. Along similar lines
to what he has said about it in Romans and Galatians,
Paul argues that the Law was given to restrain evil.
In verse 9, Paul says that the Law was laid down not
for the righteous, but for the lawbreakers. Thus begins
the vice list.
With the Law, in particular the Decalogue, in mind,
Paul proceeds with his list of those for whom it was
given: "for lawbreakers and rebels, the ungodly
and sinful, the unholy and irreligious, for those who
kill their fathers and mothers; for murderers, for adulterers
and homosexuals, for slave traders and liars and perjurers
..." (I Tim. 1:9-10). Many scholars see the two
tables of the Decalogue behind Paul's list. The first
set of vices, joined by and, are said to refer to the
first table of the Law, where the final six refer to
the second table (Neil J. McEleney, "Vice Lists
of the Pastoral Epistles," The Catholic Biblical
Quarterly 36 (1974): 207). In other words, from
"lawbreakers" to "those who kill their
mothers and fathers," Paul has the first five commandments,
or those regarding God and parents, in view. From "murderers"
to "perjurers" he has in mind the sixth through
ninth commandments, or those which "bear on mutual
human relationships" (Ibid.).
Even though Paul has strayed from his main point, his
vice list is well tailored to fit his digression on
the Law. Or to look at things from a slightly different
angle, even Paul's digressions are well crafted. Rather
than rehearse some current list for the sake of ease,
Paul has written his own to demonstrate human need for
the first nine of the Ten Commandments. (Perhaps he
thought he had sufficiently dealt with the tenth in
Romans; or, more likely, he decided to keep to the external,
visible sins addressed by the second table of the Decalogue.)
In the pairs joined by and, he treats ungodliness in
rather general terms until he gets to matricides and
patricides. Here he has certainly chosen the extreme
sin against the fifth commandment, and most scholars
interpret his words as hyperbole. When he addresses
the second table of the Law, his examples seem quite
reasonable: a murderer breaks the sixth commandment;
adulterers and homosexuals, the seventh; slave traders
(or kidnappers - literally, man stealers), the eighth;
and liars and perjurers, the ninth.
Having finished his list proper, Paul tacks on for
good measure that the Law was given "for whatever
else is contrary to the sound doctrine that conforms
to the glorious gospel of the blessed God, which he
entrusted to me" (I Tim. 1: 10b-11). Then he goes
off on another digression in thanksgiving to Christ
for his call to the gospel ministry. In 1:18 he returns
to his main point, to his charge to Timothy to deal
with the false teachers.
We are left with the question of why Paul included
homosexuality, arsenokoites (for a discussion
of the meaning of arsenokoites, see my article
on I Corinthians), on his vice list. Given the fact
that the list reflects the Decalogue fairly generally,
it is impossible to answer the question with certainty.
There is no indication from the rest of the letter that
homosexuality was particularly on his mind; so we are
left to speculate (one hopes not meaninglessly). My
best guess is that when addressing people in a city
steeped in Hellenism and known for its homosexual population
a century later (Guthrie, 72), Paul made sure to include
both ends of the adultery spectrum. Both heterosexual
adultery, homosexual practice and, I suspect, a great
deal in between are offenses against the seventh commandment.
Believe it or not, I think Paul was just trying to be
inclusive.
Robin Scroggs and more recently Albert Harrill (JBL,
1999), however, have defined arsenokoites in
terms of andrapodistes rather than just pornos.
Harrill makes the case “that andrapodistai
(literally, ‘men-stealers’) was a derogatory
term applied to slave dealers who were notorious for
procuring slaves through illegal means for sordid gain.
… [That is] they sold effeminate slaves to houses
of prostitution” (in Gagnon, 333). Given this
narrow definition, pornoi are male prostitutes,
arsenokoitai are the men who sleep with them,
and andrapodistai are the men who sell them.
The chief problem with this approach is that there is
nothing in I Timothy to warrant such precise definitions;
range of meaning has to be determined by context. We
must also ask whether it is reasonable to expect that
Timothy and the Ephesian church would have put the three
terms together at all (pairs make more sense the way
the list flows), much less together as references to
the male-prostitute slave-trade. Perhaps more to the
point, Philo and rabbinic Judaism considered homosexuality
to have been a violation of the seventh commandment
and kidnapping (rather than slave trade per se)
a violation of the eighth.
Where it may be impossible to say why Paul included
homosexuality (all the more so, specific variations
thereof) on his vice list, it is quite possible to say
that his having done so is significant. At the very
least, we can deduce from its inclusion that Paul believed
homosexuality was as much a violation of the Decalogue
as lying or stealing. So although we find the sole mention
of homosexuality in the Pastorals in a digression, it
remains important. That Paul discussed homosexuality,
however briefly, in Romans 1 is not terribly surprising.
But that it is mentioned in I Timothy, almost off-handedly,
indicates that its sinfulness was absolutely taken for
granted by Paul.
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