Prefigurative Peace in Philippians
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Peace in Its Literary Context
3. Peace and God’s Presence
4. Peace: Both Present and Absent
5. Peace and Prefiguration
6. Prefigurative Politics: Some Contours
First developed in the 1970s,32 the concept facilitates overcoming dichotomies such as that between means and end (the end is present in the means) and between a future ideal and the present: the future is already there in the present through its prefigurative performance in communal practices.33 Thus, prefigurative practices manipulate time to the extent that the dichotomy between present and future becomes blurred. However, this is not the only kind of dichotomy that is called into question in prefigurative practices. Beyond the dichotomy between future and present, others include the following:Rather than looking to a revolutionary vanguard to seize existing power structures and implement revolutionary change on behalf of the masses or to trade unions or political parties to leverage reforms within the existing system, a prefigurative approach seeks to create the new society “in the shell of the old” by developing counterhegemonic institutions and modes of interaction that embody the desired transformation.31
- The dichotomy between means and end because the end is already present in the means.
- The dichotomy between presence and absence because what is (yet) absent is also (already) there.
- The dichotomy between ideal and reality, as the ideal is present in a reality that does not agree with the ideal; with this, also a strict dichotomy between body and mind becomes blurred as the (noetically) imagined future is imagined through physical practices and experiments.
- The dichotomy between center and margin, as (marginal) prefigurative practices both establish themselves as center and continue as marginal.
7. Peace in Prefigurative Perspective
8. Peace and Politics
9. Concluding Observations
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In what follows, I will not occupy myself with proposals to view Philippians as a composite letter, with one reason being that I am not convinced by them (see Smit 2013, pp. 39–52) and another that the segment Phil. 4:4–9 will, by and large, be discussed on its own merits, and in the broader context of the undisputed Pauline letters, arguments based on the structure of the canonical Epistle to the Philippians will, in other words, play a very limited role. For this question, see also (Popkes 2004, pp. 246–47). One aspect that concerns the present pericope is whether v. 8 is a remnant of the conclusion of a letter that has been incorporated into canonical Philippians; this may be, but, besides being a rather inelegant way of editing, it can also indicate a continuation of the line of thought (cf. 1 Cor. 7:29; Heb. 10:16), while the references to peace also give the text a kind of coherence that speaks against separating vv. 8–9a from what precedes it redaction-critically, as (Standhartinger 2021, p. 268), suggests (see 14–23 for the full redaction-critical proposal). Of the recent literature, Castillo Elizondo (2022) could not be consulted. |
2 | A primarily temporal interpretation is preferred here and in what follows, as it has been recently proposed by, for instance, (Szerlip 2020, pp. 225–45), who offers a wealth of linguistic and conceptual support (kind reference of Dr Isaac Blois). See for considerations about a more spatial interpretation, e.g., (Popkes 2004, pp. 251–52), and (Guthrie 2023, p. 282). One reason for emphasizing the temporal is the likely proximity of the expression used here to Μαρανα θα (1 Cor. 16:22) that is predominantly eschatological, see, e.g., (Walter 1998, pp. 93, 100–1), and (Standhartinger 2021, p. 274). Yet, as it will be explored further below, what is at stake in Phil. 4 is also the coming Lord who is now already near (through the peace that Paul mentions). In other words, in the end one is dealing with a false dichotomy between interpretations that emphasize the future at the expense of the present and vice versa. |
3 | One reason for thinking this is that it is precisely the thinking of Paul that has served as an inspiration for philosophers such as (Agamben 2005). See, for instance, Suzan Sierksma-Agteres (2024). |
4 | |
5 | The connection between the injunction to rejoice and the exhortations that follow has been constructed variously and cannot be the topic of extensive discussion here, though little of what follows depends on that; although, the connection between εἰρήνη and χαρὰ in Romans 14:17 would invite exploring a connection. For a brief survey of views on the relationship between Phil. 4:4 and 4:5ff., see: (Snyman 2007, pp. 233–34). |
6 | But not to the extent that the assumption of a combination of letters becomes necessary, also in a continuing text a new emphasis can be indicated through such literary means. See, e.g., Bockmuehl (1997, p. 249). |
7 | See, e.g., (Morgan 2020, p. 163), (Standhartinger 2021, p. 269). Cf. also Bockmuehl (1997, p. 238), who also stresses that what follows in vv. 4–9 with its focus on good relationships contrasts with the strife addressed in vv. 2–3 (Bockmuehl 1997, p. 243). |
8 | For criticism of this possibility, see (Morgan 2020, p. 28); εἰρήνη, which could, as (Breytenbach 2010, pp. 228–31), has argued, just as well be a variation on a (common) salutation formula referring to peace and mercy (as it also occurs in Jude 2: ἔλεος ὑμῖν καὶ εἰρήνη). |
9 | With many, e.g., (Walter 1998, p. 94), (Standhartinger 2021, p. 276). |
10 | As it has been noted variously, see, e.g., (Popkes 2004, p. 253), and (Morgan 2020, p. 172) (literature). |
11 | On which see (Breytenbach 2011). |
12 | See, for a discussion of the eschatological and inaugurated nature, also (Gorman 2013) and also (Roberts Gaventa 2013, pp. 71–72), notes the tension between the already and the not yet. |
13 | Standhartinger (2021, p. 276), points to the fact that the peace of God is personified here (and only here), which would be one reason to view it as a circumlocution for God’s presence (metonymy). As Paul does wish the presence of the God of peace with his correspondents towards the end of some of his letters (Rom. 15:33; 16:20; 2 Cor. 13:11; 1 Thess. 5:24), while usually wishing them peace in his salutations, the two may well be regarded as somewhat interchangeable: peace implies the presence of the God of peace and vice versa. |
14 | Hawthorne and Martin (2004, pp. 246–54), also Standhartinger (2021, p. 275), and Bockmuehl (1997, p. 247). This can lead to some theological anxiety, cf. e.g., (Reumann 2008, pp. 640–41). |
15 | Vgl. (Popkes 2004, p. 253), ‘Das Verb in V. 7b steht im Futur, nicht im Konjunktiv. Mehr als ein frommer Wunsch, nämlich eine Zusage und Verheißung wird den Philippern zuteil.‘ Cf. also (Standhartinger 2021, p. 275). |
16 | For a discussion of the eschatological nature of peace, see also, e.g., (De Villiers 2009, pp. 15–17), esp. p. 17, offering a characteristic of such peace: ‘…peace is not merely an inner experience of individuals, but a state under God’s rule that comprises creation and humanity as a whole and inspires people in a new time and dispensation to live righteously, peacefully and joyfully.’ |
17 | Of course, when operating on the basis of a chronology of Paul’s letters that place Philippians after Romans as Paul’s final letter, this caution can be waived. For a discussion as to where Phil. was written, see (Smit 2013, pp. 52–55). |
18 | See (Wengst 1986, p. 222): ‘Der Friede, der menschlichen Verstand übersteigt, der alles übertrifft, «was der menschliche Verstand leiten kann» (Gnilka, Phil 171) und—erst recht—was Menschen bewerkstelligen können, ist gewiß nur von Gott her zu erwarten; aber wenn dieser Frieden das Denken und Wollen der Glaubenden geradezu in seinen Gewahrsam nimmt, dann bestimmt er auch ihr handeln, gibt ihnen Richtung und Perspektive.’ |
19 | The more general exhortations in v. 8 are interpreted through the lens of Paul’s own example, cf. Wojtkowiak (2012, pp. 255–56), Hawthorne and Martin (2004, p. 253), Heil (2010, pp. 156–57), helpfully using the concept of embodiment. On Paul’s use of himself as an example in Philippians in general, see also (Smit 2014). |
20 | What cannot be pursued here is the question of physical mediation, given that the behavior that the Philippians are called upon to engage in is social and, as it necessarily involves bodies, also physical or material in nature. It would be inviting to consider this both from the vantage point of the perspective of the paradigm of material religion, which, as formulated by Meyer, views religion as ‘a medium of absence that posits and sets out to bridge a gap between the here and now and something “beyond”’ (Meyer 2015, p. 336), as well as from the perspective of sacramental theology—the two perspectives can cohere, or this is at least proposed with regard to another early Christian body, that of Ignatius of Antioch by Smit (2020b). For a consideration of the ancient and contemporary liturgical ritual of the peace, which can also be said to have a sacramental character, see (Smit 2020a). |
21 | Such a rather sacramental perspective on the agency of the Philippians is also supported by Guthrie (2023, p. 285): ‘God uses right thinking and right doing, learned from the example of mentors as agents of God’s peace, to buttress believers against life’s anxieties.’ |
22 | See (Schapdick 2010, p. 257). |
23 | One example would be (Hawthorne and Martin 2004, p. 246): ‘Paul seems here to be referring to the tranquillity of God’s own eternal being…, the peace that God himself has…., the calm serenity that characterizes God’s very natures and that grateful, trusting Christians are welcome to share…’ See more recently also (Holloway 2017, p. 183) (with reference to the motif of the tranquilitas animi, but no further discussion), as well as (Guthrie 2023, p. 284) (both without really considering alternative interpretations). |
24 | See, along these lines, the condensed argument of (Focant 2010). |
25 | See the convincing collation of evidence offered by Dormandy (2021). Dormandy also offers a survey of pertinent opinion on more theological and psychological interpretations of peace both in general (Dormandy 2021, pp. 220–23) and with regard to Phil. 4:6–9 (Dormandy 2021, pp. 238–39), which will not be repeated here; as the survey of εἰρήνη in Paul’s (undisputed) letters below will show, virtually only its use in Rom. 5:1 has a direct connection with reconciliation with God, even if peace is just as consistently associated with God as its origin. |
26 | See (Kreinecker 2010, pp. 105–6), equally working on the basis of papyri. Such views are also supported by research on peace in the Bible at large, see for surveys, e.g., (Smelik 2005) and (Kunz-Lübcke and Mayordomo 2021). |
27 | This diverges from the view put forward by (Dormandy 2021, p. 239): ‘Paul is in fact saying that God, by his εἰρήνη, will cause the world to work in a way such that the hearts and minds of his readers are kept in Christ.’ The peace is not the source of the behavior of the Philippians but its result, even though it is the case that this peace will have an effect on the hearts and minds of the Philippians. See for the position advanced here, e.g., (O’Brien 1991, p. 496), ‘the peace that he bestows or gives…is thus equivalent to the eschatological salvation that has been effected in Christ Jesus.’ |
28 | As it is variously recognized, see, e.g., (Hawthorne and Martin 2004, pp. 244–45), also underlining the simultaneity of the presence and the absence of the lord. |
29 | |
30 | |
31 | |
32 | Usually, reference is made to (Boggs 1977). |
33 | See, for instance, the elaboration of this theme by (Swain 2019). |
34 | ‘Religious’ is used in a very general sense here; the term is, at least to the extent that it suggests a distinction between the sacred and the secular and the private and the public spheres, of course, not really applicable to first-century CE social movements or cultic groups. |
35 | See, for instance, (Stern 2017). An insightful study (as of yet not published as a monograph) is (Wan 2016). |
36 | See on this, e.g., the essays in (Gildenhard et al. 2019), as well as in (Dijkstra et al. 2017). |
37 | See also the careful formulations of (Guthrie 2023, p. 285), emphasizing God’s use of people as agents of peace. |
38 | Wojtkowiak (2012, p. 255), rightly points out that also the emphasis on prayer and the need for protection mentioned in Phil. 4:6–9 point to a situation of distress. |
39 | Hawthorne and Martin (2004, p. 245), stress that the call μηδὲν μεριμνᾶτε is anything but vacuous, given this situation. |
40 | As I have argued before, see (Smit 2023a, 2023b). |
41 | This topic was explored fruitfully in a workshop in the context of the joint colloquium of the Amsterdam Centre for New Testament Studies (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) and the Centre of Contextual Biblical Interpretation (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam/Protestant Theological University) on 1 December 2023; I am grateful to the input provided by Dr Suzan Sierksma-Agteres, Dr Mathijs van de Sande through their responses to my contribution and Dr Klazina Staat and Prof. Dr Evert van der Zweerde in the discussion. |
42 | On the significance of error in this respect, see, with regard to ritual, also (Smit 2021). |
43 | Both on a macro and on a micro level, the Roman context is of importance, as Philippi was part and parcel of the Roman empire as such and it was a Roman colony with, as it is often stressed, strong ties with Roman culture and ideology. Cf. with regard to peace, for instance (Dormandy 2021, p. 238): “[T]he Roman background is particularly important for understanding Philippians. Philippi was a Roman colony and the Philippians could hardly have failed to see how Paul’s εἰρήνη contrasted with the pax Romana.” See similarly, (Wojtkowiak 2023, p. 68), ‘Die Adressatengemeinde lebt in der Colonia Iulia Augusta Philippensis, welche unter den römischen Kolonien in singulärer Weise von römischer Kultur geprägt ist.’ See also Pilhofer (1995, pp. 115–23); Wengst (1986), remains a benchmark study. |
44 | See, e.g., (Hawthorne and Martin 2004, p. 247), cf. (Standhartinger 2021, p. 275; Reumann 2008, p. 637; Szerlip 2020, p. 239), also notes that στήκετε in 4:1 is a military term. |
45 | For a review of some research, see (Wojtkowiak 2023, pp. 69–70); the idea that an orientation towards heaven is merely ethical and not political does seem to miss the point, as such an orientation involves a strong relativization of the earthly state of affairs—see for this proposal (Wischmeyer 2013, pp. 307–10), and also Standhartinger’s argument (Standhartinger 2021, pp. 277–78) that Paul’s considerations match Stoic ideas does not need to the conclusion that social criticism is not involved; even if Paul wants to suggest, along Stoic lines, that a heavenly citizenship (or ‘commonwealth’) is to be the model for the earthly state of affairs, then a critical tension is created between the two (which was precisely the point of this Stoic notion). Ebel’s earlier considerations remain (more) convincing, see (Ebel 2015). |
46 | In agreement with, for instance, (Wojtkowiak 2023, p. 71), ‘In keinem der für die Diskussion um eine anti-römische Ausrichtung des Philipperbriefs zentralen Punkte dürfte Paulus das explizite Ziel verfolgen, sich gegen das Imperium Romanum zu wenden. Alle Punkte besitzen jedoch kritische Implikationen.’ |
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Smit, P.-B. Prefigurative Peace in Philippians. Religions 2024, 15, 944. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080944
Smit P-B. Prefigurative Peace in Philippians. Religions. 2024; 15(8):944. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080944
Chicago/Turabian StyleSmit, Peter-Ben. 2024. "Prefigurative Peace in Philippians" Religions 15, no. 8: 944. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080944
APA StyleSmit, P. -B. (2024). Prefigurative Peace in Philippians. Religions, 15(8), 944. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080944