In this article, it is investigated how the concepts identity, ethics and ethos interrelate, and how the ethics of the Pauline communities in Galatians functioned against the background of
the missionary context of the early church. The author argued that the missionary dimension originated in the context of the missio Dei, and that God called Paul as a missionary to
be taken up in the latter. The missionary process did not end with Paul, but was designed to be carried further by believers who should be, by their very nature, missionary. In the process,
the author investigated how the transformation of identity (the understanding of self, God and others) leads to the creation of ethical values and how it is particularised in different
socio-religious and cultural contexts in the development of the early church. The author argued that there is an implicit missionary dimension in the ethics of Paul in Galatians. In the
process, it is argued that those who want to speak of ethics should make something of mission, and those who speak of mission in Galatians, should speak about the role of identity, ethics
and ethos in the letter.
Recently, the Mo Ibrahim index revealed that South Africa, when one compares the amount of violent deaths and rape, that take place daily, statistically compares to countries that
are in a state of war (see Van der Watt & Kok 2010). In September 2009, the minister of police, Nathi Mthethwa, revealed the latest crime figures in parliament, in which no less than 2.1 million cases
of crime have been reported in South Africa during the last year. Elsewhere, Kok
(2010:1) has argued that South Africa is not only experiencing a moral crisis, but that after the transition into the New South Africa the mainline churches (and some members in that church) also
experienced an identity crisis in the period. According to others, like the American scholar Campbell (2005:25), the global cultural shift and global phenomenon of postmodernity forced fundamental
changes in the Western worldview’, to the extent that ’the core beliefs, values and institutions of Western culture have been challenged’ significantly in the last few decades. Campbell (2005:25)
argues that ’we no longer have a cohesive system to explain reality’ and that everything is becoming pluralistic and increasingly uncertain, ’accompanied by an increasing degree of social unrest’.
In our zeitgeist questions like ’who am I’ seems to be a fundamental question people ask, which is nothing less than a question about identity (Cambell 2005:25). Against this background of the
growing context of crisis and disorientation concerning morality and ethics, a growing number of scholars are endeavouring research into ethics and/or morality and the way Christian ethics
should be applied in a postmodern context (see Burridge 2007; Wolter 2009; Zimmermann & Van der Watt 2010; Kok 2010; Du Plessis, Orsmond & Van Deventer 2009). Burridge (2007:1)
rightly argues that controversies about how to apply Biblical material to moral and ethical issues have always been a matter of debate within the history of the Christian church. Some of
these issues relate to the prophetic role and self-understanding of the church in the pluralistic post-modern, post-Christian context of our multicultural world. As a Biblical scholar, I
recognise the potential and need for deeper scientific reflection on ethics in the New Testament, with specific reference to the dynamics between ethics and mission and the resulting formation
of moral agents and moral communities. It is not possible to suggest a constructive answer to the moral crisis in South Africa and the appropriate way to address the problem within the scope of
this article. I would, however, like to argue that a scholarly and Biblical study of ethics in the New Testament is of utmost importance for contemporary society. Well known scholars in New
Testament ethics like Burridge (2007:1-2), agree that the study of New Testament Ethics and the way we interpret scripture should be an ongoing process of academic reflection. Burridge
(2007:1-2) rightly refers to an example within the context of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa, in which human relations were understood (within a scripturally based church) to
support the doctrine of ’separate development’, better known as apartheid. The General Synod of the Dutch Reformed Church accepted the doctrine of apartheid in 1976 and justified it ethically.
A few decades later, after deep reflection and changes in the South African context, the same church confessed that the doctrine of apartheid was unethical and could no longer be justified
on a scriptural basis. Burridge (2007:3) is thus correct when he argues that it is necessary to keep on reflecting on the use of the Bible in ethics (cf. also Du Plessis, Orsmond & Van
Deventer 2009) and the way that Christian ethics is to be lived out in a concrete ethos (lifestyle). It is against this background that I investigate the dynamic relationship between mission and ethics in the early church, with specific reference to Paul.
In this article, it will be investigated how the concepts identity, ethics and ethos interrelate and how the ethics of the Pauline communities in Galatians functioned within the background of the missionary context of the early church. It will thus be investigated how the transformation of identity (the understanding of self, God and others) leads to the creation of ethical values and how it is particularised in different socio-religious and cultural contexts in the development of the early church.
In this article, the dynamic relationship between mission and ethics in the New Testament, focusing on Paul’s letter to the Galatians, will be investigated. Much has been written on Ethics and Morality in Paul on the one hand and on Paul as missionary on the other, but little on the dynamics between Ethics and Mission in Paul. The need for this article is positioned against the background of the growing interest in the missiological dimension of the church, as seen in the worldwide flux of recent publications on the subject and the rapid growth of Christianity in Africa (especially amongst the indigenous peoples) over the last few decades (Jenkins 2002:1-15, 79).
With regard to missional theology and the practice of mission, missiologists have in recent years become ever more sensitive to the errors that have been made in the past with
reference to mission to indigenous cultures: in the process of missional endeavours from the developed world, it more than often happened that the ethical values of the developed world have been imposed
on indigenous cultures. The social values of the developed world were seen as
’gospel’, and in the process, missionaries have not always been sensitive to the social ethics of indigenous cultures as Dana L. Robert expresses it well:
(Robert 2005:412)
We have indeed learned from mistakes made in the past, but also need to keep on learning and exploring new horizons on an ongoing basis. In this article, the dynamics
between mission and ethics and ultimately what we could learn from Paul’s missionary approach, will be investigated. How, in other words, is the dynamics between mission and morality in Paul,
in the course of the missionary process, to be understood in a post Christian, post modernistic and cultural pluralistic context against the background of mission?
Mapping the field: Clarification of important concepts identity, ethics, ethos and mission
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Firstly, it is necessary to define the terms ’Identity’, ’Ethics’ and ’Ethos’ (Van der Watt 2006:v–ix). The term ’Ethics’ is to be understood as a generic term referring to the moral codes, values, principles and norms in a particular society based on the systematic reflection upon the latter (Van der Watt (2006:v–viii). I agree with Zimmermann (2009:399–400) that the term ’ethics’ could thus be defined as the ’systematic-theoretical examination’ of a lived ethos, in which he follows Aristotle (An. Post. 1.33–89b 9). Ethics is thus concerned with the ’rational analysis of morals, the critical examination of ethos and the subsequent questioning of the motives of morality’ (Zimmermann 2009:400).
’Identity’ relates to the question of who we are, the values we live by on the basis (motivation) of how we understand ourselves, our relationship to God and the world and the values, rules and principles we defer from that.
’Ethos’, on the other hand, is to be understood as the practical way we live out our ethics (Lebensstil, practical life style) in a given socio-historical and cultural context (Van der Watt 2004:2-3), the way we do things in our society or group, the institutionalised practices.
As Christians, the basis or motivation of our being should be built on the basis of a particular understanding of God, the world and God’s story for and/or with the world, which by implication includes the missionary dimension and Universal Godly Narrative (UGN). Accordingly, it could be argued that there exists a dynamic inter-relational correspondence between identity, ethics and ethos on the one hand. On the other hand, that the inter-relational dynamics thereof are always implicitly imbedded and particularised within a specific socio-historical context has to be taken into consideration. This was the case in Paul’s missionary endeavours, and will also be the case today, when we do mission.
This brings us to the question as to what we understand under the term ’mission’. In most cases one will find that the denotative, associative and connotative meanings of ’mission’ are understood in a centrifugal way. That is at least the case in my native language, Afrikaans. The Standard Afrikaans Dictionary defines ’Sending’ (mission) as follows (Odendal 1994: ad loc):
- handeling van te send, te stuur [Action of sending someone]
- opdrag, taak wat elders verrig moet word: op ’n diplomatieke sending in Moskou wees. Vredesending [A task that has to be done somewhere else: To be on a diplomatic mission in Moscow]
- al die werksaamhede van Christen-sendelinge en die administrasie daarvan: Die binne- en buitelandse sending. Die sending onder die Jode, Islam. [All the duties of Christian missionaries and the administration thereof].
These kind of centrifugal definitions are enormously problematic, in the sense that they tend not only to pacify congregations and believers as such, but also that ’mission’ becomes something that someone else does, somewhere far away. I concur with scholars like Keifert (2006:167–168), that the Pauline understanding of mission is far removed for the latter definition and understanding that prevail in some churches today. Mission, rather, is something far greater than the church, a dimension in which the missional church is to be taken up into, and carry out God’s mission (cf. also Bosch 1999). A missional church is rather a church that does not simply do mission, but that focuses on being missional (Keifert 2006:168).
The dynamics of mission in Paul
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The origin of the missionary dimension: God’s plan in action
In Paul and in the New Testament per se, it is clear that the totality of the missionary dimension originates from God (cf. Gl 1:4). It is, in other words, not the story of people
doing missionary work, but of people being taken up in the missionary dimension or story of God and his Son (missio Dei), with the implication that the definition
of mission should, in the first instance, reflect the missio Dei. This becomes clear in the opening verses of Galatians, where Paul clearly states that the fact that he is an apostle (missionary) is not as
a result of men Gl 1:1 Παῦλος ἀπόστολος οὐκ ἀπʼ
ἀνθρώπων οὐδὲ διʼ ἀνθρώπου [Paul, Apostle not of man
or through man]), but because of God (cf. also Gl 2:8), who raised Jesus from death (Gl 1:1 ἀλλὰ διὰ Ἰησοῦ
Χριστοῦ καὶ θεοῦ πατρὸς τοῦ ἐγείρα
ντος αὐτὸν ἐκ νεκρῶν [but through or because of Christ and God the father who raised him from death]).
The life-transforming message that Paul preaches thus has as its origin the revelation of God, Paul argues, and not merely that of men (Gl 1:11–12).
Furthermore, Paul’s sending as an apostle is not seen as something that takes place in isolation, but realises against the background of the UGN, according to
which God has sent his Son to deliver or save (ἐξέληται [rescue]) the world (Gl 1:4). In Galatians, Paul states that the whole world is caught up in the grip of sin
(Gl 3:22 ἀλλὰ συνέκλεισεν ἡ γραφὴ τὰ πά
ντα ὑπὸ ἁμαρτίαν
[the whole world is a prisoner of sin]). The fact that Jesus gave himself to save the world (δόντος ἑαυτὸν ὑπὲρ
τῶν ἁμαρτιῶν ἡμῶν, ὅπως ἐξέληται ἡμᾶς ἐ
κ τοῦ αἰῶνος τοῦ ἐνεστῶτος πονηροῦ
[who gave himself for our sins, to rescue us from this evil age]) is, according to Paul, based on the will of God (Gl 1:4 κατὰ τὸ θέλημα τοῦ
θεοῦ καὶ πατρὸς ἡμῶν
[according to the will of God our father]). There where people are subsequently saved from this evil age (Gl 1:4) or where the transforming message is preached or lived, there a very important part of
the missionary process, of God’s mission, is already taking place. When the missionary dimension in Paul is discussed, in other words, one should not make the mistake to limit the scope thereof to a
mere focus on the end result of the missionary process, but rather start with its origin. In most books and articles on the subject, one will find that the authors focus more on the result of the
missionary process than on the origin and motivation thereof. The
implication of the former approach is that the focus of the missionary dimension falls more towards the result of the missionary process, where conversion has taken place, or where a missionary
takes the action to go out and convert. The pendulum moves more towards the result of the missionary process than towards the origin thereof, with the result that not much is made of the theological
(and ethical) dimension that serves as the motivation for the mission. The further implication is that only that which refers to the end result of mission is regarded as mission. In the process an
important dimension of the missionary process is not discussed or recognised as part of the missionary dimension, with the result that much of the implicit missionary dimensions in the New Testament
are not taken into consideration.
God the sender sends Paul the missionary
Paul is well-known as the planter and founder of communities of faith (cf. τοὺς οἰκείους τῆς πίστεως [the house of faith]). We know the ’dass’ of the
fact that he found new communities of faith but have little historical evidence of the ‘wie’ or how he went about in forming these communities. Paul’s missionary endeavours obviously entailed a particular
sociological process that could be divided in different stages. The first stage would be his contact with a particular community or a group of individuals, to which he preached the Gospel, and the second
entail the process of forming a community that naturally followed. Lietaert Peerbolte (2003:204) rightly asks whether Paul purposefully went out to create a new community when he visited a town or city,
or whether the reality of group formation was an unforeseen result of the process of Paul’s preaching. Here it is best to investigate, as far as possible, Paul’s own way of describing his missional
activities. Pesce (1994:12) argues that we do not have available historical evidence, or literary sources for that matter, that explicitly refer to the so-called first stage of group formation, where
Paul met individuals or a group of individuals and the way he went about the missionary process. We have only the second stage of evidence, in which the community has already been formed, and in which
Paul writes to an existing faith community. Therefore, Paul’s letters ’do not offer direct access to Paul’s preaching of the gospel and the subsequent formation of the communities that resulted from this
activity’ (Lietaert Peerbolte 2003:205).
Nevertheless, we do have textual witnesses of how Paul described his own work in retrospect, for instance in Galatians 1:8–11 as a εὐηγγελισάμεθα
[we preached] (cf. Mt 11:5; Lk 2:10; 3:18; Ac 5:42; 10:36; Rm 1:15; 10:15; Gl 1:8; Eph 2:17; 1Th 3:6; Heb 4:6; 1Pt 4:6; Rv 10:7; 14:6), or the telling of the
good news. Here εὐηγγελισάμεθα [we preached]
(cf. εὐαγγελίζηται [he should preach]; εὐηγγελισάμεθα [we preached]; εὐαγγελίζεται
[he is preaching] in Gl 1:8–11) is written in the aorist medium voice, indicating that the faith community in Galatia received the gospel as it was preached unto them by Paul when he made the Gospel
known (cf. Gl 1:7) to them. Paul is thus the instrument that told them about the good news that God revealed (cf. Gl 1:11 διʼ ἀποκαλύψεως Ἰησοῦ Χριστοῦ [by or through a revelation of Jesus Christ])
to him. In Galatians 1:11 Paul uses the passive form (εὐαγγελισθὲν ὑπʼ ἐμοῦ
[I preached]) to emphasise the fact that this good message was not received by men (ὅτι οὐκ ἔστιν κατὰ ἄνθρωπον [it is not
from or according to men]), ἀλλὰ διʼ ἀποκαλύψεως Ἰησοῦ Χριστοῦ [but through or by revelation] (Gl 1:12). The source of this gospel, or good news is the same God who, within his original plan, sent not
only his Son, but also the apostle Paul. The message Paul preaches and embodies thus comes not from Paul, but from God, διʼ ἀποκαλύψεως Ἰησοῦ Χριστοῦ [revelation]. This undoubtedly presupposes the fact
that as Paul ’passively’ received the gospel through revelation from Jesus Christ, it nevertheless derives from God and from his will, and is therefore part of his plan and ultimately originates (in
the language of mission) from the . Every element of the missionary dimension thus has as its origin the original plan of God. For this reason, Paul can also argue that he was not appointed
by any man, but by Jesus Christ and by God the Father who raised Jesus from death (Gl 1:1 οὐκ ἀπʼ ἀνθρώπων οὐδὲ διʼ ἀνθρώπου ἀλλὰ διὰ Ἰησοῦ Χριστοῦ καὶ θεοῦ πατρὸς τοῦ ἐγείραντοςαὐτὸν ἐκ νεκρῶν [not
from men nor by man, but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised him from death]). The construction, διὰ Ἰησοῦ Χριστοῦ καὶ θεοῦ πατρὸς [by Jesus Christ and God the Father], refers to the close
connection and inter-relatedness between the Father and the Son in the context of the missional dimension. Paul is thus taken up in the missio Dei, into the greater story of Jesus Christ and God’s
purposes with the world. The sending of Paul is thus fundamentally inter-related to the plan of God, the sending of the Son and the UGN. Therefore, Paul would often refer to the (spiritual) work
being done in the the lives of believers as God’s work (cf. Rm 14:20 τὸ ἔργον τοῦ θεοῦ
[the work of God]) and as such, something that God will bring to maturity (Phlp 1:6 ὁ ἐναρξάμενος ἐν ὑμῖν
ἔργον ἀγαθὸν ἐπιτελέσει
[he who began a good work in you will perfect or complete it]).
In the introductory part of the letter (Gl 1:4), Paul gives indication of his understanding of the
εὐαγγέλιον [gospel] that he is called (cf. Gl 1:15 καλέσας
διὰ τῆς χάριτος αὐτοῦ [who called me through or by his grace]) to preach:
κυρίου Ἰησοῦ Χριστοῦ - τοῦ δόντος ἑαυτὸν
[Lord Jesus Christ - who gave himself]
ὑπὲρ τῶν ἁμαρτιῶν ἡμῶν,
[for our sins]
ὅπως ἐξέληται ἡμᾶς ἐκ τοῦ αἰῶνοςτοῦ ἐνεστῶτος πονηροῦ
[that he might deliver us out of this evil world]
κατὰ τὸ θέλημα τοῦ θεοῦ
καὶ πατρὸς ἡμῶν
[according to the will of our God and Father]
(Gl 1:4)
From the aforementioned text we could infer that in Paul’s mind and theological understanding, his mission is be interpreted as part of something God is doing, or which
God is up to in the world, namely that it is the will of God (cf. κατὰ τὸ θέλημα
τοῦ θεοῦ [will of God]) that people might be delivered (cf. ἐξέληται [delivered])
out of or from this present
evil age (cf. ἐκ τοῦ αἰῶνος τοῦ ἐνεστῶτος
πονηροῦ [from this evil age]). In reality, the whole world, Jews and Gentiles alike, are caught up in the grip of sin (Gl 3:22 τὰ πάντα
ὑπὸ ἁμαρτίαν and spiritual slavery (cf. Gl 2:4 [καταδουλώσουσιν
[bring into bondage]); 4:3, 4:8 (ἐδουλεύσατε [you were in bondage]), 4:9
(δουλεύειν [to be in bondage or a slave]), 4:24–25). Those who do
not believe are in other words not free, they are caught up and inevitably part of the αἰῶνος τοῦ ἐνεστῶτος
πονηροῦ [this eveil age], and although they might not realise it, they are desperately
in need of deliverance from this bondage to sin (see Gl 3:22). God not only called Paul by grace (Gl 1:15), he also called him with a very definite purpose, namely to reveal his Son in him
(cf. Gl 1:16 ἀποκαλύψαι τὸν υἱὸν αὐτοῦ
ἐν ἐμοί [to reveal his son in me]), so that (ἵνα [so that]) Paul would proclaim and preach him amongst the nations
(ἵνα εὐαγγελίζωμαι αὐτὸν ἐν τοῖς ἔθνεσιν
[to preach him in or amongst the nations]). Paul, in other words, understood his calling as mission and his missional preaching as a calling with universalistic
implications (Nissen 2007:60).
An ontological transformation with universalistic implications
Before his conversion to Christ, Paul was a zealous Pharisee following the law, living a life characterised by an extremely high Jewish morality (cf. Phlp 3:4–5), but nevertheless a slave to the law. Accordingly, there
existed for him a compelling irreconcilable difference between Jew and Gentile (and Christian) and he zealously persecuted the followers of Christ (Gl 1:13). After his conversion,
Paul’s identity was radically redefined (Cromhout 2009:135).
Although he retained much of his Jewish faith elements (Cromhout
2009:126; Burridge 2007:107; Kok 2010b:1; Gager 2000; Sanders 1977, 1983; Wright 2003:1-2; Dunn 2008:5–9; Hawthorne, Martin & Reid 1993:306), and was still on an ethical level aligned
with some of the elements that are to be interpreted as typically Jewish and Pharisaic (cf. his sexual ethics [1 Cor 5], his use of Old Testament (OT) Scripture, covenant, etcetera [Wright
2003:6]), it was nevertheless reinterpreted through his experience of the Christ event (cf. Phlp 3:7). Paul realised his identity by making the Christ-event metaphorically part of his self
understanding. He soon understood, however, that Christ was sent (Gl 4:4) to redeem us all from the curse of the law (Gl 3:10), that had become a curse for us (Gl 3:13). This newly found freedom changed Paul’s identity, ethics and ethos and his paradigm of God, people and life. This new paradigm called forth a
reevaluation of his whole outlook on life. In Galatians 2:19–20, Paul states that he has been crucified with Christ (Χριστῷ συνεσταύρωμαι [crucified with Christ]), and it is no longer he
that lives, but Christ living in him (ζῶ δὲ οὐκέτι ἐγώ, ζῇ δὲ ἐν ἐμοὶ Χριστός [it is no longer I that live, but Christ living in me]). He now lives a life of faith and freedom (cf. Gl 5:1),
which is in the Son of God (ἐν πίστει ζῶ τῇ τοῦ υἱοῦ τοῦ θεοῦ [I live in faith, the faith which is in the Son of God - Gl 2:20]), who loved him and gave himself up for him. In Paul’s conversion
or calling, he was radically transformed from the inside out. Paul himself was delivered from this evil age and from bondage and experienced the freedom (and χάρις [grace], cf. Gl 1:6, 15; 2:9;
21; 5:4; 6:18) in Christ that he later would wholeheartedly proclaim.
The message of deliverance and freedom from bondage and spiritual slavery became intrinsically part of his missionary message, the good news that had the potential to radically transform the
world and bring vertical (God-humans) and horizontal (humans-humans)
reconciliation.
For Paul, his missionary calling and the preaching of the gospel is to be seen as in direct opposition to the powers of this world. Hahn (1965:99) goes so far as to say that
the powers of this world (cf. also Gl 4:3 στοιχεῖα τοῦ κόσμου
[rudiments of the world]; Col 2:15 ἀρχὰς καὶ τὰς ἐξουσίας [principalities and powers]) are overcome by the preaching and spreading of
the gospel, and Paul is led in a triumphal march through the countries whilst propagating the savour of Christ (cf. 2 Cor 2:14ff; see Col 2:15). This is true when the high Christology of Paul (cf.
Phlp 2:5–10; Rm 10: 9–13; 14–18; 15:7–13) is taken into account. Hahn (1965) argues that:
On these presuppositions (of the high Christology) the mission to the gentiles can no longer be for Paul an exceptional phenomenon. From the concept of the exaltation he
realised, as no one before him, the all-embracing reality of the Christian message, and he understood that the gospel itself, with its universal claim, demands that the mission should be to all
human beings, including the ’Greeks and barbarians’.
(Hahn 1965:99)
From this high Christology as the point of departure, Paul could thus proclaim boldly that, through faith, all who believe have been clothed in Christ
(Gl 3:27 Χριστὸν ἐνεδύσασθε [to put on Christ]) and receives a new identity
(cf. Gl 6:15–16). This new identity is also expressed in kinship
language. Paul uses the metaphor of a family and argues that believers are no longer slaves but have become (freed) children of God
(Gl 3:26 Πάντες γὰρ υἱοὶ θεοῦ ἐστε διὰ
τῆς πίστεως ἐν Χριστῷ Ἰησοῦ
[For you are all sons of God, through faith, in Christ Jesus]), spiritual heirs of God’s testament of inheritance (cf. Gl 3:21–4:7).
They have been changed from one state of being
(bounded slaves) into a new one (freed children of God), which comes down to nothing less than being new creatures (cf. Gl 6:15–16 καινὴ
κτίσις [new creation]). As newly created
children of God, they are thus taken up in the family of God and have received a new identity. Soteriology, in other words, implies a particular re-socialisation and entrance into
a new social reality, which also serves as the basis for the formulation of the believer’s ethics (Van der Watt 2005:124). The fact that believers have all become children of God,
naturally implies that there is no difference between Jew or Greek, slave or free person, or even men and wo: In Christ they are one
(Gl 3:28) πάντες γὰρ ὑμεῖς εἷς ἐστε ἐν
Χριστῷ Ἰησοῦ
[for you all are one man in Christ Jesus]). It could thus be argued
that the concept of freedom in Christ belongs just as much as universality to the Gospel. In other words, from the high Christology as point of departure all socio-cultural and religious barriers
between people dissolve, which inevitable opens up the missionary
(universal) dimension.
According to Galatians 4:8, at least some members of the faith community Paul is writing to were people who previously did not know God, and who worshipped pagan idols.
In due time (within the missionary process) they came to know God, or rather God came to know them (Gl 4:9). The word ’know’ ‘know’ [γνόντες)] is to be understood as much more than intellectual knowledge.
It refers to relational interaction, mutual participation and intimate communication. It thus denotes the idea of people who journeyed together with God, and experienced God journeying with them
(cf. Gl 5:25). It creates the picture of a faith community that grew ever deeper into their relationship with God. Therefore, it could be argued that the missionary impulse that brought them to
Jesus Christ continued to grow like a seed (see Gl 6:8 σπείρων … θερίσει [to sow…. to reap]).
The missionary impulse is thus not to be seen as a once off moment of a missionary preaching the gospel, but the ongoing process of faith formation and community building.
The missionary process thus does not end in the act of proclamation but continues as the word of God and the message of salvation takes root and grows to perfection.
It is certainly within the faith community itself
that the new paradigm for life is lived, where life is shared and where the effects of the transformative missional message are particularised.
The missional message,thus, should naturally
live on in (Longenecker 2009:205–221):
- the concrete reciprocal
love-life of the faith community
- the songs they sing
- the implicit ethics and the ethos
- the discipline
- the relationship to the state
- the relationship to the poor
- the relationship to the marginalised.
The original missional impetus thus becomes an inherent part of the life-movement of the community. The community, who once were the mission field, becomes the
carrier of the transformative missional message, with the implicit potential to influence those around them.
Regression into old thinking patterns
Unfortunately, this was not always the case. In Galatians, we see a clear indication of a particular situation in the faith community where some have been led off the
true spiritual path, leading directly to specific moral issues.
Some members in the congregation regressed and fell back into (Gl 4:9) their formal spiritual state (and identity), when they were slaves of no good idols (Gl 4:8), by again adhering to or
were influenced by religious regulations (cf. Gl 4:10 ἡμέρας παρατηρεῖσθε καὶ
μῆνας καὶ καιροὺς καὶ ἐνιαυτούς [You observe days, and months, and seasons, and years]) of weak and pitiful powers
(cf. Gl 4:9 πῶς ἐπιστρέφετε πάλιν ἐπὶ τὰ
ἀσθενῆ καὶ πτωχὰ στοιχεῖα [how turn you back again to the weak and beggarly rudiments]). Some members did not act in love towards the others and,
metaphorically speaking, almost devoured [ἀναλωθῆτε] each other (cf. Gl 5:15). Clearly, they did not walk in
the Spirit (Gl 5:16) and did not let themselves be led by the Spirit. Those who
belong to Christ, are supposed to have crucified their sinful nature (Gl 5:24) and should be living a new life in the Spirit (Gl 6:16 καινὴ κτίσις [new creation]), and walk in line
accordingly (Gl 5:25). By falling back into their former
state of being (or former identity), these members are living contra the recreated identity they have received, which inevitable leads to an embracing of certain elements of their former state of thinking
(identity and ethics) and living accordingly (ethos). For Paul this is destructing the work that God began in them (Gl 3:5; 4:11).
Therefore it is not strange that we see Paul the missionary morally encouraging the community of faith, with rhetorical force, to adhere to the right conduct
(ethos), based on the right understanding (ethics) of who they are in Christ (identity). Who they are, and should be in Christ goes back to the original plan of God when he sent his Son (Gl 1:4), and afterwards the
apostle Paul (Gl 1:15; 2:2). This is the core of Paul’s rhetorical purpose of the letter (Tolmie 2005:152-155), namely to remind the believers not to regress back into
their old form of identity and by so doing become spiritual slaves again. In his rhetorical argumentation, Paul takes them back to a renewed understanding of their spiritual
identity in Christ. According to Paul, they should realise the implications of the fact that they were transformed from slaves of idols and slaves of the law to children of God
(Gl 4:1–7), and having the Spirit of the Son of God in their hearts (Gl 4:6), they are immersed and clothed in Christ (Gl 3:26-27). Those who let their lives (increasingly) be
guided by the Spirit are those who not only understand their identity, but also those who are
free from the law (Gl 5:18). Their spiritual maturity should result in spiritual fruit (Gl 5:22vv). They are nothing less than a community of faith made free of all forms of
bondage. The faithful freedom of this community is
the compelling sign of those who belong to the heavenly Jerusalem over and against those who are still enslaved (cf. Gl 4:21-31) (Hahn 1965:101). Therefore, any approach denying
or undermining the faithful freedom of the faith community is to be rejected, for it again enslaves the believers who have been set free and imposes a certain cultural group’s
socio-religious ethical demands on that of another. For this reason any approach that would lead to the restoration of the letter of the law and divisions amongst people is to be rejected (Rm 10:4; Gl 3:28), for believers are set free from the law that
could not set them free from sin and death (cf. Gl 3:19ff). With the dawn of Christ’s redemptive work on the cross (Gl 6:14), a life of new possibilities within the family of God (Gl 3:26–27)
has been opened.
Ethics of freedom: Missionary by nature
It is, however, important to note that for Paul, men are not exempt from all forms of law or ethics, for judgment according to works still remain,
but its outworking springs forth from another
inherent source and motivation, namely πίστις διʼ ἀγάπης ἐνεργουμένη [faith working through love] (cf. Gl 5:6) based on the Gesetz Christi (way or law of Christ), who showed
the ultimate form of life in dying for us (cf. Gl 2:20). Without a holy life, in other words, without a high ethical life that results in spiritual fruit (Gl 5:22), the gospel
would be nullified as liberating message of salvation and righteousness (Hahn 1965:103). Within the context of relational faith formation, the new life in Christ is guided by
the Spirit (Gl 5:25), but lived in freedom (see Bornkamm 1961:6, 166) and in its scope and implication is directed universally (Gl 6:10) and inclusively in the context of love
(cf. Gl 5:6) (see Watson 2007:213). According to Wolter (2009:146–150),
love, within the context of egalitären Reziprozität (egalitarian reciprocity) (cf. ἀλλήλων [each other]) is to be seen as the Leitprinzip der Christlichen Ethik [leading principle of Christian ethics]
and ultimately based on and motivated by the way or law of Jesus (Gesetz Christi) who died for us as an act of love (cf. Gl 2:20). The theological category of freedom and good works (Gl 6:10), that have to be done in the context of love
(Gl 5:6) within the context of the faith community (τοὺς οἰκείους τῆς πίστεως [the house of faith]), is nothing less than the result of Paul’s missionary message that he received from
God (cf. Gl 1:12) and that reflects the will of God (Gl 1:4). Long after Paul had preached his missionary message, the effect thereof (should) still live on in the context of the faith
community as such. In other words, by understanding their freedom, and living from that freedom they are to be carriers of the missional message. They thus are to carry the same inclusive,
universal message they have received from the apostle - that same message that ultimately and intrinsically relates back to the original missional plan of God. This message has to be lived
out in concrete ways and thus has an implicit performative, missio-ethical dimension. The characteristic of this ’living the message’ will then carry with it the same sense of inclusiveness
and the same sense of freedom. By living this way, the faith community, as incarnation of the message, in reality becomes nothing less than missionaries, as a result of the fact that every
word and every action should inherently reflect the original missionary message that they have received. Paul often, in his letters, encouraged the faith communities to follow his example,
that is modeled after that of Christ (cf. Rm 12:10; 1 Cor 4:16; 11:1; Eph 5:1; Phlp 3:17; 1 Th 1:6; 1:7; 2 Th 3:7; 3:9; 1 Tm 1:16; 4:12; 2 Tm 1:13; Tt 2:7). Following his example (in which
he follows Christ), denotes a certain way of life (ethics and ethos), based on a certain understanding of their identity. The missionary process thus did not stop with Paul, but was intended
to be continued in the ethical realisation of the life of the faith community. Therefore the faith community should by implication not only become the message, but also fundamentally missional
in their being. They should be missional in the sense that the will
of God, and the effects of that which God planned when he sent his Son and called (and sent) Paul, resulted in and relationally speaking between them. By becoming the embodiment of the message,
they were taken up within the power of the message and were themselves nothing less than a light to others.
In Galatians 6:10, Paul encourages the community to
Ἄρα οὖν ὡς καιρὸν ἔχομεν,
ἐργαζώμεθα τὸ ἀγαθὸν πρὸς πάντας,
μάλιστα δὲ πρὸς τοὺς οἰκείους
τῆς πίστεως [As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good unto all men, especially unto them who are part of the household of faith].
The construction ἐργαζώμεθα τὸ ἀγαθὸν πρὸς
πάντας [let us do good unto all men] has as its scope more than just the οἰκείους
τῆς πίστεως [household of faith]. Longenecker (2002:282) argues correctly that the inferential particle ἄρα [then], strengthened by the transitional particle οὖν [therefore],
appears frequently in Paul’s letters. Here, according to him, it certainly signals the conclusion or main point of a discussion. The implication is that this particular verse is to be seen as the conclusion and main point not only of
the directives given in 6:1-10 but also of all that has been said in 5:13–6:10:
In effect, the exhortations of 5:13, ’through love serve one another’, and 6:10, ’do good to all people’, function as an inclusio for all that Paul says
against negative tendencies among the believers of Galatia in 5:13–6:10.
(Longenecker 2002:282)
Betz (1987) (cf. also Horrell 2005:264) also points to Paul’s use of πάντα [all] in 2:16; 3:8, 22, 26–28 and remarks:
The universal character of God’s redemption corresponds to the universality of Christian ethical and social responsibility. If God’s
redemption in Christ is universal, the Christian community is obliged to disregard all ethnic, national, cultural, social, sexual, and even religious
distinctions within the human community.
Since before God there is no partiality, there cannot be partiality in the Christian’s attitude towards his fellow man.
(Betz 1987:311)
This is probably one of the most obvious negative implications for those in Paul’s day who forced a particularistic ethnic Jewish ethic on the
socio-cultural diverse community of faith. This would have worked directly against the dynamics of the missionary process because of the fact that it might again
reaffirm traditional exclusivist practices. Paul never did this in his missionary approach. In the context of Galatians 6:10, Paul rhetorically persuades the community
of faith to not only realise their identity, ethics and ethos but also to do that inter alia within a centrifugal (πρὸς πάντας)
[towards all] frame of reference. In other
words, a frame of reference directed also towards those outside of the faith community and not only centripetally to those inside. Here Paul is not referring to mission
as something that someone does somewhere, or is sent to do, but something essential to being a Christian. Being missional is thus part and parcel of being a Christian, it
is existentially part of the ’DNA’ of the Church, who should be missionary by its very nature. We should rather not speak of doing mission or sending people on missionary
projects, but rather of being missional, right there where we are in everything we do (Guder & Barrett 1998:1–17).
From the preceding discussion, we could infer that there is not only a dynamic inter-relational relationship between identity, ethics and ethos, but also between the latter
and the missionary movement of the early church (with reference to Paul’s letter to the Galatians). It is clear that the implication of Paul’s rhetorical approach in Galatians should lead to the
reality of the faith community becoming the embodiment of the missional message preached by the missionary Paul. Paul’s personal transformation of his identity, ethics and ethos becomes not only
the message he preaches, but also the tipos, the Γίνεσθε ὡς ἐγώ [become like me] (Gl 4:12) to be followed by the congregations that he found on the missionary field. His tipos is again related to
that of Christ, who has been sent by God and thus is understood to represent something of the missional plan of God. In times of crisis and delineation from the right path of life Paul encourages
the congregation by inter alia, rhetorically taking them back to a reaffirmation of their true identity, and the ethical dimension that flows from that.
In the dynamics of Paul’s missionary work, we clearly see a focus on the elements of identity, ethics and ethos, which fundamentally relates to the symbolic universe of the
missionary. Thus, when we speak of mission in Galatians, we have to acknowledge the fact that, from a rhetorical point of view, it was the apostle’s wish that the missional movement did not stop
with his missional preaching, but continued in process as the faith
community becomes the carrier and embodiment of the missionary message. We have argued earlier that Paul, rhetorically, tries to move the congregation to realise their identity (as well as ethics
and ethos) not only within a centripetal (inwards, towards themselves) but also a centrifugal (cf. Gl 6:10 πρὸς πάντας [towards all]) frame of reference, directed inter alia towards those outside
of the faith community. Thus, their transformed identity in Christ should not only lead to a new ethics, but also to a new ethos, in the form of a new lifestyle, that should impact society around
them. In this way the faith community becomes missional by implication, because they embody the missional message and its impact potentiality. We could, in other words, infer from this that it
is possible to broaden the scope of missional hermeneutics and speak of missional congregations in the early church and that being missional is inseparable from ethics, and ethics inseparable from the missional dimension. Those who
want to speak of mission should also speak of ethics, and those who speak of ethics should make something of mission. As I have stated in the beginning of the article, we could concur
with scholars like Keifert (2006:167–168), that the Pauline understanding of mission is that mission is to be understood as something far greater than the church, a dimension in which
the missional church is to be taken up into and to carry out God’s mission (cf. also Bosch 1999). A missional church is, in other words, a church that does not simply do mission, but
focus on being missional (Keifert 2006:168).
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