There fall to be considered two Old-Christian documents — those bearing
the names of Paul and Polycarp respectively.
PAUL'S EPISTLE
1. History of Criticism
The first of the two constitutes one of the NT group of "epistles
of Paul" (epistolai Paulou), "to Philippians"
(pros Filippêsious) being the shortest form of the title. Down
to 1845—or, shall we say, to 1835?—no one had doubted its right to
this position. Men saw in it an expression, greatly to be prized,
of the apostle's love for a church which he had founded, written while
he was languishing in prison, probably in Rome, and sent by the hand
of Epaphroditus who had been the bearer of material and spiritual
refreshment for Paul, had fallen sick, and was now on the point of
returning to his home in Philippi. The only point on which doubt seemed
possible was as to the place of composition—whether Caesarea or Rome.
Paulus (1799), Böttger (1837), Thiersch, and Böhmer declared for
Caesarea; elsewhere the voice was unanimous: "the apostle's testament;
written in Rome" (Holtzmann). "The testament of the apostle
and the most epistolary of all epistles." Then came F. C. von
Baur with his thesis that only four of the epistles of Paul (Gal,
1 and 2 Cor, Rom) could be accepted as indisputably genuine — a thesis
that he employed as a criterion in determining the genuineness of
all the rest (Die sogennante Pastoralbriefe, 1835, p. 79; Paulus,
1845). Tried by this standard Philippians had, in Baur's view, to
be at once rejected (Paulus, 458-475).
The replies of Lünemann (1847), B. Brückner (1848), Ernesti (1848
and 1858), de Wette (1848), and others were not effective. Indeed,
the support given to Baur by Schwegler (1846), Planck (1847), Köstlin
(1850), Volkmar (1856) did not advance the question more than did
Baur's own reply to Ernesti and others published in Theol.
Jahrbb. 1849 and 1852, and afterwards incorporated in Paulus
(1866-7), 2.50-88. [3704] Hoekstra
(Th.T, 1875) and Holsten (JPG, 1875-6) sought to base
the Tübingen position as to Philippians upon the solid foundation
of a more strict and searching exegesis, rejecting all that in their
judgment could not be relevantly urged, and adding such other arguments
as seemed to them to have weight. Both these critics. however, still
started from the genuineness of the four "principal epistles."
So Hitzig, Hinsch, Straatman, Kneucker, Biedermann, and various others
ranged themselves more or less decidedly upon the same side.
At the same time, not merely among thoroughgoing apologists, but
also among friends of the Tübingen school, such as Hilgenfeld, Schenkel,
Pfleiderer, Lipsius, Hatch (Ency. Brit., 9/1885), S. Davidson
(Intr. 3/1894), and others, there were very many who found
themselves unable to accept the result of Baur's criticism so far
as the Epistle to the Philippians was concerned.
Without realising it very clearly, both advocates and opponents of
the genuineness found their stumbling-block, from the beginning, in
the axiom of the genuineness of the "principal epistles"
of Paul. Of necessity, however closely attached to Baur and his school,
or however little bound to one another by common principles, they
at once fell into two groups — each of them, in itself considered,
most singularly constituted — which felt compelled to maintain or
to reject the Pauline origin of our epistle, in the one case because
it did not appear to differ from the principal epistles as a whole
more than did these from each other, in the other case because assuredly,
whether in few or in many respects, it seemed when compared with them
to breathe another spirit, and in language and style to betray another
hand.
A way of escape has been sought — but unsuccessfully — by means of
the suggestion, first made by le Moyne in 1685 and afterwards renewed
by Heinrichs (18O3), Paulus (1812), Schrader (1830). and Ewald, that
the Epistle was not originally a unity.
| C.H. Weisse (Beitrag z. Kritik der Paul.
Briefe, 1867) saw in it, besides some later insertions, two
epistles: Phil 1:1-3:1a and the fragment 3:1b-4:23. Similarly
Hausrath (NTliche Zeitgeschichte, 3, 398f) saw one letter
written after the first hearing, and a second some weeks later
after the gift of money from Philippi. W. Brückner (Chron.
Reihenfolge, 1890) assumed various interpolations; Völter
(Th.T., 1892) a genuine and a spurious epistle which have
been fused together in that which we now possess. Names and titles
will be found more fully in Holtzmann, Einleitung (1892),
266-272; S. Davidson, Introduction (1894); Vincent, Commentary
(1897); Zahn, Einleitung (1900), 1, 369-400; and other
writers of introductions and commentaries.
|
A newer way, at first allowed to pass unnoticed, was shown by Bruno
Bauer (Kritik der paulinischen Briefe, 1852, 110-117; cf. Christus
und die Cäsaren, 1877, 373f.), when he determined to make his
judgment upon this epistle independently of that upon the four "principal
epistles," his main conclusion being that it was not earlier
than the middle of the second century. He was followed, so far as
his leading principle was concerned, by Loman, Steck, and van Manen.
Loman, however, did not go more closely into the question of the origin
of Philippians. Steck intimated his adhesion in an incidental statement
in his Galatians (p. 374) that in Philippians we hear some
"echoes" of the controversy between Paulinism and the older
party of the followers of Jesus. Van Manen's view was set forth in
his Handleiding, 3, §§ 34, 36).
Thorough criticism has no other course open to it but that of condemning
any method which ties the hands in a matter of scientific research.
Before everything else it demands freedom. Exegesis must not be content
to base itself on results of criticism that have been arrived at in
some other field; rather is it the part of exegesis to provide independent
data which may serve as a foundation for critical conclusions. The
epistle to the Philippians, like all other Old-Christian writings,
requires to be read and judged entirely apart and on its own merits,
independently of any other Pauline epistles, before anything can be
fitly said as to its probable origin.
2. What Philippians Seems to Be [3705]
The writing comes before us as a letter, not of course of the same
type as those commonly written at the period, of which we have recently
received so many examples in the Oxyrhynchus Papyri, but as
a letter of the sort that we know from the New Testament, and especially
from the Pauline group (see Van Manen, "Old Christian Literature",
§ 18; also "The Pauline Writings"); a letter, to judge from
the opening sentence, written by Paul and Timothy, but, to judge from
all that follows, by Paul alone. In it we find Paul speaking, as a
rule, as if he were a free man, yet sometimes, particularly in 1:7-17,
as if he were a prisoner. He is full of sympathetic interest in those
whom he is addressing. He tells them that his thoughts are continually
about them and their excellences (1:3-11; 2:12), how he yearns to
see them once more (1:8, 26; 2:24, 26), how they are properly speaking
the sole object for which he lives, his joy and his crown (1:24; 4:1).
The epistle purports to be addressed to all the saints in Christ Jesus
at Philippi with the bishops and deacons (1:1; 4:5), known and loved
brothers, disciples, and friends of the apostle; still, the impression
it gives is rather as if it had been written for a wider circle of
readers, among whom the Philippians play no other part than that of
representing the excellent Christians addressed, who nevertheless
required to be spoken to seriously about many and various things that
demanded their unremitting attention.
3. Contents
The writer, as Paul, declares his thankfulness to God for the fidelity
of his readers to the gospel, and his earnest yearning after them
all and their continued spiritual growth (1:3-11). He refers to the
misfortunes that have recently happened to him and to that which in
all probability lies before him, Pointing out how his bonds have served
to promote the cause of Christ both amongst unbelievers and amongst
the brethren, and how Christ to his great joy is being preached, whatever
be the reasons and however diverse be the ways; how he is in a strait
between his desire to be released and his desire to go on with life,
whilst in any case hoping to be able to glorify Christ in his
body (1:12-26).
Next, he exhorts his readers, whether he be present or absent, and
especially in the latter case, to let their manner of life be worthy
of the gospel of Christ, after the example of him who, being in the
form of God, had humbled himself by taking the form of a bondservant,
being found in fashion as a man, and becoming oliedient even to to
the death of the cross (1:27-1:18).
He then proceeds to speak of his intention to send Timothy—joint
author of the epistle, according to 1:1—whom he highly commends, and
Epaphroditus his "brother," "fellow-worker" and
"fellow-soldier," and at the same time the "messenger"
(apostolos) and "minister" of the Philippians to
the need of Paul. Epaphroditus has been sick nigh unto death, and
sore troubled because they had heard he was sick, and yet he is recommended
to the Philippians as if he were a stranger (2:19-30).
The writer, as Paul, goes on, abruptly, to a vigorous onslaught on
his enemies, prides himself upon his Jewish birth, glories in his
conversion, describes his unremitting effort towards the Christian
goal, and exhorts to imitation of his example. For those whom he addresses
he is himself is a "type," his conversion a "conversation
in heaven" (3:1-4:1).
Lastly, comes a new series of exhortations, to Euodia and Syntyche,
Synzygus and all the other brethren, to conduct themselves in all
things in accordance with the word and example of Paul who is addressing
them (4:2-9); an expresion of thanks for the gift, received from them
by the hanid of Epaphroditus, which has recalled the memory of previous
kindnesses, and has been welcome at this time, although not indipensable
(4:10-20); greetings to and from all the saints, and a benediction
(4:21-23).
4. Difficulties
Some things here are certainly not easily intelligible or very logical,
whether we regard the form or the substance. We may point, for example,
to the unusual although genuinely "Pauline" "Grace
to you and peace from God our Father and (the) Lord Jesus Christ"
in the exordium (1:2), and "Now unto our God and Father be the
glory for ever and ever, Amen" at the close (4:20), followed
by the prayer "The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your
spirit" (4:23) instead of the well-known customary formula of
salutation and greeting. The address, moreover, to "all the saints
of Christ Jesus at Philippi, with the bishops and deacons" (1:1)
seriously raises the question, Who are they ? Where do they live?
Contrast, too, the double authorship (Paul and Timothy) of the Epistle
as seen in 1:1 with the fact that from 1:2 onwards Paul [3706]
alone speaks and in 2:19 speaks of Timothy as if he had nothing to
do with the Epistle. Observe also the peculiarly exaggerated manner
in which the Philippians are addressed, as if they and they alone
were by way of exception Christians, worthy to absorb the apostle's
every thought, and as if it was for them alone that he lived and endured,
and how, once more, towards the end (4:5) he names them in a singularly
lofty tone as "ye Philippians." How he again and again praises
himself, holds himself up as a pattern, as the best example that can
be given for the imitation of his disciples and friends: not only
when he speaks so ecstatically of his thanksgivings and prayers, the
significance of his sufferings and possible death, the tie between
him and his present or absent readers (1:2-30; 2:1, 12, 16f., 27f.),
but also when he boasts of his pure Hebrew descent, his faith, his
unceasing effort to be perfect, and to walk as an example (3:5-21;
4:9-14).
Note how the writer salutes "every saint in Christ Jesus"
and sends greetings from "all the saints, especially those
that are of Caesar's household" (4:21f), he being a prisoner
yet apparently in free communication with the people of the Praetorium,
the imperial guard in Rome to whose charge he had been committed (1:7,
13f., 17). Consider how impossible it is to picture clearly to oneself
his true relation to the supposed readers at Philippi, the circumstances
by which he and they are surrounded, the occasion for writing or sending
the epistle, unless a considerable part of its contents be left out
of account. All is confused and unintelligible as long as one thinks
of it as an actual letter written in all simplicity and sent off by
Paul the prisoner at Rome to his old friends at Philippi after he
has been comforted and refreshed by their mission of Epaphroditus
to him. Wherefore, in that case, the bitter attack and the self-glorification
so intimately associated with it (4:2-21)? Wherefore the Christological
digression (2:6-11), with the substance of which (on the assumed data)
one might presume the reader to have been already long familiar? Why
the proposal to send Timothy "shortly" (taxeôs),
whilst yet the writer himself hopes to come "shortly," and
Epaphroditus is just upon the point of setting out (2:19, 24f.)? Could
not Epaphroditus, if necessary by letter, have sent the wished-for
information touching the Philippians which is spoken of in 2:19? What
was Epaphroditus in reality? a fellow-worker of Paul? or a messenger
of the friendly Philippians (2:25)? Why did he need to be warmly recommended
to the Philippians as if he were a stranger, though they had already
been full of solicitude on account of the illness from which he has
now happily recovered (2:26-30)? How can this give occasion for the
exhortation to hold "such" in honour (2:30)? Even Euodia
and Syntyche, Synzygus and Clement (4:2f), simple though they seem,
have long been the subjects of various perplexing questions. Who were
they? symbolical or real persons? In what relation did they stand
to one another, to Paul, to the community addressed ? Why the reminiscence
of what Philippi had previously done for the apostle (4:15f.)? Only
to give him an opportunity to say that he valued the good-will of
the givers more than their gift (4:17)?
5. Not a Letter
The solution of these and other riddles of a like nature raised by
the Epistle lies in the recognition that it is not really a letter,
in the proper sense of that word (see above, § 2), but an edifying
composition in the form of a letter written by Paul to the church
of Philippi and intended to stir up and quicken its readers. Or rather,
let us say, its hearers; for epistles of this sort were designed first
and foremost to be read in the religious meetings of the congregation.
No more precise determination of the occasion for the composition
and sending of the epistle—such as is usually sought in the receipt
of the gift alluded to (for the first time) in 4:10-18 (cf. 2:25,
30)—can be given. The writer knows the proper form of a Pauline epistle'
and he follows it without troubling himself [3707]
as to whether everything that he says exactly fits its place or not.
Hence his naming of Timothy as joint writer of the Epistle (1:1)
although he makes no further mention of him, apart from 2:19, 23,
where he speaks of him as if he were a third person. Hence, too, his
vague expression "all the saints in Christ Jesus at Philippi"
and the strange addition, explicable only from 1 Cor 1:2 and 2 Cor
1:1 "With the bishops and deacons" (1:1 ), his benedictions
(1:2; 4:23), his greetings (4:21f.), his thanksgiving for, and high
praise of, the church he is addressing, which yet has to be admonished
with such earnestness; his exaltation of Paul and his relation to
"the whole Praetorian Guard and all the rest" (1:13), his
intercourse with them that are of Caesar's household (4:22); his praise
of Timothy (2:20-22), of Epaphroditus and of the always attentive
Philippians (2:25-30; 4:10-18); in a word, everything that strikes
the reader as strange and perplexing as long as he is endeavouring
to regard the epistle as a genuine letter of Paul to the church he
had founded at Philippi. His "Philippians" are ideal Christians
of the good old times to which the living generation may acceptably
have its attention directed, and at the same time they are the "you"
amongst whom are found faults and shortcomings, and even "dogs,"
"evil workers," and "concision" (3:2). The aim
of the writer is no other than to edify, to incite to patience and
perseverance by pointing to the example of Paul and others, including
the church addressed, with its illustrious past.
6a. Composition
The author is acquainted with the canonical epistles to the Romans,
the Corinthians, the Galatians, perhaps also the Ephesians, as is
shown by the "parallel" pass-words and allusions, to which
defenders as well as assailants of the "genuineness" are
accustomed to point in order to prove either the identity of the writer
with the author of the "principal epistles" or his dependence
on those writings. A careful examination makes it evident that many
of the phenomena can be accounted for only by imitation.
| For example: the naming of Timothy (1:1)
as a joint writer of the epistle although its further contents
show that he was not so (cf. 2 Cor 1:1); the expression "with
the bishops and deacons," alongside all of the saints at
Philippi (1:1; cf. 1 Cor 1:2; 2 Cor 1:1); the expression "Jesus
Christ" on 1:2 after "Christ Jesus" in v. 1 (cf.
Rom 1:7; 1 Cor 1:3; 2 Cor 1:2; Gal 1:3; Eph 1:2); the calling
of God as a witness of the sincerity of Paul's desire towards
his readers (1:8; cf. Rom 1:9); the expression "test the
things that differ" (dokimazein to diaferonta, 1:10),
elsewhere only in Rom 2:18 (cf. 12:2); the bonds (hoi desmoi)
of the prisoner, who nevertheless seems to walk at liberty (cf.
ho desmois, Eph 3:1); the strange word (and therefore unexplained
by elpis) "expectation" (apokaradokia)
in 1:20, elsewhere only in Rom 8:19; the great importance attached,
without any apparent reason, to Paul's coming (1:26; cf. Rom 1:10-13).
In addition, the expression "the same love etc."
(tên autên agapên...) in 2:3-4 as compared with the exhortation,
originally standing by itself, "to mind the same thing"
(to auto fronein) cf. 2 Cor 13:11; Rom 12:16; the use
of such words as morfê ("form"), arpagmos
("robbery," or "a thing to be grasped"),
isa ("equality"), kenousthai ("empty
himself"), huperupsoun ("greatly exalted")
in 2:6-11, even though perhaps not borrowed from our existing
Pauline epistles; the likeness of men (2:7), cf. the
likeness of sinful flesh in Rom 8:3; the words in 2:10f.
borrowed from the OT in accordance not with the text of Is 45:23
LXX but with that of Rom 14:11; the stringing together of purely
Pauline expressions (such as hôste , hupêkousate, pollô
mallon, hê parousia, and hê apousia mou) in
2:12 for which no reason is apparent from the context; the echo
of Rom 7:18 in 2:12f.; the expression "to run in vain,"
"to labour in vain," "praise the day of Christ"
in 2:16 (cf. Gal 2:2; 4:11; 2 Cor 1:14).
Also the sending of Timothy and the praise accorded to him
in 2:19-22 (cf. 1 Cor 4:17; 16:10); the assurance in 2:24, very
strange in the connection in which it occures, that the writer
himself will speedily come (cf. 1 Cor 4:19); the "supposed
to be necessary" and "speedy" sending of Epaphroditus
in 2:25, 28 (cf. 2 Cor 9:5; 8:22); the unintelligible imperative
(prosdechesthe) in 2:19, with reference to the highly
appreciated Epaphroditus (cf. Rom 16:2); the deviation after
"such" (toioutoi) in 2:30 (cf. ta auta
in 3:1) otherwise than as referring to what occurred wlsewhere
in some previous passage in the group of epistles to which this
originally belonged; the keenness of the attack in 3:2-6, 19,
which is fully in harmony with much in 2 Cor 10-13 and Gal,
but not with the present epistle; the unintelligibleness of
the assurance "for we are the circumcision" in 3:3,
so long as we do not bear in mind such words as those in Rom
2:25, 28f.; the necessity for explanation of "glorifying
in Christ Jesus and not trusting in the flesh" (kauxômenoi
en Christou 'Iêsou kai ouk en sarki pepoithotes) in 3:3,
by referring to such texts as Rom 2:17, 23; 11:1; 2 Cor 11:21-23;
Ga 1:13f., and so forth.
|
[3708] Perhaps the special features
connected with Paul's sojourn as a prisoner in Rome, as also the allusion
to succour previously received by him from the Philippians according
to 4:5f., may be both borrowed from some written source; if this be
so , the source in question cannot, in view of the discrepancies,
be the canonical book of Acts, but must be rather a book of "Acts
of Paul" which underlies it (see Van Manen, "Pauline Epistles,"
§ 37).
6b. Not Patchwork
However many the traces of the writer's use of earlier materials,
it does not seem advisable, and certainly in no case is it necessary,
to regard his work as a chance or deliberate combination of two or
more epistles or portions of epistles. The epistle as a whole does
not present the appearance of patchwork. Rather does it show unity
of form; we find a letter with a regular beginning and ending (1:1f.,
4:20-23); a thanksgiving at the outset for the many excellences of
the persons addressed (1:3-12; cf. Rom 1:8-12; 1 Cor 1:4-9) not withstanding
the sharp rebukes that are to be administered later; personalia; exhortations
relating to the ethical and religious life; all mingled together yet
not without regard to a certain order. Here and there some things
may be admitted to interrupt the steady flow of the discourse; 3:1
or 3:1b raises the conjecture of a new beginning; the "things"
spoken of here are not different from those which we meet with elsewhere
in other Pauline epistles—even in Rom, 1 and 2 Cor, Gal. There also,
just as here, we repeatedly hear a change of tone, and are conscious
of what seems to be a change of spirit. Yet even apart from this,
to lay too great stress upon the spiritual mood which expresses itself
in 3:2-6 as contrasted with that of 1:3-11 or, on the whole, of 1-2,
would be to forget what we can read in 1:15-17; 2:21 and the calm
composure shown in chs. 3f.
No unmistakable trace can be shown of conjunction or amalgamation
of two or more pieces of diverse origin, apart from what admits of
explanation from use having been made of existing writings—say, the
reading of certain Pauline epistles. Rather does everything, even
that which has been borrowed. reach the paper through the individual
brain and pen of the writer. Witness the unity of language and style
which becomes all the more conspicuous whenever we compare the work
with, for example, a Johannine epistle or a chapter from the synoptical
gospels.
There is but one so-called conclusive proof that there were originally
more than one epistle—whether genuine or not genuine—of Paul to the
Philippians: the much discussed testimony of Polycarp (Pol.Phil.
3.2). There we read of Paul that he had not only in his time orally
instructed the Philippians but also written them "letters, into
which if you look carefully you will be able to have yourselves built
up into the faith that has been given you" (epistolas, eis
as ean egkruptête, dunêthêsesthe oikodomeisthai eis tên dotheisan
humin pistin). It is not necessary, however, as is done
by some scholars, to explain the plural number (letter[s]) by reference
to Latin idiom (epistolae), or, with others, to think that
Polycarp is exaggerating. The text in 13.2 clearly shows that he well
knows the difference between epistolê and epistolai;
in 11.3, (qui estis in principio epistulae ejus) that he knows
of but one epistle of Paul to the Philippians; in 11.2, that he regards
1 Cor 6 as belonging to the instruction given by Paul to the Philippians,
whilst we moreover meet with other traces of acquaintance with Pauline
epistles. The inference lies to our hand: the plural form (epistolai)
in 3.2 is to be explained by the writer's intention of pointing to
a group of epistles by Paul which his readers might read for edification,
and [which] the Philippians also might regard as written for them.
A remarkable evidence indeed, not of the earlier existence of more
than one epistle of Paul to the Philippians, but of the way in which
in the [3709] middle of the second century
the group of Pauline epistles was regarded—not as a chance collection
of private letters, but as one destined from the first for the edification
of various churches.
After what has been said it is hardly possible to think of Paul as
the writer of Philippians.
7a. Paul Not the Author
In itself considered it is possible indeed that the apostle should
have written in the form of a letter to a particular church a composition
which was in truth no real letter, but a writing designed for purposes
of general edification. This is not impossible; but it is hardly at
all probable. The same remark applies to the writer's method of borrowing
one thing and another from extant "Pauline epistles" even
if sometimes the borrowing amounts perhaps to no more than a slight
unconscious reminiscence of what he had at some time read. Possible
also, but still less probable, is it that he should have written in
so impalpable a manner regarding his then surroundings—his recent
vicissitudes, what might be awaiting him in the future, his relation
to the community addressed, what was happening within it—and above
all that he should write in so exalted a tone of himself as an "example"
whose sufferings are significant for them all.
What finally puts an end to all doubt is the presence of unmistakable
traces of the conditions of a later period. Amongst these are to be
reckoned in the first instance all that is vague and nebulous in the
supposed historical situation, the firmly held conception of "Paul,"
his "bonds," his presence and absence. More particularly,
everything that points to a considerably advanced stage in the development
of doctrine. Christianity has freed itself from Judaism. "Saints"
may be called so, not because of their relation to the law, nor as
children of Abraham, but in virtue of their standing "in Christ
Jesus" (1:1; 4:21). Righteousness, or the fruit of righteousness,
is attained not through the law but "through Jesus Christ"
(1:11; cf. 3:9). Not the Jew but the believing Christian belongs to
the true Israel (3:3).
It is no longer Jesus who is by preference spoken of—the expression
occurs only twice (2:10, 19; according to Tischendorf's text); usually
it is "Christ Jesus," or "Christ," sometimes "Jesus
Christ." God is in a special sense his father (1:2). His "day"
is spoken of (1:6, 10; 2:16), the righteousness obtained through him
(1:11), the abundance that is had in him (1:26). He can be the subject
of preaching (1:15, 17f.); the life (1:21); his spirit a stay
for believers (1:19), and he himself glorified in the body of the
apostle (1:20). In him is comfort (2:1), he is the highest object
of human striving (2:21), whose work must be done (2:30), in
whom alone can there be glorying (3:3), for whom everything may well
be sacrificed (3:7), the knowledge of whom is worth all else (3:8),
who lays hold of those who are his (3:12), in whom is the calling
of God (3:14), to be hostile to whose cross is the saddest of all
things (3:18), who is to be looked for from heaven as Lord and Saviour
(3:20), who shall make us like unto himself (3:21), in whom we must
stand fast (4:1), whose "thoughts" (noêmata) we must
have (4:7), through whom or in whom God blesses us (4:19), whose grace
may be invoked upon us (4:23), our Lord at whose name every knee must
bow (2:10f.), who came down from heaven, who was in the form of God
and who humbled himself, became man, suffered and died, and was glorified
above all (2:6-11).
The church already possesses its "bishops and deacons"
(1:1), its factions, its parties and schools (1:15, 17; 3:2), its
good old times (1:5; 2:12). The unity of the faith is in danger (1:27f.;
cf. 2:2f.), there is suffering on account of the faith (1:29f.),
there is an aiding of prisoners (2:25, 30), with regard to which we
find a testimony in Lucian's De Morte Peregrini.
In a word: all points back to an Old-Christian development that cannot
at so early a date as 64 A.D., the assumed death-year of Paul, have
attained to such a degree of maturity as we see it here possessing.
Let it [3710] not be said, however, on
this account, that the unknown writer who conceals himself behind
the name "Paul" or, if you will, "Paul and Timothy,"
was a forger or fraudulent person. Nothing gives us the smallest title
to cast any such imputation on his character. He simply did what so
many had done before him, and so many others were to do after his
day; more from modesty than from any arrogance or bluntness of moral
sense did such men write under the name of some one whom they esteem,
in whose spirit they wish to carry on their labours, and under whose
spiritual protection, as it were, they wish to place their literary
efforts. The "Paul" whom this author brings before his reader
is the motive—indispensable or at least desirable—for glorying over
against those who are accustomed to exalt themselves over well-known
predecessors, as we learn from 2 Cor 5:12.
7b. The Real Author
The author himself lived at a later date; we know not where. Presumably
in the same circle as that in which the "principal epistles"
had their origin, and not long after the production of these, probably
in Syria or Asia Minor, about the year 125 A.D. In any case
not earlier than the beginning of the second century and not later
than the testimony of Polycarp already cited, dating from the middle
of the century, or indeed, when we bear in mind Marcion's use of the
letter, not later than 140 A.D. What we can securely infer from the
epistle itself is no more than this: that it appeared after the "principal
epistles," and in dependence on them, yet by another hand than
any of those which we find at work there, as is shown by the divergences
by which, not withstanding many things they have in common, its language
and style are distinguished. Our author, like the writers of the "principal
episties," belonged to the Pauline school. Yet he was, so far
as we can judge, less dogmatically inclined than these writers, or
at least than the authors of Rom and Gal. Rather was he one who directed
his thoughts by preference to the practice of the Christian life.
He knows well of conflicting tendencies and divergent schools and
parties, yet he glides lightly over them and in the character of Paul
unhesitatingly places himself above them all (1:18), if only his readers
are obedient and adhere to that which has once been taught (2:12;
3:16f.; 4:9). Questions of doctrine leave him unmoved, if only his
readers will bear in mind the watchwords: struggle. ceaseless struggle
(3:12-16); a walk in accordance with the gospel of Christ, in unity
of the spirit (1:27); after the pattern given by Paul (passim,
especially 1:21-26; 2:17f.; 3:'17; 4:9-13), Timothy, Epaphroditus
(2:19-30), and other Philippians of the good old days (1:3-11; 4:10-18),
only thinking the thoughts which were in Christ Jesus (2:5).
8. Value
The historical as distinguished from the abiding religious and ethical
value of this writing, even though it makes no contribution to our
knowledge of the life of Paul, is not slight. It throws light for
us upon the history of Paulinism and the course of this quickening
practical movement within Christianity during the first half of the
second century.
POLYCARP'S EPISTLE
10. Text [3711]
The Epistle of Polycarp to the Philippians has long held a place,
by universal consent, among the writings of the "Apostolic Fathers."
Its title in that group (according to Zahn) runs: tou agiou Polukarpou
episkopou Zmurnês kai hieromartuos pros Philippêsious epistolê.
In Lightfoot it is simply pros Philippêsiuos. Neither the longer
nor the shorter title can be regarded as original. The epistle is
now extant in its entirety only in a faulty Latin rendering by the
same hand as that which translated the longer recension of the Ignatian
epistles. We know the Greek text of chs. 1-9 from nine MSS, which
all go back to the same ancestor, and are usually called akefaloi
because they contain the Greek text of the acephalous "Barnabas"
21—i.e., of Barn 5:7 ( ... ton laon k.t.l.). Ch. 13 is found
in Eusebius HE 3:36.14-15.
11. Form and Contents
The work is in the form of an epistle written by "Polycarp and
the presbyters who are with him," or by Polycarp alone, to the
church of God at Philippi which had invited him to write the epistle
(3.1; 13.2), we are not told how or why. The "presbyters"
are mentioned as joint writers of the epistle only in the exordium;
for the repeatedly recurring "we" elsewhere does not necessarily
imply them. "Polycarp" speaks in chs. 1-14 to "brethren,"
to whom his attitude is after the manner of "Paul" in his
epistles. He declares his joy at their friendly reception of Ignatius
and his companions on their journey to Rome (1), gives some exhortations
(2), declares that he cannot compare himself with Paul (3), gives
directions and precepts for married women and widows (4), for deacons,
youths (i.e., laymen) (5), presbyters, himself and others (6). He
warns against Docetism and exhorts to faithful adherence to the views
that have been handed down (7). He points to the perseverance of Christ
Jesus, the blessed Ignatius, Zosimus, Rufus, Paul and the rest of
the apostles (8f.), urges his readers to follow their example (10),
laments the falling away of the former presbyter Valens and his wife,
yet desires that they should be gently dealt with (11). He incites
to the examination of the scriptures, to a holy walk, to prayer for
others (12). He will take care, on the request of the Philippians
and Ignatius (see Ign. Poly. 8), that letters
should be sent to Antioch in Syria, and says a word in commendation
of the epistles of Ignatius accompanying his own; also of Crescens,
the bearer, and his sister (13f.).
12. Is Polycarp the Author?
The author of this epistle, according to tradition, was Polycarp,
a disciple of the apostles, especially of John, who made him bishop
of Smyrna, where about 166 or 167-168 A.D. he suffered martyrdom at
an advanced age. The difficulties, however, in the way of our accepting
this tradition are insuperable.
In the first place, it has to be asked what motive was there for
Polycarp. the bishop of the church at Smyrna, to address such an epistle
at all to the church at Philippi—with which, so far as we can trace,
he had nothing to do? What is said in 3.1 (cf. 13.2) about the epistle
having been invited is manifestly invention.
Further, we must not overlook that, though doubtless the writing
gives itself out to be a letter, it is in reality nothing of the sort,
but rather, in the author's own language, a treatise "concerning
righteousness" (peri tês dikaiosunês, 3.1; cf. 9.1). The
form is taken from the Pauline "epistle," on the whole coinciding
most with that of the pastoral letters, or those of Ignatius, though
also now and then showing affinities with the first Epistle of Clement
to the Corinthians. Its dependence on all these continually strikes
the eye.
Now, it is, in itself considered, certainly possible, [3712]
yet at the same time it is not at all likely, that Polycarp, under
his own name or as "Polycarp and the presbyters that are with
him," should have written a treatise "concerning righteousness"
in the form of an epistle to the church at Philippi. Rather does it
lie in the nature of the case that a third person should have made
use of his name in this manner.
The same observation has to be made upon the circumstance that the
writer, in the character of Polycarp, refers to the charge laid upon
him by Ignatius. Ignatius himself, however, in his letter to Polycarp
(8.1) had said that on account of his hasty departure from Troas for
Neapolis he was no longer able to write to all the churches, wherefore
he, Polycarp, must now instead send letters "to the churches
in front"—a fiction upon which the real Polycarp could hardly
have proceeded, though for a third party this would have presented
no difficulties. Or if it be held that we are not at liberty to speak
of fiction in this connection because Ignatius had really said what
we read in the passage cited above, how then could his friend Polycarp
have passed over his words, have written a treatise in an epistle
to the Philippians, and in the socalled letter assume the appearance
of having written, not to please Ignatius, but because the writing
had been called for by the persons addressed (3.1; cf. 13.2)?
There are other difficulties also. The date of Polycarp's death is
unknown.
The tradition that speaks of 166 or 167-8 as
Polycarp's death-year rests upon some indications of Eusebius
(Chron. and HE 4.14f.; 5.5, 20), yet it appears
to be inadmissible. The same authority, however, speaks (HE
3.36) of Polycarp not only as a contemporary of Ignatius and
Papias, but also as already in the third year of Trajan (98-117)
bishop of Smyrna and at that time in his full vigour. For this
reason many scholars—such as Hase, Wiseler, Duker, Keim, Uhlborn
[et. al.]—have during ever so many years not hesitated to use
their freedom in this connection, and have assigned as the death-year
of Polycarp various dates between 147 and 178. More particularly,
however, many scholars since Waddington (1867)—such as Renan,
Aubé, Hilgenfeld, Harnack, Völter, Lightfoot, and Zahn—have fixed
upon the year 155-6 as the date, basing their conclusion on what
they read in the martyrium Polycarpi, ch. 21. Unfortunately
it is not possibIe to place reliance even on this passage. The
purport of the supposed statement is uncertain; it requires a
number of guesses to be made before it can be taken in the sense
that is desired; and in the most favourable event yields a statement
that stands and falls with the twofold, far from probable, view
(1) that ch. 21 is an integral part of the main work, although
it was still unknown to Eusebius. and Jerome; (2) that the Martyrium
itself is as old as it claims to be, and was written within
a year after the martyrdom of Polycarp (see Van Manen, Old Christian
Literature, § 14).
|
The oldest tradition we possess regarding the date of Polycarp is
that given by Irenaeus (AH 3:3-4, written about 180), who speaks
of him as one whom he had known in his earliest youth (en tê prôtê
hêmôn hêlikia), who at that time was bishop of the church of Smyrna,
and of whose successors "down to the present time" (hoi
mexri nun diadedegnenoi ton Polukarpon) he is able to speak. To
what is said by Irenaeus here and elsewhere, as also in the Epistle
to Florinus wrongly attributed to him (see Van Manen, Old Christian
Literature, § 25). Eusebius has nothing new of any consequence to
add, beyond his indications as to the death-year in 167-8. which are
certainly not to be accepted. Irenaeus names no such year.
We should certainly not go very far astray if, in view of what Irenaeus
tells us about Polycarp, we were to seek his death about the middle
of the second century. At that date the Ignatian letters, with which
our present epistle is connected, had not yet been written (see Van
Manen, Old Christian Literature, § 22), and thus the latter cannot
have been the work of Polycarp.
It is of no avail to attempt, as some scholars have done, to meet
these difficulties by assuming our present epistle to be greatly interpolated,
so that in its original form it can still be regarded as older than
the Ignatian Epistles. The [3713] assumption
of the many interpolations required finds no support in the MS tradition
nor yet in the textual phenomena or in external testimony—as has been
rightly pointed out by Zahn and Lightfoot among others.
13. Author Unknown
The conclusion remains—notwithstanding Zahn and Lightfoot, who (albeit
supported by Harnack) have not succeeded in proving the "genuineness"—that
our "Epistle of Polycarp to the Philippians" is the work
of an unknown hand, in the spirit of the epistles of Ignatius, though
not, in view of the differences in style and language, by the same
author, as a sequel to that group, and not, as has been conjectured,
with the object of recommending them, or of controverting Docetism.
The "Pauline" epistles are much more strongly recommended
(3.3) than the Ignatian (13.2); and the polemic against Docetism in
ch. 7 comes too little into the foreground for us to be able to regard
it as one of the main objects of the writing. The epistle is a well-meant,
though by no means important, composition of the edifying order, made
up in great part of borrowed words, and in no respect showing much
independence, written after Polycarp's death about the middle of the
second century, and before Irenaeus, who (AH 3.3.4) praised
it as "an able epistle" (epistolê ikanôtatê))
from which we can learn the manner of Polycarp's faith and how to
preach the truth; probably, therefore, about 160 A.D.