He is our peace: The Letter to the Ephesians and the
Theology of Fulfilment A Dialogue with Peter Ochs
David F. Ford Cambridge University
This paper is an engagement with an old text and a new text for a specific
context. The old text is the Letter to the Ephesians, which has fascinated me
for years. The new text is Peirce, Pragmatism and the Logic of Scripture
by Peter Ochs (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998). The context is the
Society for Scriptural Reasoning, which is one of the readerships Ochs had in
mind when writing his book. I am not competent to judge Ochs' reading of
Peirce, but his book is also about the logic of scripture. It therefore invites
a review in the form of testing its capacity to help in interpreting a
scriptural text, and that particularly suits the SSR. This is very much an
initial exploration of Ochs' none-too-easy book, and it is a relief to know
that Ochs himself might well be at our meeting to correct what I write here. As
it is too early to have weighed (or even to have understood adequately) much of
what Ochs says, my aim is to try to enter a little into the significance of his
book by using it to redescribe and interpret theologically a more familiar
text, in this case the Letter to the Ephesians.
1. Introducing Ochs
First I will give a minimal introduction to some of Ochs' ideas which will
be used later in this paper.
The main thrust of Ochs' argument is to show how Peirce offers a
pragmatic reading of the modern Cartesian-Kantian philosophical
tradition so as to correct and redefine it, especially through engagement with
the experimental methods of the natural sciences. One key feature of Peirce's
correction is to show how that tradition's claims to discontinuity with the
past were part of a misconstrual of transcendental philosophy's own nature
and significance. In fact, Peirce and Ochs claim, the Cartesian-Kantian
tradition is better seen as a correction of features of the tradition of
medieval scholastic (and earlier) philosophy, and both traditions are to be
understood in relation to common sense. The common sense of any
community needs to be open to correction, but it also contains many
indubitable beliefs on which people act and in which it is wiser to
trust rather than indulge in a Cartesian principle of radical doubt. Efforts at
correction should be stimulated by real doubts avoiding, for
example, a foundationalist attempt to meet every paper doubt.
Failing to do justice to the tradition or community of which they are part
is one aspect of a broader Cartesian-Kantian failing. This is the tendency to
describe judgements, statements of fact and propositions in dyadic,
subject-predicate terms rather than in a triadic logic of relations (Ochs,
Peirce, Pragmatism, and the Logic of Scripture, pp.254ff.). An important
implication of this is that there is a third grade of clearness in
the meaning of a conception, beyond Cartesian clarity and
distinctness. The third grade conceives the practical effects
which the object of a conception would have (Ibid. p. 36, Ochs quoting
Peirce) (what Peirce calls the conception's interpretant) and
includes attending to when, where, how and by whom it is received. There is
here no rejection of clarity and distinctness, but a correction and
supplementing of them in a way which especially insists on the significance of
discourse, symbolic action and dialogue, as well as community, tradition and
common sense. Many key concepts cannot be clarified in the abstract: they await
further determination as they are applied or communicated in a specific
context.
This leads to the helpful idea of vagueness, which refers to a
meaning which is neither determinately specific nor indeterminately general,
but rather only discloses its meaning by way of some interpretant (Ibid. p.37).
Since vague entities define one another dialogically (Ibid. p.211),
and some concepts are irremediably vague (Ibid. p.226) (including
indubitable beliefs and many other concepts concerning metaphysics, values and
theology), there can be no undergirding foundationalism: a logic of
vagueness is at the same time a logic of dialogue
(Ibid.).
Part of that dialogue in a tradition is its constant attempt to deal with
its own problems, sufferings, contradictions, burdensome elements,
doubts and incompletenesses. Pragmatic reading responds to problems
in the plain sense of the texts of a tradition by drawing on the
resources of the tradition itself in order to correct or redefine it for
particular readers in particular situations, taking their common
sense both seriously and critically. Ochs describes how Peirce himself
did this as he corrected and redefined his earlier pragmatism in
his later pragmaticism. He also shows how the logic of dialogue can
(and, where the issues at stake are as embracing as those in philosophy and
theology, should) lead beyond the boundaries of one tradition and bring
different communities of readers into conversation.
In his final chapter Ochs promotes this by addressing various communities of
pragmatic philosophers as well as Rabbinic and Christian pragmatic interpreters
of scripture. He sees Rabbinic and Christian pragmatists agreeing on the need
for a critique of modernist philosophy using a scriptural corrective and also
on the need for a reformational reading of scripture which rereads
scriptural texts as vague symbols of rules of conduct that are defined
only in specific contexts of action within respective communities of
readers(Ibid. pp.310f). He then urges that both communities of scriptural
pragmatists need to be in dialogue with each other, and concludes with
guidelines for such a dialogue.
What follows is an attempt to see what happens when a Christian interpreter
of the Letter to the Ephesians tries to grapple with the problems and
vaguenesses of that letter before a Society of scriptural reasoners who are
mostly Christian but who also include Rabbinic interpreters, a Muslim
respondent and others.
2. The Problem
[T]he pragmatic meaning of a conception is the sum total of its
practical consequences for the long run of experience... (Ibid. p.113).
How might that maxim relate to the quotation from the Letter to the Ephesians
in my title? The whole verse is: For he is our peace, in his flesh he has
made both groups into one, and has broken down the dividing wall, that is, the
hostility between us (2.14). The reference is to Jews and Gentiles, and
in view of the long run of experience over nearly two thousand
years it must constitute a major problem for the interpretation of Ephesians
today. If pragmatic scriptural reading aims to read in response to human
suffering and with a community of readers for the sake of changing
the practical and communal conditions of suffering (Ibid. p.313), then in
view of the terrible history of Christian persecution of Jews there is a need
for correction of Christian conceptions of Jews. The constructive question is
whether there might be a valid and strong reading of Ephesians that not only
resists Christian hostility to Jews but even allows the communities today to be
of mutual blessing. How might this tradition not only correct itself but even
surpass itself with the aid of a pragmatic reading of Ephesians?
How might Ephesians have contributed to that terrible history? Its plain
sense lends itself to a realised eschatology in which Jews and Gentiles are
made one in the church. It is a short step to a supercessionism which sees no
further role in history for the Jewish people outside the church, or at best
regards Judaism as a negative shadow of Christianity. The strong emphasis on
fulfillment in Ephesians reinforces this. If one links the universal scope of
1.10 (... a plan for the fullness of time [oikonomian tou pleromatos
ton kairon], to gather up all things in him [Christ], things in heaven and
things on earth) with the ecclesial triumphalism of 1.22-3 (and he
[God] has put all things under his [Christ's] feet and has made him the head
over all things for the church, which is his body, the fullness of him who
fills all in all [to pleroma tou ta panta en pasin pleroumenou]),
then one can understand how Jews could easily be written out of history, with
all sorts of appalling consequences when Gentiles became dominant in the church
and the balance of power between Judaism and Christianity shifted in favor of
the latter. Much more could be said about this, but the main point is simple:
using the language of peace and unity (with differences unified within the
church), Ephesians focuses in the church the fulfillment of God's
oikonomia, and runs the danger (which has been fulfilled over and over
again) of the continuing Jewish community being regarded as outside or opposed
to God's oikonomia and therefore to be distanced, disrespected or even
eliminated.
3. Resources for Correction in the Plain Sense of Ephesians
Might the plain sense of Ephesians itself resist
this danger? Are there materials for the correction of this tendency of the
tradition? The most obvious resistance comes in the ethics of Ephesians. It is
an ethic of non-coercive communication, of speaking the truth in love (4.15),
of all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing with one another
in love (4.2). If such speech and action were to characterise relations
with those outside as well as inside the community then, whatever the beliefs
about Jews in relation to God's oikonomia, there would be respect,
communication and peace. The root of this resistance within Ephesians is in who
Jesus Christ is believed to be. All the uniting, fulfilling and peacemaking is
seen as being done through Christ's embodiment of love, gentleness, patience
and giving up self for others without limit (cf. 4.31, 5.1-2).
It is also worth remembering the probable context into which the letter was
written: a small, vulnerable church in a thriving, pluralist city of about a
quarter of a million people where there were a great many more Jews than
Christians. The letter shows that this church clearly needed great
encouragement and a strengthening of its identity, and what was appropriate
then and there might not be so in another situation.
Yet none of that is good enough. It might expose how much Christian
treatment of Jews has been unethical by Christian standards, and it might
contextualise the rhetoric of Ephesians so that its statements cannot simply be
turned into general guidelines from which all sorts of new conclusions can be
drawn directly in new situations; but it fails to tackle the issue of the
prominence of Jews and Gentiles in the letter, in which peace between them is
made central to the musterion of the Gospel, and it ignores the basic
theological issue of supercessionism. How might this be faced?
First, it is to be noted that Ephesians itself can be read as correcting and
redefining the Pauline Christian tradition. It is generally seen as dependent
on the Letter to the Colossians (out of 2,411 words in Ephesians, 26.5% are
paralleled in Colossians, once with 29 consecutive words repeated verbatim), so
it is especially interesting to note where the two diverge. Among the notable
divergences are the two themes of my title. Ephesians develops the Colossians
themes of the church as the body of Christ and of peace through the blood
of his [Christ's] cross into an explicit focus on peace between Jews and
Gentiles in the church. And the Colossians theme of pleroma (the
fullness of God dwelling in Christ - 1.19, 2.9) is maintained and intensified
in its cosmic scope and its relation to Christian living, and developed
explicitly in relation to the fullness of time (1.10), the church,
and love in the community (3.14-21).
There are many directions the discussion of this could takedeeper into
the comparison and contrast of Ephesians and Colossians; backwards, especially
to Paul in his Letter to the Romans; forwards to later Christian writers; and
backwards, forwards and sideways into Jewish and Hellenistic contexts. But for
present purposes it is enough to try to identify with a broad brush the
significance of what Ephesians has done. It has intensified the universality of
its conception of fulfillment (frequent use of all, all
things, everyone) at the same time as intensifying the
particularity of the community's musterion, defined as: ... that
is, the Gentiles have become fellow heirs, members of the same body, and
sharers in the promise in Christ Jesus through the Gospel (3.6). This
particularity is reinforced in Ephesians through far more use of the Septuagint
than in Colossians. It is crucial to note the sort of unity described between
Jews and Gentiles: the Gentiles are given the privilege of sharing a Jewish
heritage. This heritage is the unsurpassable horizon of the church. That is
where Ephesians leaves the matter: the conjunction of, on the one hand, a
universalizing soteriology of abundant reconciliation, peace and love, to be
completed in the fullness of time, with, on the other hand, a small
community in which the musterion of unity between Jews and Gentiles was
a reality. The two dimensions are embraced by Jesus Christ, as the one in whom
all things are gathered, and the Holy Spirit, as the pledge of our
inheritance toward redemption as God's own people, to the praise of his
glory (1.14).
After all that, the massive problem remains: what about those of God's
own people who do not acknowledge Jesus Christ in the way the author
does?
4. Pleroma in Ephesians: A Pragmatic Reading
In Ochs' terms, I have identified something burdensome in the plain
sense (Ochs, p.6.) of Ephesians. This now stimulates me to suggest what
he calls a midrashic, or pragmatic interpretation. As he says, such a reading
is to be judged by how well it resolves the given problem for a given
community of interpreters (Ibid. p.7.)in my case, the Society for
Scriptural Reasoning at the end of a century marked by the Shoah. What might be
the non-evident meaning (Ibid. p.6.) of Ephesians on this matter in
line with the leading tendencies of the letter?
In this case, the problem is not mainly in what Ephesians says explicitly.
It lies more in its pragmatic meaning in the millennia that
followedthough in fact for many Christians the problematic reading has
been read as the plain sense and has shaped their common sense.
Ochs might say that the irremediably vague concept of
pleroma was later given overprecise (errantly clear)
pragmatic definitions whose decisive supercessionism ruled out any continuing
positive role of Jews in God's oikonomia, with disastrous implications.
An appropriate response to this is to offer a better (in Ochs' terms, a more
valid and stronger) pragmatic definition of pleroma.
What might that be? Since this paper is meant to be a stimulus to discussion
rather than a full treatment of the subject, I will only sketch some of the
elements of a possible pragmatic reading. They will be in the form of questions
and notes focused as commentary on particular verses in which the noun or verb
form of pleroma appears.
4.1 Ephesians 1.9-10 [With all wisdom and
insight God] has made known to us the mystery of his will, according to his
good pleasure that he set forth in Christ, as a plan for the fullness of time,
to gather up all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth.
How is this gathering up to be envisaged? If it is done with wisdom, love
and gentleness, aiming at what seems inconceivable when we look at the
fragmentations, divisions, wounds and enmities of the world, then we have to
imagine boundaries of selves and communities as radically transformed. If the
horizon of their Jewish heritage is unsurpassable for Christians, and if, for
both Jews and Christians, practical orientation towards an utterly good
fullness of time has the status of an indubitable
belief, which is irremediably vague, then the implications of
a logic of vagueness being at the same time a logic of dialogue
(Ibid., p.226) must mean that there is a dialogical imperative here. Christians
have no privileged overview of fulfillment- - in fact the vagueness
and universal scope of fulfillment mean that it constantly calls for further
determinations from a wide range of interpretants. So the pragmatic reading of
these verses will lead into a range of respectful dialogues (not just between
Jews and Christians, but with Muslims, atheists, etc.) as well as into all
sorts of other activities that gathering up all things might
require - the arts, scholarship, the sciences, economics, politics and so on.
And part of the vagueness is allowing for transformative surprises. Response 1
4.2 Ephesians 1.22-3 And [God] has put all
things under [Christ's] feet and has made him head over all things for the
church, which is his body, the fullness of him who fills all in all.
If 1.10 makes clear that the fullness has yet to be completed, then the
nature of the eschatological community is a fascinating question. How does it
relate to present Christian and Jewish and other communities? Eugene Rogers,
following on from George Lindbeck's contention that both the church and Israel
should be regarded as types, not of Christ, but of the people of God in
fellowship with God at the end of time, (Eugene F. Rogers, Jr.,
Supplementing Barth on Jews and Gender: Identifying God by Anagogy and
the Spirit, Modern Theology Vol.14 No.1 (January 1998), p.63)
makes a convincing case for the contribution of an anagogical
interpretation of scripture, reading it in the light of the eschatological
community. His own anagogical reading (which is strikingly
pragmatic in Ochs' terms) is in line with Ephesians: the basic plot
is a Jewish one oriented towards consummation, with Gentile redemption a
sub-plot. God's faithfulness to the covenant with Israel is permanent. There
are not two stories, much less two covenants, but two ways the Spirit
excites gratitude for the blessings of Abraham in the readers of the Bible, who
in this too can become sources of mutual blessing (Rogers,
Supplementing Barth, p.64). And it is worth remembering that there
are many other Gentiles besides Christians. Response 4
4.3 Ephesians 3.18-20 I pray that you may
have the power to comprehend, with all the saints, what is the breadth and
length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that surpasses
knowledge, so that you may be filled with all the fullness of God. Now to him
who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more
than all we can ask or imagine ...
God is the most important consideration of all in relation to
pleroma. This prayer acknowledges that, it denies that Christians or
others have an overview of the meaning of pleroma; in Ochs' terms the
text is an ultimately vague sign of the God whose activities correct it
and clarify its meaning (Ochs, op. cit. p.287. Cf. the continuation of
this passage: By the logic of pragmatism, a vague sign reserves for
some other sign or experience the function of completing [its]
determination (5.505). Therefore, if God is the object of an ultimately
vague sign, then whatever defines this sign would also be vague, and only God
would complete the determination of the sign of God.) The meaning of
fullness has to take into account the infinite dynamic abundance of
a God of love, fulfilling prayers in ways we could never have imagined. The God
identified here questions many of the terms and presuppositions in which
Christian supercessionism has been expressed - concerning linearity, binary
oppositions, completeness, closure, the boundaries of communities, election and
salvation. Response 5; Response 8
4.4 Ephesians 4.13 ... until all of us come
to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to maturity,
to the measure of the full stature [eis helikias tou pleromatos] of Christ.
Ephesians Chapters 4-6 is about some of the communal,
personal and institutional practices which are involved in pragmatically
interpreting pleroma. The idea of learning Christ is used
(4.20), and that conjures up a vast, complex learning process (including much
unlearning), involving exchanges with individuals, communities and
disciplines who are part of the gathering together of 1.10, and
shaping habits accordingly. Response 5
4.5 Ephesians 5.18-20
Do not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery; but be filled
[plerousthe] with the Spirit, as you sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs
among yourselves, singing and making melody to the Lord in your hearts, giving
thanks to God the Father at all times and for everything in the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ.
Ephesians is saturated with praise and prayer, and this imperative about the
shaping of ordinary life is vital for working out practically the implications
of pleroma. The logic of praise as perfecting what is perfect, the logic
of thanks as completing what is completed, and the similar logic of blessing:
it is these, learnt and practiced daily over centuries, that need to inform
understanding of and participation in pleroma (For a reading of
Ephesians which takes these verses as its hermeneutical key see David F. Ford,
Self and Salvation: Being Transformed (Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge November 1998), Chapter 5 Communicating Gods Abundance: A
Singing Self). Response 6
But since these dynamics can, as those centuries demonstrate, also go so
terribly wrong, it is salutary to try to learn disciplines of reading which
encourage facing up to the burdens, failings, errors, sufferings, and
remediable or irremediable vaguenesses occasioned by interpretations of
scripture. One of the great strengths of Ochs' approach is that it both
encourages a tradition to find within itself the resources for its own
correction and redefinition, and also to believe that, through the
mediation of particular community members, communities of scriptural reading
may themselves enter into dialogues that strengthen each community's practices
of reading by complementing and clarifying them (Ochs, op. cit., p.314).
The attempt to fulfill this double programme is at the heart of the Society for
Scriptural Reasoning. This paper makes some tentative points (far more
concerned with the first than the second part of the programme) and I look
forward to much correction, redefinition, complementing and clarification in
Orlando.
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