What About Paul? (1)

For we know that the Law is spiritual, but I am of flesh, sold into bondage to sin. Romans 7:14 NASB

Flesh – Yesterday we looked at some words from John that appear to be gnostic at first blush. We found that John’s Hebraic orientation must be considered in the exegesis of his statements. But now we come to Paul. My goodness, a statement like this one just reeks of gnostic flavor, doesn’t it? The “flesh” is horrible and filled with sin. It holds us prisoners. It must be eradicated. Even if God’s torah is good, it is powerless to remove me from the bonds of my bodily desires. What can be done?

We need to look carefully at Paul’s choice of terms. First, there’s sarkinos (translated here as “of flesh”). It’s really an adjective, not the noun of a prepositional phrase, so we should read it as “I am fleshly.” Of course, that’s not good English, so the translators modify it. The root is sárx. In older usage, it is the equivalent of the Hebrew bāśār, meaning the flesh part of living creatures, i.e., muscles and tissue, etc. By the time of Plato, sárx meant the whole body. Of course, Platonic thought, and later gnosticism, recognized the decay of death. This meant that sárx was the corruptible part of human beings while nous, the mind, or spirit (psyche), was incorruptible. What survived death was not a resurrected body but rather an eternal mind, reunited with the divine. Gnosticism and some Greek philosophies concluded that “sárx, as the source of uncontrolled sensuality and immoderate gluttony, supposedly makes the freedom of the soul impossible.”[1]

But Paul is not a Greek philosopher. He is a Jewish rabbi and his concepts flow from rabbinic thought. Therefore, we should notice how the word sárx is used in the LXX.

The LXX does not connect sárx with sensuality, relates it to circumcision, never uses it for the flesh of sacrifice, and distinguishes the spheres of spirit and flesh (Num. 16:22), although not equating this cosmic dualism with the ethical dualism of Creator and creature, as tends to be the case at times in Judaism.[2]

Furthermore, we find that the Qumran community expresses a Jewish view of the first century.

Flesh is sometimes neutral, but it also denotes human creatureliness. This is bound up with sinfulness and ignorance, but it does not itself stand in contrast to spirit; instead it is the battleground of conflict between the spirit of evil and the Holy Spirit. Hence flesh does not belong in principle to the ungodly sphere, nor is it the prison of the soul.[3]

Schweizer provides a very useful summary of the differences between Greek and Hebrew thinking. Notice that Hebrew does not embrace the ontological dualism of the Greeks even though it recognizes a theological distinction.

  1. In Greek thought the concern is the anthropological one of the relation between the different component parts of humanity. Humanity is understood in terms of its nature, i.e., the parts and their conflict, controlling center, distinction, and interrelationship.
  2. In the OT the concern is the theological one of the relation of humanity to God. Humanity is understood in terms of its creatureliness, its response to God. The only dualism is that of Creator and creature or obedience and disobedience.
  3. In Hellenism humanity belongs to the earthly sphere by destiny rather than by decision, is tied to it during earthly life, and seeks to rise above it through ecstasy and secret formulas.[4]

Where does Paul fit? Of course, his use of sárx is connected to the Hebraic/rabbinic view. He does see a gap between God and the flesh, but it is not a gap that came about because of creation. It is a gap that occurred because men sin. Men are a part of God’s creation, but they are not condemned because they are embodied. They are condemned because of the actions they take. The body is not a prison of inevitable corruption. It is the arena of the battle, a battle which can be won for the sake of God. In opposition to Greek thought, “subjection to sárx is not fate but guilt.”[5] So when Paul writes that we are sarx, sold under sin, he is not saying that sin is the inevitable consequence of having a body. He is saying that you and I made choices and those choices created patterns and those patterns created habits and attitudes, and now, in that process, we have become slaves to our own desires. We didn’t have to be, but this is what happened. Now, with God’s grace and the power of the Spirit, things can change.

Tomorrow we’ll look at pipráskō, Paul choice of verb for the phrase “sold under sin.” Something very Hebraic is happening here too.

Topical Index: sárx, flesh, bāśār, sin, body, corruption, Romans 7:14

[1] E. Schweizer, sarx, in Kittel, G., Friedrich, G., & Bromiley, G. W. (1985). Theological Dictionary of the New Testament (1001). Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans, Vol. VII, pp. 98-105.

[2] Ibid.

[3] R. Meyer, op. cit.

[4] E. Schweizer, sarx, TDNT.

[5] Ibid.

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Laurita Hayes

C.S. Lewis writes that the worst sins are all spiritual: he names pride as being the worst of the worst. Now, where exactly in flesh and bone can you dissect pride? Answer; pride is experienced by the entire nephesh, of course. I don’t think a Hebrew would ever try to separate sin into categories based upon the distinctions of spirit, mind and body. Yeshua sure didn’t. For example, He saw no distinction between murder in the thought life and murder in the act of the body. Neither should we.

The fallen body, mind and spirit (nephesh all) of man IS referred to as “flesh”, for the entire nephesh is described in Is. 1:5,6 “the whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint. From the sole of the foot even unto the head there is no soundness in it; but wounds, and bruises, and putrifying sores”. This is a description of a decaying, dying creature IN ITS ENTIRETY.

On the other hand, I think when Paul talks about “spirit” he is referring to our obedience to the minute-by-minute direction of the Holy Spirit, which intersects with our nephesh via our spirit. It may be initiated through the spirit world, but obedience is not limited to that spiritual intersection: we are called to obedience in our entire nephesh; our spirits are just the command center for the nephesh. We may make the choice to obey in our spirits, but that obedience instantly translates into the action of the mind and body. If it does not, however, then we are just playing games on the devil’s playground, and the spiritual transaction did not actually occur at all. James recognizes this when he says that faith will always translate into works (mental and physical compliance).

I think “flesh” is in the same category as “world”. In fact, one is the description of the inner corrupted biome as the other is the description of the outer manifestation of it; the collective. “The world and the flesh” may both under the dominion of the devil, but we are called to redemption: not only our spirits but also our flesh, as we are also called to witness the gospel to that lost world and therefore effectuate its redemption – spirit, mind and body – too. The battle is about the redemption of both the world and the flesh. Further, our entire nephesh is called to salvation, and that salvation starts today. Health (which is peace, or, homeostasis) in spirit, mind and body (as a by-product of our obedience) is a complete nephesh experience, too.

I think it is a mistake of the first magnitude that the churches still are attempting to follow the old, dualistic model of spiritual salvation by-and-by while leaving the body (along with obedience) in the dust. If you are not obedient, you are not free – not just spiritually free, but mentally and physically, too.

Salvation is a combo package: it may start with justification (which is independent of any work on our part) but it ends with sanctification, which is where we progressively learn to cooperate with heaven by obedience. Obedience to what? A platonic, ‘spiritual’ set of laws? Hardly. We are called to obedience to ALL the laws enacted by the Creator for His creation. These would be laws against pride, but would also include laws that govern our thought life as well as our physical one. In fact, if the nephesh is collectively (and equally) under law, then the physical laws of creation are equally valid when it comes to physical health, are they not? If we think that we should obey the Law that tells us not to lie, but can break with impunity the laws that govern bodily health, our mind and spirit will end up in the ditch along with our body, won’t they?

I totally agree with Skip about the fact that Paul, when he contrasts flesh with spirit, is talking about the difference between “obedience and disobedience”, but wouldn’t that obedience encompass all law; not just what we call “moral” law? Let’s put it this way: it is hard to attract the world’s attention when we are as sick as the world, and it is hard to do good when we feel awful, too. Law is law: the entire nephesh would agree.

Olga

Amen, Laurita…as the man thinketh – so is he.

Mark Parry

Very interesting comments by my sister Laurita. The underlineing principles of authority or rulership established in “the dominion mandate” to Adam is segnificant. It is my assertion that the kingdom of YHVH Is simultainiously coexisting while mutually exclusive of the kingdom of this present world system. This is not a comment on the organic structures, the natural vehicle of the spirit or soul of man. We are flesh and blood. The nephesh includes spirit and animal. It is the comand and controll center that is in question and to what Spirit it is aligned. Dylan sings propheticly on his album “Love and theft” I will baptize you with fire (Rauch ) so you can sin no more, I’ll establish my rule through civil war. ” Who’s driving our bus is the question. Knowing the answer will determine its destination. And I suppose knowing what bus to get on will as well! It all goes back to the garden and what we chose to stick in our mouth…

Rich Pease

VISION
Paul is cautioning us. What are you looking at? False power waits
to beguile us.
The cares of this world. The deceitfulness of riches. Desires for stuff.
Even a tiny paper cut can ruin your day. So keep your eyes open.
Sin is crouching at your door.
Among the believers in Corinth, Paul, walking in the light, said:
“So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. For what
is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.”
Paul is right. Stay in the light. It does wonders for your vision.