Saturday, April 27, 2024

Carolyn Osiek on the "Clement" in the Shepherd of Hermas and the Ecclesiology of Rome

  

Vision 2.4 of the Shepherd of Hermas reads:

 

. . . So you will write two little books and send one to CLement and one to Grapte. Clement will send his to the other cities, for he is charged with this responsibility. Grapte will admonish the widows and orphans. But you will read it in this city with the presbyters who preside in the church."

 

Commenting on this passage, Carolyn Osiek noted that:

 

The debate has raged among scholars about this Clement: is he or is he not Clement of Rome, author of 1 Clement? Even if the two figures are identical, that does nothing to establish a monarchical episcopate at Rome at this early date; the end of v. 3 is very clear about church government. Even if there were a single bishop in Rome at this time-though all evidence is to the contrary-sending someone else's letter to other churches would hardly be his task. The reference is more likely to the church secretary, perhaps a deacon. The figure of Clement was powerful enough in the early tradition to establish a long literary connection: not only 1 Clement, but 2 Clement, the Clementine Romances, and the Recognitions. Though the writing of 1 Clement is generally dated to the 90s of the first century, there is nothing against an early second-century date, so that discrepancy of dating is not a problem. Hermas' original community obviously knows who this person is supposed to be. If Clement of Rome is alive and functioning as a kind of community secretary, this remark must refer to him. (Carolyn Osiek, The Shepherd of Hermas [Hermeneia—A Critical and Historical Commentary on the Bible; Minneapolis, Minn.: Fortress Press, 1999], 59)