Thursday, April 18, 2024

Crispin Fletcher-Louis on the Case against "Jesus" being the Name Jesus is Given to Him Upon His Super-exaltation (Philippians 2:6-11)

  

If, on the other hand, the name is “Jesus,” we have the bizarre conclusion that, according to this early tradition, the resurrected one whom Paul and his peers followed was only given that name after his death. But every other early tradition agrees that “Jesus (of Nazareth)” was his name during his human life. Moule’s interpretation also suggests the theologically problematic conclusion that the name “Jesus” has now replaced the supreme name YHWH. That may be empirically true of some church discourse today, but how likely is it that the historical Paul would have praised Christ in words that left others to draw such a conclusion? It is, in any case, hard to find any parallel for the notion that Christ was given the exalted name “Jesus” after his death and resurrection. (It is true that in Eph 1:21 there is exaltation “far above all rule and authority and power and dominion, and above every name that is named . . .” This is not far from Phil 2:9-11. But the name used there is “Christ” [in v. 20] or κυριος Ιησους Χριστος [in v. 17], not “Jesus”). (Crispin Fletcher-Louis, The Divine Heartset: Paul’s Philippians Christ Hymn, Metaphysical Affections, and Civic Virtues [Eugene, Oreg.: Pickwick Publications, 2023], 418-19)

 

The attempt to defend Moule’s view in Martin and Nash, “Subversive Hymnos,” 132 on the grounds that verse 91-b merely means “his name is exalted—that is, that his name takes on a newly acknowledged status,” founders on the fact that this is now that the text says. It does not say “wherefore, God also highly exalted his name above all names” (cf. Hem 9;5; Ps 148:13). Rather, the gift of the name corresponds to the common horrific convention (well attested in the epigraphic and literary records) of the gift of new names, titles, or epithets to praiseworthy or transformed mortals. (Ibid., 418 n. 15)

 

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