Wednesday, May 8, 2024

L. Ann Jervis on Paul Not Believing God Exists Outside of Time

  

The Exalted Christ, Like God, Is a Temporal Being

 

Paul describes the exalted Christ living with God. The apostle says that Christ is at God’s right hand (Rom. 8:34; also Col. 3:1), that God has highly exalted Christ (Phil. 2:9), and that Christ is currently in heaven (Phil. 3:20; 1 Thess. 1:10). Since the ascended Christ lives with God, presumably Paul conceived of Christ living God’s temporality.

 

Though Paul describes God as having eternal power (Rom. 1:20), nowhere does the apostle say that Christ lives in, or is, eternity. Unlike Isaiah, Paul does not say that God “inhabits eternity” (Isa. 57:15). Nor does Paul state, as does Augustine, “Domine, cum tua sit aeternitas” You, God, are, eternity). It is important to recognize what Paul does not say in order to guard against simply assuming that he shared the classical Christian understanding of God and eternity; that understanding being that God lives eternity, which is non-time, non-change—a now containing all moments at once. Augustine, for instance, defined eternity as a “never-ending present.” For the great theologian, to live eternity means that all past time and all future time is at once. This is, in effect, non-time. Ephraim Rader rightly describes patristic exegesis as understanding God’s reality to be “non-temporal.”

 

Though Paul often expresses his desire for God to be blessed for ever and ever, exhibiting his conviction about God’s endless duration, the nature of God’s duration is not eternal timelessness and non-change. Rather, Paul’s letters indicate that he understood the eternal God to live a temporal existence in which there is past, present, and future, though for God these tenses are nonsequential. God knows all events or moments, whether they are past or future. Paul’s statement that God passed over formerly committed sins (Rom. 3:25) indicates that such an understanding of God’s temporality: though the sins are in the past, God can pass over them. Likewise, Paul’s statement in Romans 1:2 that God announced the gospel in advance to his prophets in the holy writings indicates that the apostle did not conceive of God living tenses sequentially as do humans.

 

Paul’s notion of God’s capacity to know all time at once does not, however, entail that Paul understood God to live in a static existence—at least in relation to God’s creation. (L. Ann Jervis, Paul and Time: Life in the Temporality of Christ [Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Academic, 2023], 64-66; note that man is also said to inhabit eternity in Psa 37:29)

 

God’s Tenses

 

Paul speaks in tenses about God’s activity. For instance, Paul writes that God condemned (κατεκρινεν) sin in the flesh through the sending of God’s Son (Rom. 8:3). Paul writes that God sent (εξαποστειλεν) God’s Son (Gal. 4:4). God raised Christ (ηγειρεν; 1 Cor. 15:15). These past tenses signal divinely initiated events form the perspective of human time, yet I propose that Paul also thinks they are a true representation of God’s history with creation (though, again, tenses in God’s life are not confining).

 

That Paul thinks that God has a history with creation may be evident in his curious mention of “the fullness of time” (Gal. 4:4), as if God were watching the χρονος for the right moment to send God’s Son. The phrase conveys something other than that God and time are separate, with God watching time from a detached atemporality. The fullness of time allows for a cosmic shift for humanity form slavery to το στοιχεια του κοσμου (“the elemental spirits of the world”) to the possibility of adoption as God’s children (4:3-5), a shift comparable of inheriting (4:1-2). God is the generator of this cosmic shift. God is also intimately connected with it. God sends God’s own spirit into the hearts of God’s adopted, crying “Abba! Father!” (4:6)

 

In the present, God tests hearts and is a witness to Paul’s exemplary behavior (1 Thess. 2:4, 10). In the future, God will bring to completion the good work that God began (Phil. 1:6). God’s evident activity in human time indicates a divine eventful temporality, an active temporality that produces change—at least between God and God’s creation. Being God, however, God lives eventful, changeful temporality without the blinkers and boundaries of tenses as humanity experiences tenses. Paul understands God to live tenses, although not in the way that humans do, for God does not know incompleteness, as tenses in chronological time imply. Paul does not conceive of God’s temporality as in any way limited by its tenses. For God, the past, present, and future are one, but nevertheless they are still pats, present, and future rather than a singular Now. God’s tenses do not function chronologically. God’s past, present, and future are not sequential or discrete. The past and future are always in the present for God. It is as if God looks at God’s past, present, and future from a vantage point that allows God to see all of God’s time (in addition to human time) at once. This perspective does not, however, collapse God’s tenses into a tenseless Now. The fact that Paul believes that the living God acts to change the circumstances between God and God’s creation indicates such. (Ibid., 69-70)

 

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