Did Christ have a Physical Body?

I haven’t read the book, The Empty Tomb: Jesus beyond the Grave, ed. Robert Price and Jeffery Jay Lowder yet, but I have ordered it. I’m not exactly sure where this book is headed, but it seems to me that Robert Price would definitely believe that the tomb was indeed empty on that first Easter morning. The reason is that he believes that Jesus never existed. There’s a new breed of writers who are actually taking this idea seriously and are working out all sorts of explanations for how the rise of Christianity took shape. One of the objectives, it seems, is to deny that Paul ever spoke of Christ as having lived on earth. To Paul (according to this view), Jesus Christ was a mythical figure who roamed the heavens, not a real time-space man who suffered on a Roman cross, bled real blood, and rose from the grave bodily.
This seems to be the view that one of the chapters especially takes. Again, I haven’t seen the book yet, but I am generally acquainted with the work and viewpoint of several of these authors, Richard Carrier among them. I was alerted to Carrier’s translations of various passages in his chapter, “The Spiritual Body of Christ.â€
After calling one of the essays in the book ‘mean-spirited,’ the Publishers Weekly review added, “However, several essays make excellent points about holes in Christian apologists’ arguments; Richard Carrier’s discussion of the ‘spiritual body of Christ,’ for instance, challenges Christians’ tendency to imagine a monolithic worldview among first-century Jews.†This lone chapter was singled out for the highest praise by PW. Again, since I haven’t read the book yet, I cannot comment on the entirety of the chapter. But I can comment on one of the foundational pieces in it: whether Paul thought in terms of a spiritual body or a physical body when he considered the resurrection of Christ.
One key passage on this is Romans 8.11-13. This is Carrier’s translation:
“So if the spirit of the raiser of Jesus from the dead dwells in you, the raiser of Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies, through the Spirit dwelling in you. And so, therefore, brothers, we owe nothing to the flesh, we ought not live in the flesh, for if we live in the flesh, we are destined to die, but if we kill the deeds of the body we will live.†(p. 149)
Critique: On the one hand, this is an awkward translation, which normally means that the translator is a neophyte and is uncomfortable in working in Greek. On the other hand, it is a bit too free, indicating that the author is either quite comfortable working in Greek or has an agenda (this second would be the case if the translation is not true to the meaning of the original). The translation is reminiscent of the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ New World Translation in its method, a translation I would regard as the worst committee-produced English translation ever foisted on the public. In addition, there are some specific critiques I would add, most notably Carrier’s poor understanding of Greek syntax.
Now for some specifics: ‘the raiser’ (two times) is both overly literal and yet does not accurately reflect the Greek. Since the participle each time is aorist, the best translation would be ‘the one who raised,’ indicating that this was an event in the historical past. One wonders if Carrier is trying to do a sleight of hand, but suggesting that the resurrection of Jesus is not in the past. Then, either sloppiness in viewing antecedents or else an intentional deception is seen. Carrier has “through the Spirit dwelling in you†in v. 12. Earlier ‘spirit’ was not capitalized. This time it is. If this is intentional, it seems meant to distinguish the two instances in vv. 11 and 12. But this neglects the autou, wedged between tou enoikountos and pneumatos. The Greek means either “through his Spirit†or “through the same Spirit.†This is something, in fact, that we just went over in first-year Greek last week! By dropping either ‘his’ or ‘same,’ and by rendering the first ‘spirit’ in lower case and the second capitalized, the impression one gets is that two different s/Spirits are in view. Whether intentional or not, this is simply a poor, even sloppy translation by one who does not seem to be well acquainted with the language. There are other items we could quibble with in v. 12 (e.g., the use of exclusivist language for adelphoi when it has been amply demonstrated that adelphoi was often used of both genders in Koine Greek; the paraphrase of what should be translated as “we are obligated not to the flesh, to live according to the flesh†into the clumsy expansion, “we owe nothing to the flesh, we ought not live in the flesh†in which the single point is now divided into two, and the preposition ‘according to’ is translated as ‘in’). Perhaps worst of all is v. 13: not only does the translator switch the person from second to first (from ‘you’ to ‘we’) with no warrant that I can discern, not only does he continue to illegitimately or at least loosely translate kata as in, but he also leaves out ‘by the Spirit’—the only means by which one can kill the deeds of the body!
If this translation showed up in an exegetical paper for one of my Romans classes, I doubt that I would give it a passing grade. I would note that the translator was not paying attention to the details of the text and thus was ending up with a view of the passage that was far afield from what Paul intended. Whether Carrier did this intentionally or unintentionally, either way his treatment of the text is illegitimate. If unintentional, then his competence in Koine Greek needs to be called into question. If intentional, then his integrity as a scholar needs to be called into question. I can almost understand this sort of thing in a rushed-off email to someone when a translator is distracted by Monday night football while he’s glancing at the text in semi-conscious awareness of the Greek. But for it to appear as a published translation—and one that no doubt has an agenda—seems inexcusable. Now if this is the best chapter in the book (as Publishers Weekly almost hints at), I have to wonder how good the rest of the tome is.
Nevertheless, I am sure I am missing something. I want to give the benefit of the doubt to Carrier and see if he has defended himself in lexical or grammatical explanation, footnotes, or text-critical decisions that would alter the text. Has anyone read the book yet? How does Carrier defend this translation?
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- Did Christ have a Physical Body?
- Pauline Scatology
- Why Did Scribes Make Mistakes when Copying Scripture? Part 1
- The Significance of Scribal Corruptions to the New Testament
- In What Sense Are Jesus and the Father One? Part III: One in Purpose? Calvin’s View

Aaron Smith on 02 Oct 2007 at 12:23 am #
I do wonder how this type of thinking would deal with 1 John 1.1. “… what we have heard, seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands concerning the word of life…”
Chad Winters on 02 Oct 2007 at 4:35 am #
or 1Cor 15:
12But if it is preached that Christ has been raised from the dead, how can some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? 13If there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised. 14And if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith.
It is quite clear throughout the NT that Paul believed Christ was a real person who was bodily ressurected
Joanie D on 02 Oct 2007 at 5:01 am #
That’s amazing, Dan, that this author would believe that Jesus did not exist in the flesh! I think many atheists even believe Jesus lived physically on earth!
As always, I appreciate your study and your time sharing that study with us all.
Joanie D.
ChadS on 02 Oct 2007 at 6:42 am #
Dan,
I can understand your unwillingness to prematurely pass judgment on a book you have not read yet, but as a scholar I imagine you have a good sense of where an argument is heading or any potential methodological flaws a book may possess just by reading a few short passages.
The grammatical problems you pointed out in the Romans passage, if your own translation is accurate, raises several problems the author would have to explain away. I’m sure you are also aware of any grammatical arguments the author would make in defending his position — ones I’m sure you have considered in your own work and perhaps found wanting.
I doubt offering a new translation of the Bible is what the authors of these essays have in mind though. Their agenda goes far beyond arguing over the translation of a few words in the aorist tense. If their intention is to show that Jesus never physically lived then if the Scriptures are wrong on that count then what else are they wrong on? I’m speculating now but if they believe their research is accurate then the least they’ll be offering is a reinterpretation of Christianity to free it of its man-made shackles and get back to a purer, more spiritual Christianity or they’ll call for the complete eradication of Christianity as we know it or they’ll say Christianity is merely one equally valid choice among dozens.
Dan mentions the JWs in his post. They’re a good example of what I’m talking about above. They weren’t happy with just a new translation of the Bible. They ended up giving the world an essentially new version of Christianity that is partially unrecognizable as Christianity. I doubt the essays in this book are meant to be purely academic and without ramifications.
ChadS
Nick N. on 02 Oct 2007 at 9:24 am #
Darrell Bock has also been blogging on related issues. He’s addressing Earl Doherty’s The Jesus Puzzle. Check it out. I posted a couple of comments on the first point.
Dr. Wallace,
I understand your wanting to give Carrier the benefit of the doubt but from all I have heard and read from him in the past, I wouldn’t. His agenda is clear and he is certainly in the minority even amogst skeptics with the views that he holds about Jesus’ non-existence. His methodology is a prime example of question begging in that he’s assumed the truth of his conclusion and will in turn skew all evidence to the contrary to somehow fit his views.
For all interested,
Gary Habermas and Mike Licona ‘debated’ Richard Carrier and Reggie Finnely on The Infidel Guy radio show. Another ‘debate’ is also available between Dr. Habermas and Robert Price. Listen Here.
JohnT3 on 02 Oct 2007 at 9:35 am #
If Jesus did not exist or have a real body then what did Josephus write about in his history?
Regardless of whether you believe he (Josephus) believed Jesus was the Messaiah then what did he write about?
Or even Thomas, he touched the body of Jesus after his resurection, why would he go to his death for something that was unreal?
Same could be said of all the Apostles. Even John who lived the longest why put up with all the torment and trouble for something you know is not real?
Doesn’t make sense. Why doesn’t it make sense because what they claim (those who claim Christ did not exist or have a phsyical body) is not true. It is just another painted version of a lie that Satan has been hooking people with for centuries.
jwjoslin on 02 Oct 2007 at 6:04 pm #
Nick N:The people behind this book are staunch atheists who write the book as a polemic against the resurrection. They’re not pseudo-Christians like Spong trying to “save Christianity” or new-agey types. They’re from the biggest atheist site on the internet.
Not all of them believe Jesus never existed (Even Carrier and Price waffle on the issue of his existence some), and questioning his existence is not the main point of the book - it’s to attack the resurrection.
If it sounds like I’m defending the book, I’m not. I haven’t read it and I am a Christian. There just seemed to be a couple of misconceptions of what the book was about in some of the comments.
Nick N. on 02 Oct 2007 at 8:13 pm #
jwjoslin,
Thanks. I’m actually somewhat familiar with Carrier through his writings on the Secular Web and his various radio interviews with the Infidel Guy and the Rational Response Squad. From all that I have heard he does deny that Jesus ever existed but at times for the sake of argument he’ll grant that Jesus was in fact a historical person and then proceed to argue that the story of the resurrection is common in the ancient world and the Christian version is nothing more than a rehash of older variations on the same theme.
But one of the arguments against the historical, physical, bodily resurrection of Christ is to maintain that Paul and other early Christians never believed in the ‘historical Jesus’ but rather believed in some ‘cosmic Christ’. I haven’t read the book either but from Dr. Wallace’s post I can see that this is Carrier’s position. This is very similar to something that Earl Doherty argues in The Jesus Puzzle to which Darrell L. Bock has been responding to as of late on his blog.
But I think the main point of this post was to show that from what Dan has read so far, he feels that Carrier is being very careless with the text (to which I would agree).
Joseph Wallack on 02 Oct 2007 at 8:17 pm #
“One wonders if Carrier is trying to do a sleight of hand, but suggesting that the resurrection of Jesus is not in the past.”
Mr. Wallace, is this what you meant to write?
Joseph
Jason on 02 Oct 2007 at 9:31 pm #
He rather falls afoul of Mike Licona’s “minimum facts” argument.
Applying the same criteria as we do to the records of any other historical person we can say of Jesus that he lived in Israel, in the Galilean area, that he was regarded as a teacher and miracle worker, that he was crucified by the Romans and his followers believed he was raised from the dead.
His willingness to dispute the basic historical data suggests that Carrier may never receive his PhD. Healthy scepticism is one thing, pure bloody mindedness is something else entirely.
Dan Wallace on 03 Oct 2007 at 12:45 am #
Thanks for the good input, folks. Briefly, I’d like to address one or two things.
First, I do want to give those who oppose my views—including outright heretics—the benefit of the doubt. If I don’t, I will be sloppy in my handling of the ancient texts. A case in point is when I did not look carefully at the apparatus of the International Greek New Testament project’s work on Luke 1.34, when I commented on Robert Price’s handling of the text. Because I was not giving him the benefit of the doubt, I ended up impugning his character. In this case, I was wrong, terribly wrong. He had the facts right, and I did not. So, I wrote to Robert Price and apologized to him. I said that I would post an apology and correction on-line (it’s on bible.org) and that the wording in the next printing would delete those inaccurate statements I made about his views. The fourth printing of Reinventing Jesus is now out and it does not say what it said before; we were able to rewrite a couple of pages with just a couple of words’ room left! Dr. Price thanked me and even called me a ‘Christian and a scholar.’
As for Carrier, I know his overall views well, but my point was that I didn’t want to be prejudicial in handling the evidence that he brings to the table, largely because I had not seen the evidence yet (just his translations). We must recognize that we can learn from those who are far outside the realm of orthodoxy, Richard Carrier included. I now have the book and plan to do some blogging about in the coming weeks. I will examine the arguments and those that are found wanting will be mentioned as such. Those that are decent arguments will be so mentioned. After all, the Christian belief in the resurrection does not rest on solid, indisputable fact. There are indeed strong probabilities that it rests on, and some indisputable facts. But it is not an iron-clad case that could be put forth in a court of law. We learn what our weakest arguments are from our enemies; hence, it’s important to read what they have to say.
I believe that this is the only right position to take when we are dealing with those who are opposed to the Christian message. If we paint them with a black brush before we hear what they have to say, it looks as though we are afraid of something—perhaps of some truth they have discovered that ruins our belief system. The one thing I have tried to do in my ministry is to allow students to raise all the kinds of questions that they want to. We should never fear pursuing truth. And when I find egregious errors of logic or evidence, I will point them out. From Carrier’s translation of Romans 8.11-13, I have seen enough to suggest that he is pushing his agenda but doing so at the cost of sound exegesis. But since I haven’t read his footnotes that defend his translation, I can’t say that for sure.
I was actually hoping that someone had read the book and could comment on his defense of that translation. But too many responses to this blog have been ad hominem. That’s not the way to treat people, folks. Let’s engage in the dialogue and do so with a civil tongue.
Finally, some of you brought up a few arguments about historicity that, in your mind, proved that these guys were looneys. Not so fast. One mentioned the Comma Flavianum (the famous passage in Josephus which mentions Jesus of Nazareth). That passage has been disputed for a long time as to its authenticity. Most scholars today feel that there are definitely Christian accretions that crept into the text (as I do), but that the core was stable. Josephus really did acknowledge that Jesus existed. But some more radical scholars want to excise the whole thing.
Others point to 1 John 1.1 or 1 Cor 15 as proof that Jesus existed and that the resurrection must be true. They don’t realize that the argument from 1 John is easily defeated by skeptics: John didn’t write it; it came later and was meant to promote the myth of a historical Jesus.
But 1 Cor 15 is much harder for them to deal with. This is because it’s demonstrably early (c. AD 53), in an undisputed letter by Paul, and is very clear about Jesus’ resurrection. If this passage can hold its own, then the idea that Jesus never existed is dashed to the ground. So, one way to solve the problem for skeptics is to say that this passage was an early interpolation that was added to 1 Corinthians. I know a little about textual criticism and can critique that view readily: all theories of textual fragmentation, added interpolations, and the like must be tested against hard evidence. And the hard evidence is that we don’t have a shred of evidence that 1 Cor 15 ever existed apart from in its proper place in this letter. The manuscripts are solid on this front. Once a scholar starts to pick and choose what goes into the text and what does not—all based on conjecture rather than evidence—his agenda is showing. It’s question begging to the max, and hardly worthy of genuine historical investigation. Or, as Kurt Aland, the world-renowned textual critic, said: “All theories of composition and interpolations fall shipwreck on the rocks of textual criticism.” In other words, an ounce of real evidence is worth a pound of presumption. I haven’t yet read what this new bread of atheists argues about that, but it should be interesting.
Jason on 03 Oct 2007 at 1:34 am #
You’re that Dan Wallace? I have Reinventing Jesus mine is the 2006 copy. A very interesting book. Thanks for writing it.
C Michael Patton on 03 Oct 2007 at 2:03 am #
Kudos to Chad
Thanks Dan for the reminder to continually deal with the issues, doing our best to set aside our emotions—even . . . no, especially with something like this. This response of yours needs to be a separate blog!
jwjoslin on 03 Oct 2007 at 8:22 am #
“And the hard evidence is that we don’t have a shred of evidence that 1 Cor 15 ever existed apart from in its proper place in this letter.”
Am I misunderstanding you, or are you saying that you don’t think it’s a very early church creed like many scholars do?
Monica on 03 Oct 2007 at 8:41 am #
Dan,
Thank you for your humble approach to this discussion! It is so refreshing to see your knowledge clearly tempered with love. I also appreciate your handling of the Greek text. Your Greek Grammar has helped me immensely!
Justin on 03 Oct 2007 at 10:50 am #
What if some ‘apostle’ somewhere decides to write a Book of Trinity which takes Old testament and New testament scripture plus some points of his own and explains the Trinity further. Say he makes explicit claims stating God is a triune being and also Jesus is God. Period.
Also assume that all the of the claims align with scripture, and the ‘apostle’ insists that God told him to add this to our current canon. Also, the ‘apostle’ becomes a martyr for his faith in some remote place preaching the gospel.
Michael, are you suggesting that we should add a book like that to the canon in those circumstances?
Jason on 03 Oct 2007 at 4:53 pm #
jw, I’m thinking he means that the passage was not added to the text, that it was always found where it is.
matt on 03 Oct 2007 at 6:24 pm #
So does Carrier ultimately propose that Paul adapted his myth from a “hybrid” form of Judaism, hence the polemic against a monolithic Judaism in the early first-century? It would take some pretty interesting gymnastics to get gnostic accretions into Judaism as early as the time Romans was penned, let alone to the extent in which Paul could adapt a theology as clear as the one Carrier ultimately proposes. Even if you assume Paul came into extensive contact with the Qumran community, you have to reckon with the degree to which Qumran was influenced by gnostic myths - and such proposals are tentative at best.
If someone has read the work, to what degree does Carrier interact with the Greco-Roman mystery cults?
ChadS on 04 Oct 2007 at 7:02 am #
Thank you Michael
Richard Carrier on 11 Oct 2007 at 8:35 pm #
Greetings! You seem to be going in a very weird direction here. I nowhere argue in ET that Jesus didn’t exist, and in fact I assume his historicity there–as I believe all scholars should at this time, even if they have suspicions to the contrary, or when they argue to the contrary, it should be treated as a hypothesis under test and not a confirmed conclusion. Neither of these concerns were relevant for ET, which only pertained to the resurrection claim.
You seem to be assuming my translation of Rom. 8:11-13 has something to do with ahistoricity or was tweaked to help ahistoricists somehow (I never imagined any such thing). As you will eventually see when you read the book, I translated it in a deliberately awkward way to put into relief the role of the kai in 8:11, and then to articulate the context of 8:11 as speaking of the present-day church, all to a purpose completely different than you assume. But due to all these possible ways to “abuse”my translation, as you point out, I do see this now as among the worst translations I effected in that chapter, though only through my carelessness about details that didn’t pertain to the point I was making, and potential abuses I never imagined. I would correct it if a new edition were published (though I don’t expect one to be).
But in case you were wondering what the hell:
(1) Participles emphasize aspect over tense, thus aorist participles do not have to be rendered in the past tense when the context is otherwise clear. When I wrote “raiser” I was using it in the event-aspect, not intending to emphasize any tense relation (since I take it as obvious the event occurred in the past, e.g. “if the attitude of the electors of President Bush persists, then we will continue to have bad administrations” would convey the same meaning, emphasizing the event rather than the tense, although obviously Bush was only elected in the past and it would be silly to think otherwise). There is no way to render a past participle in English here without using a subordinate clause, which would have obscured the very point I was trying to make (which is not any point you seem concerned with, as you will see when you finally read the chapter), hence I chose the simplest structure I could (and I would not change this).
(2) In my argument from this passage I make no use of the word “spirit” at all, which is why I missed the fact that I had not consistently capitalized the word here. That is simply an error of style, which escaped my notice because the distinction was irrelevant to anything I was saying at the time. I certainly do not imagine any distinction being made. This is an error I do occasionally make elsewhere. Since I attach no real meaning to whether such words are capitalized (like Gospel, God, Lord, etc.), yet I have been influenced by both styles in my reading, my brain flips a coin from time to time. In much the same way I often inconsistently switch between British and American spelling. Though the editors I think normalized my chapters in ET on that score, I don’t think they were looking for inconsistencies of capitalization, and though I engaged a great number of proof runs myself, it didn’t occur to me to look for this sort of thing either. It is simply ironic that this harmless fallibility converged with others here to produce a perfect storm.
(3) As you note, it is unclear whether the autou is a possessive or an intensive, so since it made no difference to the point I was to make, I simply rendered it “the” (which could refer to either and thus retains the ambiguity, though since I did not imagine this being taken the way you point out, I can now see the danger of that choice, especially when conjoined with the completely unrelated accident of capitalization–I would certainly change both if a corrected edition were ever produced, preferring “this” to “the,” though I wish we did not live in a world where we had to be so precise simply to avoid someone misusing our words).
(4) I reject the PC contention that the general masculine excludes women in English. If the masculine can include women in Greek (as it could), then so it can in English, and in fact long has. The relatively recent claim to the contrary is a silly hyper-feminist campaign against common sense (no offense intended to the many more reasonable feminists out there). Thus, I did not intend any gender exclusion when rendering the Greek literally. I’ve gotten stodgier about this as I get older, I suppose. I have similar attitudes now against the CE/BCE trend (which I perceive as even sillier). Likewise, I find “we are obligated not to the flesh” to be clumsier than what I chose to convey the same meaning (and except when I needed to be awkward, clarity for the reader was my aim here), so evidently we have different ideas of what sounds nice.
(5) The point of verse 13 certainly did not exclude Paul, and since I saw no need to switch subjects, I kept the first person plural for clarity (since logically Paul’s saying “we x, because you y” is, strictly speaking, a non sequitur, and not a distinction Paul intends to make, and though he clearly intends the philosophical ‘you’, I felt this would not be obvious to someone who read this passage out of context). I make nothing of the matter, except that Paul is talking about the current members of the Christian church here–which, again, surely included him. Since I did not want to give the impression that Paul didn’t mean him, too, and since nothing I argue turns on the person of Paul’s verbs, I took the liberty to avoid distracting the reader from the only relevant points I was making. I did not perceive any harm in this, as the meaning still seems to be entirely the same to me, though now that you have brought my attention to the obscure ways such a rendering can be doctrinally abused, I would change it simply to head off abuses, though it annoys me again that such concerns pull the straightjacket tighter and thus limit our freedom to translate meaning rather than droll literalism.
(6) Because in English “according to” and “after” (in the metaphorical senses intended by kata here) are now in modern dialect archaic or obscure in their meaning, I try to avoid them. Hence I translated ‘kata’ as I believe it was intended (as Paul equated attachment to the flesh with residence in the flesh, e.g. 2 Cor. 5). Though I can see how someone might want to argue that Paul thought we could still live in a body of flesh without living according to the flesh, obviously his instruction here is to do just that, so I never imagined anyone thinking I was intending to deny it. If I had made any issue of the preposition, then I would have discussed its ambiguities in Greek. But in this case there was no need for such a digression, as nothing I say turns on that matter here. I wouldn’t change my translation here, either, as I think the meaning is adequately clear from the given context.
(7) My omission of “by the spirit” is a typo. Looking back I see it in earlier drafts but at some point it became accidentally deleted. As it had no relevance to the point I was making, I overlooked its disappearance. I had to laugh when I discovered this, as no other other verse had so many converging (yet individually trivial) errors and unintentionally ’significant’ decisions as to make this verse look altogether rather sad! In the words of Mister Darcy, “By this reckoning my faults are grave indeed!” I hope you don’t judge the rest of the chapter by this one example–and I apologize if this convergence of events has misled anyone.
Dan Wallace on 14 Oct 2007 at 2:32 am #
Dear Richard,
Thanks so much for writing! I’m delighted to hear from you, especially so that you can set the record straight. I must apologize at the outset: I THOUGHT I knew your views better than I did. When you said that you assumed that there really was a historical Jesus, I was taken aback. MY assumption was that you did not start with that assumption because (a) you were prominently featured in Brian Flemming’s “The God Who Wasn’t There,†along with Alan Dundes and Robert Price. You three were the Greek, literary, and historical-theological scholars, respectively, that Flemming used to build his case that Jesus never existed. So, now I’m scratching my head and wondering, “What other things does Carrier hold to that I assumed he did not?â€
As for the “very weird direction†I was going in the blog, as I mentioned several times, I wasn’t sure what you were saying. My point was first to critique the translation since a friend sent it to me. (As a sidenote, I bought the book because he made me aware of it.) And second, I was trying to fill in the blanks of what your argument was. I’m still not clear on that point, nor on how the KAI makes any difference. I guess I’ll just have to read your article! I’m afraid that my time commitments are way over the top right now, but I assure you I will give it a careful read even if not in the immediate future. Thanks for setting me straight on these points.
As for the translation, I will respond to your seven points of explanation below.
(1) I believe you meant “participles emphasize aspect over time†rather than “participles emphasize aspect over tense,†since Greek tenses include aspect as part of their definition. Even here, of course, that’s not the best way to state things. Time in participles is relative, which means that they are dependent on other elements in the sentence for their force. It is better to speak of the temporal value of participles as antecedent, contemporaneous, or subsequent, rather than past, present, or future. Be that as it may, from purely an English stylistic perspective as well as clearly representing the Greek, I thought your translation of EGEIRAS was inadequate. But, as you say, to express this with a relative clause would be to obscure your point.
(2) Fair enough on the capitalization of Spirit.
(3) On the lack of translation of AUTOU, the choice not to translate it was a bad choice, as you now admit. But for you to say “I wish we did not live in a world where we had to be so precise simply to avoid someone misusing our words,†I think that’s a bit overstated. My principal critique was that this was an inadequate translation. And I registered several caveats throughout the blog about not knowing what you were trying to say. But I could, at the same time, offer a critique on the translation. So, I don’t think it’s fair of you to criticize me for misusing your words since I only spoke with any definiteness about your translation.
(4) I understand your concern about the PC contention on how to translate ADELPHOI, but I would have to say that I disagree with you. First, the plural form ADELPHOI can mean simply ‘brothers’ in Greek or it can mean ‘brothers and sisters.’ The standard Greek lexicon for the New Testament is BDAG. They note, “The pl[ural] can also mean brothers and sisters…†This is followed by several references, including both literary and non-literary Koine texts, in which a single brother and sister are collectively called ADELPHOI. Of course, you and I both know that the reason Greek does this is because the word for sister is ADELPHE and the word for brother is ADELPHOS. In the plural, when both brothers and sisters are in view, the default gender is the masculine (just like it is for ‘lions,’ and ‘dogs’ in English, while ‘cows,’ though feminine in the singular is the default gender for both cows and bulls when used collectively). Further, your resistance to seeing the English language as evolving strikes me as rather naïve. You said, “If the masculine can include women in Greek (as it could), then so it can in English, and in fact long has.†Are you really arguing that because something is so in Greek, this somehow connects to English usage? The historical argument (“and in fact long hasâ€) seems to suggest a diachronic over synchronic priority in how you approach linguistics. Surely you’re not saying that people today had better get used to the fact that since English USED to mean both men and women when it says ‘men’ or USED to mean both brothers and sisters when it says ‘brothers,’ it still does, are you? I would have thought that you had to be acquainted with Saussure’s Cours de linguistique générale in grad school to see that that is not the way to think about language. And if that was not required reading, an understanding of the artificial atticizing of Greek during the Hellenistic period would have taught you, by analogy, that we can’t go back. This is how English is now, whether you like it or not. Like all living languages, it is evolving.
You added “Likewise, I find ‘we are obligated not to the flesh’ to be clumsier than what I chose.†That misses the point of what I was noting: you used two independent clauses to convey a single hypotactic structure in Greek, which, in my view, makes for an awkward English rendering (“we owe nothing to the flesh, we ought not live in the fleshâ€). But again, we each have a different view on English style.
(5) I understand why you did what you did with the first person plural in the translation of v. 13. However, you still made an assumption that had interpretive implications. By calling the second person the “philosophical ‘you’†(by which I think you mean the use of the indefinite second person), you assumed that Paul was not directing his attention to his readers. It may not affect your particular point, but I would argue with the assumption that this is an indefinite second person here. That usage is fairly rare in Koine anyway, especially in the New Testament. But I think your translation simply reveals your lack of acquaintance with New Testament syntax. Your complaint at the end of this point was “it annoys me again that such concerns pull the straightjacket tighter and thus limit our freedom to translate meaning rather than droll literalism.†This complaint is not justified. You switch between a slavishly literal rendering to a very free one, and a free translation that skews Paul’s argument. I now realize that his argument on these issues was irrelevant to your purposes, but at more than one point your translation assumed a particular interpretation that is not shared by all. I don’t see principle in this vacillation, just inconsistency.
(6) I understand the point you are raising about KATA. However, in Romans 8, Paul makes some statements using EN SARKI (vv. 8, 9) and KATA SARKA (vv. 4, 5, 12, 13). What struck me most about your translation was its insensitivity to Paul’s usage.
(7) Yes, those things happen to the best of authors. No problem. Your article is quite lengthy; it’s very easy to overlook a certain amount of errata in such dense material.
Richard, thanks for your explanation. This helps a great deal, and I’m glad you had this chance to vindicate yourself. At the same time, I still have to wonder how much time you have logged in the Greek of the New Testament, especially in the corpus Paulinum. The minor errors you made in the translation of these three verses, in light of your explanation, still suggest that New Testament exegesis and Koine Greek are not your primary areas of specialization. Nevertheless, I can readily concede, based on your comments, that all such errata are peripheral issues to the point you were making in the chapter.
I am grateful that you have taken the time to respond to this blog.
David Wood on 15 Oct 2007 at 2:23 pm #
Dr. Wallace,
I think you misunderstood Richard’s comment about the historicity of Jesus. Richard does hold that Jesus probably never existed. When he said that he assumed the historicity of Jesus, I think he meant something like “For purposes of the essay, I assumed the historicity of Jesus.”
Richard Carrier on 16 Oct 2007 at 3:10 pm #
Dan,
No worries. I took no offense. I fully understood your circumstances, as you explained them well enough, with all the appropriate qualifications. Moreover, your criticisms were still often warranted. For many of the reasons you identify, I’m not happy with the translation, it is at once too literal and too loose, and has implications I did not foresee.
I also sympathize with your struggle. You may have had a harder time figuring out my views from GWWT because my views often evolve over time. My conclusions before GWWT differed from those during filming, which differed from those I hold now, all as a result of further research and debate and discussion (and I mean in many ways, not just on Jesus questions). I think the extended interview on the DVD makes more clear where I stood at that time.
In the film itself I’m only used to establish some points. Which is appropriate, IMO, since a documentarian’s interview subjects need not agree with each other or the filmmaker’s conclusions, they only need to agree with what they are actually portrayed as saying–thus when subjects are portrayed as arguing what they do not, that is deplorable (FOX news once did this, and I took them to task for it in an article for Skeptical Inquirer), but I wasn’t treated that way in GWWT.
Since then I have come down more on the side of the Jesus myth camp (I presented a more scholarly case for it in a lecture at Stanford). Though I don’t agree with every single claim in GWWT. And I have been trying to make it clear that this remains only a theory (a fact the Stanford newspaper correctly reported). But I do think it deserves to be examined more seriously by academic experts.
Flemming can perhaps be compared to Michael Moore, in that what his films actually say is often not as wrong as critics claim, but it sometimes exaggerates or underqualifies (as any entertaining medium will always do), and is presented in such a way that it enrages people and in their anger they over-interpret its message and pick on its errors rather than engaging with the difficult facts it gets right. But then, that’s why it gets attention. So I’m still on the fence as to whether this fills a valuable niche or goes too far. At any rate, it’s not my movie.
On the matter of the KAI, that indeed has no bearing on the issue of historicity (or not in any way I can imagine). It only relates to the abuse of the verse on the matter of the nature of the resurrection (not its historicity). But you will see what I mean when you do get around to reading the chapter (in which, as throughout ET, I presume the historicity of Jesus).
On the rest of what you say, I generally agree with you. In fact, when I spoke of misusing my words, I was not referring to you doing so, but to those who could do so to make the very points you were rightly arguing against (thus I was not criticizing you, but the same kind of people you were criticizing).
The only major disagreement, I think, is on the use of universal gender. I do not think adding “and sisters” to the translation would be sound practice, as that would imply Paul actually made that distinction (and thus did what PC proponents today want him to have done), which would be yet another way such a translation could mislead or be abused, the very same faults you identified already in my translations as-is. So repeating the same faults would not be an improvement. This is an example of where there simply is no satisfactory English, which leaves a literal rendering as the least misleading option.
After all, basic skills of reading comprehension should already communicate the same point. That Paul is not excluding female members of the Church when he speaks of the brethren here is already entailed by the context, since to assume otherwise entails Paul did not believe what he says applied to women, which would be a bizarre and baseless assumption. Yes, language evolves, but it is not yet where you seem to think it is, and it is not clear that it ever will be. No language will ever be perfect for all occasions, so we need to learn to cope with its limitations, and rely on reading comprehension and context to convey much of our meaning. Hence, as I see it, to assume anyone of competence will think Paul was excluding women here is simply unreasonable.
In all other respects, I recommend comparing this example, with all the other passages I translate in that same chapter (and my corresponding commentary in text and footnotes), before drawing any generalizations, since I think this example is not typical of me (certainly not in terms of the number of coinciding errors and choices).
David Wood on 16 Oct 2007 at 5:12 pm #
Dr. Wallace,
I was hoping you could comment on Richard’s analysis of Philippians 3:21. It seems to me that the passage can only mean that our present bodies will be transformed. Yet Richard argues that Paul has an exchange in view. I just can’t make sense of this when I try to translate the passage in the manner Richard suggests (”who will exchange the body of our humiliation”???). Do you think Richard’s translation works? (This might, however, be better discussed in a separate post.)
Richard’s Q & A reads as follows:
Q: Doesn’t Philippians 3:21 clearly state that the body will be transformed?
A: Not clearly, no. Philippians 3:21 says Jesus “will change the scheme of the body” of our humble condition “to correspond in form with the body” of his glory (metaschêmatisei to sôma…summorphon tô sômati), which is vague as to details. I discuss this on pp. 118-19 (with corresponding notes, pp. 204-05). As I explain there, the key verb (metaschêmatizô) was also used to refer to changing clothes, which is not a transformation but an exchange, so this verse alone is inconclusive. That means it must be read in the context of Paul’s other statements, especially his frequent allusions to resurrection as changing clothes (pp. 120-50). Likewise, Paul’s only other use of this verb is in the sense of “disguise” rather than real transformation (three times: 2 Cor. 11:13-15), and that connotation of “disguise” comes from the verb’s colloquial use in referring to the changing of clothes (e.g. Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews 7.257, 8.256-57).
Source:
http://www.columbia.edu/~rcc20/SpiritualFAQ.html#trans-phil
Dan Wallace on 16 Oct 2007 at 7:56 pm #
Richard, thanks for the qualifications. It’s very important to me to represent an opponent’s views honestly. Two quick comments: First, you said,
“Flemming can perhaps be compared to Michael Moore, in that what his films actually say is often not as wrong as critics claim, but it sometimes exaggerates or underqualifies (as any entertaining medium will always do), and is presented in such a way that it enrages people and in their anger they over-interpret its message and pick on its errors rather than engaging with the difficult facts it gets right. But then, that’s why it gets attention. So I’m still on the fence as to whether this fills a valuable niche or goes too far. At any rate, it’s not my movie.”
I would have to say Flemming’s film went too far in the direction of simply really bad scholarship. From the mistranslation of Hebrews, the attribution to Paul of a message by Peter to Simon the magician, the archaic Jesus movies, the statement that Paul never quoted Jesus, the suggestion that the Gospels have no historical credibility because they are written four or more decades after the events, the idea that John’s Gospel was based on the other three, the complete sliding over of the criteria of authenticity, the lack of interaction with any bona fide biblical scholars (Tim LaHaye doesn’t qualify, as you well know), TO the positioning of Dundes, Price, you, and Harris on the other side, this film, though rather entertaining, promotes so many ridiculous notions that it can only convince those who are already biased against the historical roots of the Christian faith. Frankly, I loved the sound track and have shown the movie to dozens of people. It’s a great conversation starter. But for you to say that it “sometimes exaggerates or underqualifies” is itself an underqualification. I’m afraid that you men who were featured on the film have damaged your own reputations.
David (and Richard)–regarding Philippians 3.21: You’re right; I’ll take that up later. But overall, I would say this: anyone who wants to offer a huge paradigm shift needs to have massive evidence to back up his claims. It will not do simply to say that a word occasionally can mean something and then apply that meaning to this passage. Much, much more evidence is needed. Again, I don’t know the evidence that Richard has supplied on this verse, but I would expect to see some Koine usage of exchanges that do not involve clothes or the derivative, as well as some that involve the exchange of what is corporeal for that which is incorporeal. The exchange of clothing motif fits well with the belief that Christians put on their new bodies at the resurrection, but it doesn’t seem to be particularly compatible with the notion that they are exchanging a corporeal body for an incorporeal one.