Der Philipperbrief des Paulus. Eve-Marie Becker
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СКАЧАТЬ in a specific historical context, where its theological pragmatics (justification of the believer) and hermeneutical principles (“Schriftprinzip”) had socio-political relevance (critical attitude towards religious authorities).Melanchthon, Philip(p)1 In this context, the theologoumenon of justification played an important role. Gerhard EbelingEbeling, Gerhard once has pointed out that LutherLuther, Martin’s idea on the justification sola fide cannot be seen as an

      arbitrary preference of a favorite teaching …, but rather as a declaration of what the inner structure of all theological assertions are about.Ebeling, GerhardRechtfertigungLuther, Martin2

      EbelingEbeling, Gerhard’s statement, however, also implies that biblical theology and Pauline exegesis in particular is the material center of Lutheran hermeneutics. In a similar way and inspired by LutherLuther, Martin’s hermeneutics,Melanchthon, Philip(p)3 MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p) makes use of the theologoumenon of justification. His interpretation of Paul’s letter-writing is widely informed by a Lutheran theological hermeneutics.

      2.1. MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p)’s approach to Philippians in the Loci

      MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p)’s approach becomes evident in his most prominent writing, his “Hauptwerk,”Melanchthon, Philip(p)1 which at the same time is commonly known as the first “protestant dogmatic”: the Loci Communes (1521). Melanchthon formulates one of the central theological statements already in the introduction (0.13):

      Nam ex his (= vis peccati, lex, gratia [0.12]) proprie Christus cognoscitur, siquidem hoc est Christum cognoscere beneficia eius cognoscere, non, quod isti docent, eius naturas, modos incarnationis contueri.Melanchthon, Philip(p)2

      In his comment to this Locus, Horst Georg Pöhlmann emphasizes how MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p) partly has based this thesis of protestant theology on his reading of Paul (see “Declamatiuncula in Divi Pauli Doctrinam”, 1520). Melanchthon partly refers to LutherLuther, Martin’s “Heidelberger Disputation” (1518) and Luther’s Operationes in Psalmos (1519-1521).Melanchthon, Philip(p)3 How can we best describe the potential of “protestant” – or, more specifically: Lutheran – hermeneutics as articulated here?

      There are two hermeneutical insights implied in MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p)’s proposition – one is critical or analytical, the other one is constructive:Melanchthon, Philip(p)JerusalemLuther, Martin4 The critical or analytical dimension leads to a substantial deconstruction of a theologia gloriae, as represented by Scholastic theologians like Thomas of AquinasMelanchthon, Philip(p)5 (… non, quod isti docent, eius naturas, modos incarnationis contueri). It leads, at the same time, to a disclosure of what beneficium actually contradicts (vis peccati, lex, gratia, 0.12).

      In a constructive sense, MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p) shows how the perception of Christ is defined (… hoc est Christum cognoscere beneficia eius cognoscere …) and what “beneficium” ex positivo means and presupposes (vis peccati, lex, gratia). The “constructive potential” of Melanchthon’s theological proposition becomes most evident in the way in which he later on in the Loci explicitly refers to Paul and his letter to the Philippians (7.34; 7.90f.):

      (a) In 7.33f., MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p) discusses the fact that justification is not yet reached completely. He refers to LutherLuther, Martin as well as to Augustine, Cyprian and Paul (RomRom 7:23; 12:2). Melanchthon claims: “… quatenus credimus, liberi sumus, quatenus diffidimus, sub lege sumus.”Melanchthon, Philip(p)6 In that context, he adds a reference – not a direct quotation7 – to Phil 3:12 in order to show that Paul himself was conscious about the continuous need of aiming for “perfection.” I cannot discuss here in detail how Melanchthon interprets the meaning of “law.” More importantly, the basic idea here is to shape in a noetic sense an “Existenzbeschreibung” that follows up the distinction between credimus = liberi sumus, and diffidimus = sub lege sumus.

      In other words, MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p) develops a type of a Christ-believing Existenzbeschreibung in which the “law” has a constitutive function for the believer’s selfSelbst, self, selfhood-understanding. From this point of view, Melanchthon also approaches Phil 3:12 – a text that can be read differently from a modern exegetical perspective. When Paul talks about his imperfection in Phil 3, he points to his eschatological hope (Phil 3:14) as well as to his current personal situation: the biographical context in prison (Phil 1:7 etc.). Paul does not necessarily develop an anthropological statement but rather reaches an interpretation of his personal fortune, which might be of relevance for his “imitators” (see Phil 3:17) who are like himself emulators of Christ.

      (b) Another example of how MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p) approaches Philippians via the hermeneutical key of iustitia ex lege, can be found in his interpretation of Phil 3:8f. The Pauline passage is still framed by Paul’s autobiographical narratio (Phil 3:4bff.). Herein, it refers to Paul’s selfSelbst, self, selfhood-understanding as a personal example to his readers. In his interpretation of that passage in the Loci (7.90f.), however, Melanchthon reads the Pauline statement in light of the theologoumenon of the iustitia ex deo est (per fidem est Christi). We, thus, get the impression that Melanchthon, again, narrows Paul’s thinking, such as in his letter to the Philippians, in that he makes it first of all to be a contribution to the theological discourse about iustitia and lex.

      Is MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p)’s approach to Phil 3 legitimate in terms of hermeneutics? In a motific sense it is: In Phil 3:9 Paul talks about πίστις, νόμος, and δικαιοσύνη. However, in the argumentative frame of Phil 3 it becomes evident that the theologoumenon of justification does not really stand in the center of the Pauline argument but only supports Paul’s conceptualization of his own personal exemplumexemplum that he provides for his readers. In his interpretation of Phil 3 in the Loci Melanchthon thus narrows or even misconceives Paul’s crucial argument of apostolic selfSelbst, self, selfhood-reflection.

      I shall add here a philological remark to Phil 3:9, where MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p) quotes the Pauline text, while he only alludes to it in the cases of Phil 3:8 and 3:12 (see above). In the case of Phil 3:9 the Pauline text obviously is of specific theological importance. It seems as if Melanchthon does not have the Vulgata-text in mind but that he himself translates the Greek text: Melanchthon’s Latin text is much closer to the Greek than contemporary Latin translations, especially when it comes to the complicated interpretation of the prepositions that are used here:

      The Vulgata-text says: … sed illam quae ex fide est Christi quae ex Deo est iustitia in fide.

      The Greek text, however, says: … ἀλλὰ τὴν διὰ πίστεως Χριστοῦ, τὴν ἐκ θεοῦ δικαιοσύνην ἐπὶ τῇ πίστει – a phrase that is much better expressed in MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p)’s translation in his Loci: … sed eam, quae per fidem est Christi, quae iustitia ex deo estMelanchthon, Philip(p)8 – per fidem equals διὰ πίστεως.

      The art of Greek philology finally leads MelanchthonMelanchthon, Philip(p) to a significant concept of “faith”: Melanchthon’s translation – even though it might reflect reformatory theology here – is much more than the Vulgata-tradition close to the Pauline Greek in a philological sense. Melanchthon’s expertise as a Greek philologist is an important contribution to the reformatory movement since it attests to the reformatory movement in humanism.Melanchthon, Philip(p)9

      2.2. СКАЧАТЬ