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St. Paul and Epicurus PDF

212 Pages·1954·10.48 MB·English
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St. Paul and Epicurus This page intentionally left blank BY NORMAN WENTWORTH DeWITT ST. PAUL and EPICURUS UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS • MINNEAPOLIS Copyright 1954 by the UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without the written permission of the publisher. Permission is hereby granted to reviewers to quote brief passages in a review to be printed in a magazine or newspaper. PRINTED AT LUND PRESS, INC., MINNEAPOLIS Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 54-12314 PUBLISHED IN GREAT BRITAIN, INDIA, AND PAKISTAN BY GEOFFREY CUMBERLEGE: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, LONDON, BOMBAY, AND KARACHI PREFACE T HE present study is a sequel to the author's Epicurus and His Philoso- phy and it aims at making good the thesis there enunciated that Epi- cureanism functioned as a bridge of transition from Greek philosophy to the Christian religion. It is hoped by this means to have opened up a new window on the New Testament, a window walled up by prej- udice long centuries ago. This prejudice had its root in exasperation over the theology of Epi- curus, which repudiated belief in miracles, prophecy, divine provi- dence, and immortality. Epicurus was consequently denounced as an atheist, which he was not. Joined with this exasperating theology was an alluring body of ethi- cal doctrine, neatly organized and attractively presented. Unluckily, however, part of the lure of the ethic consisted in analyzing happiness to consist of the memory of pleasures past, the enjoyment of pleasures present, and the hope of pleasures to come. This espousal of pleasure as the chief good of life gave excuse for denouncing Epicurus as a sensualist, which he was not. His pleasures were not the pleasures of the flesh. Nevertheless the merit of this ethic was so superior and so widely acknowledged that Paul had no alternative but to adopt it and bless it with the new sanction of religion, though to admit his indebtedness to the alleged atheist and sensualist was inconceivable. Epicurus was con- sequently consigned to anonymity. When once this screen of anonymity has been penetrated, we shall find that the most beloved devotional readings in the Epistles of Paul exhibit the greatest influence of the friendly Epicurus. An example is v ST. PAUL AND EPICURUS the illustrious hymn to love in First Corinthians 13. The philosophy of love or friendship had created a climate of feeling favorable to the acceptance of the religion of love. Epicurus had also established a cult of peace, whether peace of mind or peace among men, long before Paul preached "the gospel of peace" and "the God of peace." Epicurus had set the fashion for expounding doctrine in the form of an epistle. One of these writings bore the title To the Friends in Asia and was in circulation for three centuries before Paul composed his Epistle with the inscription To the Saints Which Are in Ephesus. Long before the congregations organized by Paul began to assemble in private houses to perpetuate the memory of Jesus the Christ, in- numerable colonies of the disciples of Epicurus had been accustomed to meet in private houses to perpetuate the memory of their founder, whom they revered as the discoverer of truth and a savior. Epicurus, according to the records, had so ordered it, just as we are informed that Jesus did. The ability to follow the trail of these hidden parallelisms and to spot the unacknowledged adaptations of Epicurean teachings in the writings of Paul is the sole advantage to be claimed by the author of this study over other scholars. The process of detection, when once the clues have been identified, will not be difficult; one discovery will ease the way to another and in the end the total number of appropri- ated teachings may prove to be astonishing. Among the immediate rewards will be more precise translations and occasionally for the first time correct translations. It was the first intention of the author to entitle this study Epicurus and the New Testament but it speedily became apparent that the Paul- ine writings called for treatment apart from the Gospels. The division into chapters under the names of the Epistles has re- sulted in a moderate amount of repetition, for which no apology seems necessary. The objective has been discovery and instruction, not en- tertainment. As a last word the author disavows all claim to have made a defini- tive investigation. He will be content with the hope of having made a definite breach in the ancient wall of prejudice and anonymity. To the work yet to be done in this line of research there is no near limit. This limit is the farther removed for several reasons. The treatment VI Preface accorded to Epicurus in histories of philosophy is perfunctory and marred at its best by the inveterate omissions, errors, and prejudices. As for the source materials, even good university libraries may be ill supplied with them; certain items have been long out of print; others have never been translated; many are fragmentary and yield their data only to a diligent and practiced scholar. Even a willing and competent researcher would do well after a year's study to feel capable of han- dling his sources with facility. The human factor must also be reckoned with; the philosophy of Epicurus was animated by a characteristic spirit, genial and reasonable and yet resolute, and to capture this spirit will demand a change of attitude, which is not to be accomplished overnight. In the present study all questions of scholarship concerning the au- thenticity of certain Epistles have been ignored as unessential to the problem of Epicurean influence. In general the endeavor has been made to hold the exposition at the level of the educated layman, for whom the source material would neither be available nor usable. Those read- ers who will find profit in footnotes are referred to the preceding vol- ume, Epicurus and His Philosophy. Thanks are due to a former pupil, Miss E. Marguerite Baker, who generously volunteered to help in the preparation of the manuscript; to a capable colleague, Dr. W. E. Staples, who gave advice on Hebrew thought and literature; and to Professor Arthur Stanley Pease of Har- vard University, whose candid criticisms on matters of Epicureanism have always merited respect. N. W. D. 143 Eleventh Street Lincoln, Illinois August 1954 vn This page intentionally left blank CONTENTS EPICURUS Life and Teachings 3 PHILIPPIANS Their God Is the Belly 21 THESSALONIANS Peace and Safety 38 GALATIANS The Weak and Beggarly Elements 58 COLOSSIANS Beguiling Speech 73 EPHESIANS The Prince of the Power of the Air 88 FIRST CORINTHIANS The Logic of the Cross 106 FIRST CORINTHIANS 13 Faith, Hope, and Love 124 FIRST CORINTHIANS 13 Interim and Recognition 144 PAUL'S KNOWLEDGE OF EPICUREANISM 16 APPENDIX Letter to Menoeceus 187 INDEX Verses Newly Explained or Translated 194 INDEX Words and Topics 196 :t

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St. Paul and Epicurus was first published in 1954. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.Everyone who is interesting in the meaning of the Bible wil
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