Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: March 4th (Proverbs 3 & Romans 16)
Episode Date: March 4, 2021Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. Paul's greetings to the Christians in Rome. If you are interested in supporting this project, please consider supporting ...my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
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Proverbs chapter 3. My son do not forget my teaching, but let your heart keep my commandments, for length of days and years of life and peace they will add to you. Let not steadfast love and faithfulness forsake you, bind them around your neck, write them on the tablet of your heart, so you will find favour and good success in the sight of God and man.
trust in the Lord with all your heart
and do not lean on your own understanding
in all your ways acknowledge him
and he will make straight your paths
be not wise in your own eyes
fear the Lord and turn away from evil
it will be healing to your flesh
and refreshment to your bones
honour the Lord with your wealth
and with the first fruits of all your produce
then your barns will be filled with plenty
and your vats will be bursting with wine
my son do not despise the Lord's discipline or be weary of his reproof for the Lord reproves him whom he loves as a father the son in whom he delights
blessed is the one who finds wisdom and the one who gets understanding for the gain from her is better than gain from silver and her profit better than gold she is more precious than jewels and nothing you desire can compare with her long life is in her right hand in her left hand
are riches and honour. Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. She is a tree of
life to those who lay hold of her. Those who hold her fast are called blessed. The Lord by wisdom
founded the earth, by understanding he established the heavens. By his knowledge the deeps broke open,
and the clouds dropped down the dew. My son, do not lose sight of these. Keep sound wisdom and
discretion, and they will be life for your soul, an adornment for your neck. Then you will walk on
your way securely, and your foot will not stumble. If you lie down, you will not be afraid. When you
lie down, your sleep will be sweet. Do not be afraid of sudden terror, or of the ruin of the wicked
when it comes. For the Lord will be your confidence, and will keep your foot from being caught.
Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due, when it is in your power to do. When it is in your
power to do it. Do not say to your neighbor, go and come again, tomorrow I will give it, when you
have it with you. Do not plan evil against your neighbor, who dwells trustingly beside you. Do not
contend with a man for no reason, when he has done you no harm. Do not envy a man of violence,
and do not choose any of his ways. For the devious person is an abomination to the Lord,
but the upright are in his confidence. The Lord's curse is on the house of the wicked.
but he blesses the dwelling of the righteous. Toward the scorners he is scornful, but to the humble
he gives favour. The wise will inherit honour, but fools get disgrace. The third and fourth speeches
of the book of Proverbs are found in chapter three. The third is in verses 1 to 12 and the 4th in
verses 13 to 35. Once again this is an address of a father to his son. The third speech presents the
son with a series of charges attended with promises or blessings, keeping the father's
commandments, not letting go of steadfast love and faithfulness, trusting the Lord, fearing the Lord,
and honouring the Lord, concluding with the admonition not to despise the discipline of the Lord.
The speech begins by enjoining the son to keep the commandments of his human father,
but ends with comparing the Lord to a father who lovingly disciplines his son.
We might imagine Solomon training his own son here, with this.
hearer as an eavesdropper. However, the framing of the father teaching the son need not be
focused so narrowly upon such a concrete referent. It may be more of a literary device designed
to democratize the book in terms of the father-son relationship more generally. The promise with which
the speech begins recalls the promise of the fifth commandment in Exodus chapter 20 verse 12.
Honor your father and your mother that your days may be long in the land that the Lord
your God is giving you. In the speech the first, the first,
follows in verse 16 of this chapter, length of days is presented as the reward of wisdom.
The blessing promised to the son who honours his father's instruction, presumably comes because
the wisdom of the father's instruction and counsel will guard the son's ways as he is beginning
in his way and has not yet internalized wisdom himself, and as he matures will also prove
their wisdom to him in his own experience. Perhaps the greatest of the challenges with regard to
wisdom is where to find it. If you are not yet wise, how are you to know where to look for it?
The instruction of parents is a very natural and in most situations the most promising place to
begin. Wisdom first comes to us in the form of authoritative commandments that must be kept.
Authority provides us with a reason for action before we have reasons of our own. However,
good authority seeks to inform obedience so that it is offered increasingly willingly,
rather than by coercion or mere thoughtless compliance.
Parental authority may begin with the command,
but it seeks to acquaint the child with the goodness of what is commanded,
so that the principle with which the child is first acquainted
as an external constraint or demand
becomes a willing and witting principle of behaviour,
which the child comes proactively to observe and understand.
The statement of the father to the son here
gestures towards just such a type of formation.
The son must treasure,
and hold on to steadfast love and faithfulness,
virtues that seem to correspond with the fear of the Lord in chapter 16 verse 6.
While superstitious persons might bind protective charms around their necks,
the son here is told that he will discover his father's teaching in the fear of the Lord
will readily answer to such an end.
The father's teaching will also be like an adornment
that a man might wear around his neck
that would attract people's attention and praise.
He must also write them upon the tablet of his heart,
heart. Memorization of the instruction of the father is a critical step in the process of
internalizing the wisdom of his lessons. The word hidden in the tablet of the heart should also
recall for us the tablet of the law in the Ark of the Covenant in the tabernacle, which among other
things symbolized the human heart. Proverbs chapter 6 verses 20 to 22 make a similar statement.
My son, keep your father's commandment and forsake not your mother's teaching. Bind them on your
heart always tie them around your neck. When you walk, they will lead you. When you lie down,
they will watch over you, and when you awake, they will talk with you. The heroes should likely
remember the words of Deuteronomy chapter 6, verses 4 to 9 here, and recognize the implicit
association between the teaching of the father and the teaching of the law, and between the father's
teaching of his son and the Lord's teaching of Israel as his firstborn son.
Here, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one. You shall love
the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might,
and these words that I command you today shall be on your heart.
You shall teach them diligently to your children,
and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way,
and when you lie down, and when you rise.
You shall bind them as a sign on your hand,
and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes.
You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.
In Deuteronomy chapter 6, the word of the law,
the word of the Lord's teaching of his son Israel is communicated by fathers to their sons,
just as the Lord promises prosperity to Israel if they diligently keep his commandments,
so the father here gives his son a similar assurance a blessing if he observes his instruction.
Children are initially cast upon their parents.
They depend upon their parents and don't have much of a choice but to trust them.
Wisdom requires this initial stage of trust.
We will never obtain wisdom without.
trusting others to direct us into it. The challenge is to trust the right people and to move to a point
where we are increasingly exercising our trust responsibly, circumspectly and with discretion,
rather than merely trusting people because we cannot do otherwise. Over time, for instance,
we will find our trust of wise people is rewarded with blessing, which makes ongoing trust of
them even more reasonable and understandable. The good father recognises his own limitations
as a guide in the path of wisdom.
And while he wants to direct his son as far as he can,
the primary form of direction that he can give
is to wiser teachers than he.
Above all else, his task is to direct his son towards the Lord.
In the rest of this third speech,
the father teaches his son to relate to the Lord
with trust, fear and honour,
and to submit to his discipline.
This is the most important lesson that he can teach,
for the fear of the Lord is the wellspring
and the greatest substance of wisdom.
To trust in the Lord is, among other things, to observe his commandments in the confidence of his ordering of the world and in his providential rule over it.
Those who depend on their own impressions will often be tempted to divert from the Lord's instructions,
as they believe that success and prosperity will come more readily by following their own councils.
They see the wicked prospering and believe that they would be better off if they followed them in their ways.
Rather than walking in the way of uprightness, we see the Psalmist's strict.
struggling with this in places like Psalm 73, where Asaph describes his initial envy of the wicked,
as they apparently prospered, wondering whether his righteousness was all in vain.
It was only through trust in the Lord, and in turning to him, that he was brought back from that brink.
Psalm 37 describes something similar in verses 1 to 7.
Fret not yourself because of evil-doers. Be not envious of wrongdoers,
for they will soon fade like the grass and wither like the green herb.
trust in the Lord and do good dwell in the land and befriend faithfulness delight yourself in the Lord and he will give you the desires of your heart commit your way to the Lord trust in him and he will act he will bring forth your righteousness as the light and your justice as the noon day be still before the Lord and wait patiently for him fret not yourself over the one who prospers in his way over the man who carries out evil devices wisdom is about the long
long-term course of our lives, about what we sow and what we will reap. It is about the consistency
to make good commitments and to follow through with them, doggedly persevering, even when things
look unpromising. Here we see that wisdom is a matter of living by faith, not by sight. The time
should come when that faith is confirmed by sight, but much of the time we simply have to act in a
stubborn and daring confidence that the world is ruled by the Lord, and that if we commit our ways to him
and act independence upon him, we will be blessed by him, even when there may be many contrary
and disheartening appearances along the way. The Lord will guard us from a myriad unseen dangers,
protecting our paths, not allowing us to be tempted beyond what we are able, and leading us in a
path whose destination is blessedness. Fear of the Lord here involves turning away from evil.
It is also the alternative to being wise in one's own eyes. It involves a posture of humility, a
recognition that we have not attained to wisdom and that we need to trust the Lord who is its true
source. Wisdom can be pursued, but we will never fully possess it. Trust in and fear of the Lord
should be accompanied by an honouring of the Lord. Here the father gives the specific case of the
presentation of the first fruits to the Lord. The first fruits are the beginning of the produce, of the
harvest, the things one might be most tempted to keep back, leaving the Lord with whatever is left
over at the end instead. While this relates to agricultural produce, we should probably discern a metaphor
for our lives here. The son might think that he wants to keep the first fruits of the harvest of his life
to himself. One could imagine him thinking, these are the best years of my life, my late teens and early
20s. Surely I should be allowed to enjoy them on my own terms, to have a good time to sow my wild
oats, and then I will serve the Lord in my 30s. However, when the 30s come, the path of folly will be
well set, and its bitter harvest already starting to appear. Had he honored the Lord by presenting
him with the first fruits of his years, he would be prospering and experiencing rich blessing in many
areas of his life. We should not delay our service of the Lord. We should give him the first
fruits of our life, our weak, our day, our wealth, and we will be richer in the rest of it on that
account. The Lord, as a loving father, disciplines his sons, those who trust in, fear and honour the
Lord will also find that they are disciplined by him, which, as the author of Hebrews argues, quoting
verses 11 to 12 of this chapter, while never pleasant at the time, later yields the peaceful fruit
of righteousness to those who have been trained by it. The father wants to bring out virtue in
his son, to form his son into his good character. The Lord wants us to grow as those created in
his image, which relates to the theme of sonship in scripture. This, however, requires painful correction,
deals with our folly, often through bringing us into suffering on its account. If we want to be
treated as sons and to grow into a closer relationship with our Heavenly Father, we are asking for the
Lord to take our sin and our folly seriously, and to deal with us in ways sufficient to correct them.
If there is one thing that the proud fool dislikes, it is correction and rebuke. However, the wise
and good son desires such correction. He wishes to grow by it. The wise cultivate great
sensitivity to correction, while fools harden themselves against it, as Proverbs
chapter 17 verse 10 puts it, a rebuke goes deeper into a man of understanding than a hundred
blows into a fool. The fourth speech of the father takes us from verses 13 to 35, stringing
together four distinct sections, verses 13 to 18, 19 to 20, 21 to 26, and 27 to 35,
as Bruce Wolcky notes,
it begins with an encomium to wisdom,
extolling its surpassing value.
Versus 13 to 18
concern the blessedness of the man
who finds wisdom, beginning with the
beatitude, blessed is the one
who finds wisdom and the one who gets
understanding. Wealth
offers many advantages and benefits,
but wisdom, the father assures
his son, greatly exceeds
wealth and its value, and should be
valued and pursued over everything else.
If the son obtains wisdom,
wisdom, many of the blessings that the fools pursue without it will be granted to him by her.
Long life, riches and honour. The long life being in wisdom's right hands suggests its greater
value than riches and honour, which are in her left. The hero of this passage may recall Solomon's
own valuation of wisdom over everything else, when the Lord appeared to him in his dream at
Gibbean in First Kings chapter three verses six to thirteen, and offered him what he wanted.
Solomon said,
You have shown great and steadfast love to your servant David my father
because he walked before you in faithfulness, in righteousness,
and in uprightness of heart toward you.
And you have kept for him this great and steadfast love,
and have given him a son to sit on his throne this day.
And now, O Lord my God, you have made your servant king in place of David my father.
Although I am but a little child,
I do not know how to go out or come in,
and your servant is in the midst of your people who may be.
you have chosen, a great people, too many to be numbered or counted for multitude.
Give your servant, therefore, an understanding mind to govern your people, that I may discern
between good and evil, for who is able to govern this your great people?
It pleased the Lord that Solomon had asked this, and God said to him, because you have asked
this and have not asked for yourself long life or riches or the life of your enemies, but have
asked for yourself understanding to discern what is right, behold, I now do according to your
word. Behold, I give you a wise and discerning mind, so that none like you has been before you,
and none like you shall arise after you. I give you also what you have not asked, both riches and
honour, so that no other king shall compare with you all your days. Besides the gifts that she offers to
those who seek her, wisdom's ways are pleasant and peaceful. Solomon's wisdom was associated with the
peace and flourishing of Israel as a nation. The tree of life brings us back to the Garden of Eden. The
The tree of life was in the centre of the garden, and offered eternal life and healing to those who ate of it.
The hero should think back to the story of Genesis and to mankind's attempt to grasp at the treasures of autonomous wisdom from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil,
before they were ready to receive it. As a result, they were expelled from the garden, particularly in order that they might not have access to that tree.
They were also frustrated in their labours from that point onwards.
wisdom, however, offers something of a path back into the garden.
In submitting to the Lord and seeking wisdom, rather than seeking to steal her fruit,
one will get to enjoy her fruit and enjoy the blessings of life that come from it.
Adam and Eve sought the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil
in order to grasp at a divine-like status and power,
which God had manifested in his act of creation.
In verses 19 to 20, after the promise of wisdom serving as a tree of life to those who
seek her, the father tells his son that the Lord himself acted by wisdom and his creation
and his founding of the earth and the heavens. The world order is the product of the Lord's wisdom,
that wisdom pervades it as the imminent principle of its operations. The Lord doesn't merely
create as an act of power, but also as an expression of his immeasurable wisdom. Verse 20 shows that
the Lord also sustains the world by his wise providence. We are already here venturing in the
direction of the personification of wisdom as a quasi-divine principle, something that will be
developed in much more detail in Chapter 8. From extolling wisdom, the father moves to exhorting his
son relative to it. He must make sure to obtain it, and to keep hold of it at all costs.
If he does so, he will experience immense benefits on its account, life, adornment, security,
and deliverance from fear and danger. The foolish walk on dark and dangerous paths, but the wise
son walks in secure, straight, and well-lit ways. He won't need to fear the pits, traps and
snares that afflict the wicked and the fools. The security of the path comes both from the path's
inherently safer character, and from the fact that the Lord watches over, protects and guards
those who walk upon it. The chapter concludes with a series of instructions concerning a proper
relationship to neighbours. Verses 27 to 30 encouraged the son readily to show good to all to whom he
has any obligation to the extent of his power to do so. He must not be grudging or reluctant in his
generosity. We might here recall passages such as Deuteronomy chapter 15, verses 7 to 10.
If among you one of your brothers should become poor in any of your towns within your land
that the Lord your God is giving you, you shall not harden your heart or shut your hand
against your poor brother, but you shall open your hand to him and lend him sufficient for his
need, whatever it may be. Take care lest there be an unworthy thought in your heart and you say,
the seventh year, the year of release is near, and your eye look grudgingly on your poor brother,
and you give him nothing, and he cried to the Lord against you, and you be guilty of sin.
You shall give to him freely, and your heart shall not be grudging when you give to him,
because for this the Lord your God will bless you in all your work and in all that you undertake.
take. Likewise, the son must be wary of delaying or deferring his obligations of generosity to his
neighbour. He must be speedy and never withholding in his assistance. From reluctance in generosity,
verses 29 to 30, warn the son against malicious and violent actions against his neighbour. He must not
conspire against his neighbour, nor should he be litigious and a starter of quarrels, bringing accusations
against the innocent, presumably intending to advantage himself in such a manner.
The Tenth Commandment condemns the sin of covetousness, a sin that lies at the root of so many
others. In the wisdom literature envy and desire are given much closer attention. While the law
focuses upon more external actions, the wisdom literature is concerned to describe the growth of sin
from its first inscipients to its final bitter harvest. Here the sun might be tempted to envy the
wicked men of violence and their seeming ease. The psalmist expresses such envy in Psalm 73,
verses 3 to 13. For I was envious of the arrogant when I saw the prosperity of the wicked,
for they have no pangs until death, their bodies are fat and sleek. They are not in trouble
as others are, they are not stricken like the rest of mankind. Therefore pride is their necklace,
violence covers them as a garment, their eyes swell out through fatness, their hearts
overflow with follies. They scoff and speak with malice. Loftily they threaten oppression.
They set their mouths against the heavens, and their tongue struts through the earth.
Therefore his people turn back to them and find no fault in them. And they say,
How can God know? Is their knowledge in the most high? Behold, these are the wicked,
always at ease. They increase in riches. All in vain have I kept my heart clean and washed my
hands in innocence. The father here is very concerned that his son not fall into this trap.
In verses 32 to 35, the father supports his warning against envy of the wicked. The final end of fools
and the wicked is disgrace, as the Lord is opposed to all of their ways, and his curse rests upon
them. Their downfall is sure to come, but those who trust in and fear and honour the Lord
will themselves inherit honour. A question to come. A question to come.
consider. What are some ways in which we can make ourselves more receptive to the correction and
discipline of the Lord? Romans chapter 16, I commend to you our sister Phoebe, a servant of the
church at Sankria, that you may welcome her in the Lord in a way worthy of the saints, and help her
in whatever she may need from you, for she has been a patron of many, and of myself as well.
Greet Prisker and Aquila, my fellow workers in Christ Jesus, who risk their necks for my life.
to whom not only I give thanks, but all the churches of the Gentiles give thanks as well.
Greet also the church in their house.
Greet my beloved Apinatus, who was the first convert to Christ in Asia.
Greet Mary, who has worked hard for you.
Greet Andranicus and junior, my kinsmen and my fellow prisoners.
They are well known to the apostles, and they were in Christ before me.
Greet Ampliatus, my beloved in the Lord.
Greet Urbaneus, our fellow worker in Christ, and my beloved Stacis.
greet Apeles who is approved in Christ
greet those who belong to the family of Aristobulus
greet my kinsman Herodian
greet those in the Lord who belong to the family of Narcissus
greet those workers in the Lord
Trifina and Trifosa
Greet the beloved Persis who has worked hard in the Lord
Greet Rufus chosen in the Lord
Also his mother who has been a mother to me as well
Greet Esencritus
Phlegon Hermes Petrobus
Hermus and the brothers who are with them
greet Philologus, Julia, Nairus and his sister, and Olympus and all the saints who are with them.
Greet one another with a holy kiss. All the churches of Christ greet you.
I appeal to you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and create obstacles contrary to the doctrine that you have been taught.
Avoid them. For such persons do not serve our Lord Christ, but their own appetites, and by smooth talk and flattery they deceive the hearts of the naive.
for your obedience is known to all so that I rejoice over you,
but I want you to be wise as to what is good and innocent as to what is evil.
The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.
The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you.
Timothy, my fellow worker greets you, as do Lucius and Jason, and so Cipater my kinsman.
I tertius, who wrote this letter, greet you in the Lord.
Gaius, who is host to me and to the whole church greets you.
Erastus, the city treasurer, and our brother Cortus, greet you.
Now to him who is able to strengthen you according to my gospel, and the preaching of Jesus Christ,
according to the revelation of the mystery that was kept secret for long ages, but has now been
disclosed, and through the prophetic writings has been made known to all nations,
according to the command of the Eternal God to bring about the obedience of faith,
to the only wise God, be glory forevermore through Jesus Christ.
Amen.
Romans chapter 16, after the immensely rich theology of the letter, might seem a little anticlimactic.
However, examine more closely we may find several aspects of it that will reward our attention.
The most immediate thing that might jump out at the reader of the chapter is the sheer number of the names that are mentioned.
By my count, 26 people in Rome are mentioned by name.
A few others are mentioned without being mentioned by name, such as the members of various households,
or the mother of Rufus.
It seems astonishing that Paul would know so many Christians
in a church that he had yet to visit.
T.W. Manson suggested that Romans 16 was a letter to Ephesus
attached to the epistle to the Romans,
so that the letter could be sent on to them.
However, there are a number of problems or weaknesses with that position,
several of which are identified by Peter Lamp
in an article, the Roman Christians of Romans chapter 16.
He notes that it would have been likely that Paul would have had many more co-workers to address in Ephesus.
Having such an attached letter would also be without precedent in Paul's writing.
A letter composed entirely of greetings would be remarkable for Paul,
who couldn't resist getting into theology.
A number of the names in this chapter also aren't found in many of the thousands of inscriptions
that we have from Ephesus, although they are found in Rome.
And then besides the fact that the manuscripts of Romans that we have don't have
end with Romans chapter 15, there is also the fact that Romans 15 would be a very unnatural ending to
the book. Nowhere else in Paul's letters does Paul address quite so many people. Yet Rome was different.
Rome was a church that Paul had not yet visited. Perhaps this is precisely why Paul can greet such a long
list of people personally. Greeting so many people in other churches would seem to single out
people in a way that might fuel rivalries and status conflicts. However,
when Paul has yet to visit, he is freer to single out people that he already knows.
These people that Paul already knew in Rome were an important initial connection that he had
with the congregation, which he would be able to build upon over time.
Along with the names in this list of greetings, Paul often adds a brief statement describing
his relationship to them, or saying something about their character or their service.
Especially in the case of the people mentioned who have worked alongside Paul in the past,
such as Prisker and Aquila, Epinatus, or Andrinicus and Junior,
these were obvious character references for Paul.
These people could commend him to the Roman church.
This is another reason why the chapter makes most sense as one addressed to Rome,
along with the rest of the letter.
Paul would not require such references for almost every other church to which he wrote.
Interestingly, Paul does not greet these people directly,
but instructs the recipients of the letter to convey his greetings to the people
in question. Perhaps this suggests that in the first instance this would not have been read to an entire
gathered congregation of Roman Christians. Before moving to consider any of the names in particular,
we should consider the fact that there are so many of them, and what this might suggest about the
character of the early church and of the church in Rome more particularly. It seems as though many
of the Christians in the church in Rome were migrants from the east. Then there is the fact that
some Romans would have spent some time living away from the capital. In Acts chapter 18, we discover
another reason why Paul might have encountered so many Roman Christians. In verses two to three,
we learn of Paul's first acquaintance with Priscilla, or Prisca, as she is here called, and Aquila.
And he found a Jew named Aquila, a native of Pontus, recently come from Italy with his wife Priscilla
because Claudius had commanded all the Jews to leave Rome. And he went to see them, and because he was of
same trade he stayed with them and worked, for they were tent makers by trade.
A number of Roman Jews had been expelled from the city by Claudius, before returning later.
As Paul had been teaching in synagogues all around the east during this period,
he doubtless would have met many of them, including many who would have returned at a later point,
perhaps after being converted through his ministry.
There is also the possibility that some of the names on the list Paul knew,
not by personal acquaintance, but by reputation.
Besides this, there is the amount of travel that people could undertake in the first century Roman world.
As Lamp observes, from the biblical details given concerning him alone,
we know that Aquila had moved from Pontus to Rome, to Corinth, and to Ephesus,
and then probably back to Rome again.
It would not be at all surprising if he had moved back to Rome by the time that Paul wrote the epistle to the Romans.
There is also the possibility that some of the persons mentioned might have been associated with each other,
other. Epinatus, for instance, mentioned immediately after Prisca and Aquila, may have travelled
back to Rome with them. Especially if, like Paul, several of the people mentioned had done missionary
work as well, we should not be surprised if their paths would have crossed with Pauls elsewhere.
This does give us a sense of how cosmopolitan the early church could be, and how extensively networked.
This should be a source of confidence for us as Christians when we consider the greater strength,
spread and possibility of confirming
eyewitness testimony in such an environment,
along with the greater coordination of the message of the churches
across vast regions.
The chapter begins by commending Phoebe to the Romans.
Phoebe is presumably the one who bears the letter to Rome.
She's a servant of the church at Sincreya,
someone noted for her ministry.
Sincreya was in the region of Corinth,
the eastern port of the Corinthian Isthmus.
She was most likely a businesswoman
whose own affairs gave her reason.
to travel to Rome, and who was sufficiently known to and trusted by Paul that he could send
an impisal of such great importance with her. She is described as a servant of the church in Sankria.
She is an emissary of, or a respected envoy for, her church in this instance, and the Romans should
receive her with honour as one who acts on behalf of her congregation in various ways.
More particularly, Phoebe is described as a patroness of many, including Paul himself,
in the verse that follows. The role of patrons was very important.
important in the early church, and it seems that a culturally disproportionate number of these
patrons of the church were women. They presumably funded the ministries and the ministers of the church
and hosted their assemblies. A wealthy businesswoman like Phoebe likely hosted the Sankrean
church in her house and showed hospitality to missionaries like Paul who passed through the city.
This is also something that was true of Jesus' ministry, as witnessed in Luke chapter 8 verses 1 to 3.
soon afterward he went on through cities and villages proclaiming and bringing the good news of the kingdom of God
and the twelve were with him and also some women who had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities
mary called magdalene from whom seven demons had gone out and joanna the wife of kuzer herod's household
manager and susanna and many others who provided for them out of their means such persons would have been
of considerable importance to the early church and likely enjoyed considerable on
in their congregations.
Phoebe is the first of a number of women
mentioned in this chapter. There are
26 names mentioned in verses 3 to
16, 9 women
and 17 men. However, as
Lamp remarks, of those especially
praised for their service, 6 or
7 are women, Prisca, Mary,
Jr., Trifina,
trifosa, Persis, and perhaps also
Rufus's mother, while only
5 or 3 are men.
Such a list implies that women were
active, prominent, and honoured
in many quarters of the life of the early church.
Prisca and Aquila, a couple we first met in Corinth in Acts chapter 18,
come first in the list of the Christians in Rome.
They were some of Paul's dearest friends who had risked much for him,
and to whom the wider church owed a considerable debt.
They host a congregation in their house,
probably one of several such congregations in the city.
Perhaps the most controversial name on the list is that of Junia,
whose name has often been translated as Junius,
a male name. While technically possible, this is almost certainly a mistranslation. In the early
church, Junior was identified rightly, I believe, as a woman, by people who clearly opposed women
in pastoral ministry, something which many modern readers of Romans have used her name to support.
Andronicus and Junior were most likely a married couple, or perhaps a brother and sister, who
travel together. We have description of such situations in 1 Corinthians chapter 9 verse 5. Do we
not have the right to take along a believing wife, as do the other apostles and the brothers
of the Lord and Cephas? They are described as Paul's kinsman. This may mean that they were relatives
of Paul, or simply, perhaps more likely, that they were Jews. They also seem to have been
imprisoned alongside Paul at some point, maybe in Ephesus. The detail that has particularly
made Junia a figure of much prominence in debate is the description of the couple as outstanding
or well known among the apostles.
While the ESV's translation
well known to the apostles
is possible, it is much
more likely that Andronichus and Junia
are included among the apostles
in some sense. They clearly aren't
members of the 12, but they are
possibly apostles in the sense suggested
in 1 Corinthians chapter 9 verse 1
1, as witnesses of the resurrected
Christ, maybe among the
500 persons who saw the risen
Christ at one time.
Going further than this becomes speculative,
very quickly, but considering how prominent and widespread debates concerning them are,
there are some points that we should make concerning Junia,
and the ways that other women in this list are used in contemporary debates about women in
pastoral ministry.
We should, at the very outset, notice the presence of a number of prominent women in the
list.
Whatever positions we hold concerning pastoral ministry, we should note the prominence of the
various ministries of women more generally, and the honour that Paul held such women in.
We have much clearer teaching on these matters elsewhere in the New Testament,
and we shouldn't need to rely on speculation about such passages.
Making questions of women in pastoral ministry hang upon the uses of particular words
and phraseology in such passages is stretching the evidence far further than it can actually support.
In debates on such matters, it is telling how often the word leadership is focused upon.
Romans 16 clearly shows women being prominent figures in their churches,
being key workers and being honoured for their faithful service.
However, the need to make a case for women in pastoral ministry
leads to a focus upon these women as so-called leaders,
which is a category that seems to be a rather clumsily fitted one,
unsuited to the service that the women here are actually performing.
Perhaps one of the lessons we should learn from this passage
is that leadership should not have such a monopoly on honour
and that other forms of service in the life of the church
should receive much more recognition.
We should beware of importing our modern assumptions
about individuals filling essentially gender-neutral roles
for which their sex is a matter of indifference,
assumptions that arise in no small part from our modern economic order.
In most societies across history and cultures,
a person's sex colours the way that the roles they perform are perceived
and how those roles function,
even when the roles they perform are nominally the same as roles the other sex can perform.
A number of the women mentioned here are also mentioned alongside their husbands, their children or their siblings.
Rather than individuals performing gender-neutral roles,
in many of these situations we seem to have husband-wife teams or families who were known for their service.
Clement of Alexandria, writing around the year 200 AD, speaks of the apostles making their wives fellow workers alongside them,
with the wives focusing on ministering to women, to which the apostles themselves would not have had such ready access.
In the case of Rufus's mother, Paul describes a woman performing an explicitly gendered role of service, acting as a mother to him.
The domestic setting for many of the ministries that Paul addresses here, in house churches, as married missionary couples, as families, etc., naturally allowed for women to enjoy much more prominence as the face of their communities, sometimes because there were relatively few male converts around.
As the church assumed a growing public profile
and the informality of house churches
was replaced with more formal offices and ordered communities,
the Ministry of male leaders naturally assumed much greater prominence
on the broader stages that the church was moving into,
a development that could strengthen the entire church in certain ways.
Nevertheless, in local communities,
the more domestic and communally grounded ministries of women
would still have enjoyed considerable honour and prominence,
even though their ministries would not have been as prominent on the broader stages.
Looking through the names, there are some scattered clues to social status,
to the regions of origin that people come from.
Most of them were probably born outside Rome.
Slave-born and free-born identities are sometimes hinted at,
and in the case of Andronichus and Junia, their Jewish origin.
It seems likely that the majority of the Roman church were slaves or freedmen or women.
Throughout this list, Paul often uses the words
in the Lord or in Christ, speaking for instance of Adronichus and Jr.
as being in Christ before him.
Christ is the new realm of his people's existence
and the source of their identity.
Before sending his companions greetings and signing off the letter,
Paul gives an exhortation.
He is concerned that the Romans watch out
for the type of people who cause divisions and set up obstacles.
such people are not motivated by the truth and the love and service of Christ,
but are just in it for their own appetites.
However, they can lead many naive people astray.
Paul writes very positively about the Romans themselves,
but he wants them to be wise in discerning what is good
and completely averse to that which is evil.
Alluding to the promise of Genesis 3 verse 15,
he promises that God will crush Satan under their feet shortly.
The serpent will be attacking them.
in various ways, but Paul is assured that they will prove victorious.
In verses 21 to 24, Paul conveys greetings from his fellow workers,
and his amanuensis tertius conveys his.
Timothy is described as Paul's fellow worker,
presumably something already well known by Christians in the eastern Mediterranean region.
The references to Gaius and Erastus suggest the possibility that Paul was writing from Corinth.
Also, Arastus's public office, is evidence.
of individuals with higher social status among the early Christians.
The book ends with a grand doxology,
summing up the meaning of the gospel.
In the fullness of time, according to his eternal purpose
and in fulfillment of prophetic promise,
Jesus the Messiah is being proclaimed as the world's true Lord
and the one in whom the reign of God is established.
This message is being proclaimed throughout the nations
so that all nations might submit to him with the obedience of faith.
this is the gospel.
This God who has established his glorious kingdom and his son Jesus Christ
is also able to establish his people,
secure in the strength of the kingdom that he is making known at this present time.
A question to consider.
Putting together various clues that we get in this chapter and elsewhere,
what might we imagine the Roman church in the late 50s A.D. was like.
