Hence I said pneuma was understood as existing in gradations of tension and functionality. The hierarchy of pneuma was directly linked to their multi-layered cosmology.
Yes, they assumed the physical was a reflection of the spiritual. Theirs was an holistic vision, even if discussed, in the detail, in terms of duality.
You can't separate pneuma from their cosmology!
I'm not trying to.
If you're saying that his ancient cosmological view is irrelevant, then I would say you're changing something crucial in Paul's worldview.
But I'm not ... quite the opposite!
So? Are you trying to flatten the ancient cosmos?
Nope. I see
modern cosmology as flat, as physicalist.
For Paul, Christ followers become gods, but not the God.
Well ... that opens the matter for discussion.
The cosmology we're talking about, the Kosmos (κόσμος), apart from its common understanding as the universe, also can mean 'order' or 'arrangement' or even 'loveliness of design' – at a stretch, a 'theophany'. (John uses the term in quite a different context.)
To repeat from elsewhere, the Kosmos was the whole of creation, a 'creature' of rational integrity organised by metaphysical principles, in a hierarchic order or gradation, mineral, flora, fauna, human, daemonic, angelic and 'divine' (God and His immediate cohorts or choirs stand outside and above) – all in all the the planetary and astral spheres, understood as a changeless realm at once physical and spiritual.
I'm not sure Paul saw the followers of Christ being numbered among the ranks and types of the greater and lesser archons that rule the world, rather by πνεῦμα υἱοθεσίας (
pneuma huiothesia), "the Spirit of adoption" (Romans 8:15, 23, 9:4, Galatians 4:5 and Ephesians 1:5), so 'children of God' rather than simply 'gods'.
Interestingly, Epesians reads "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus the Anointed, who in the Anointed has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places," (1:3, Hart translation) – and one can only speculate, within that tiered cosmology, what 'heavenly places' Paul has in mind.
Likewise, in Romans 8:23 "not only this, but even we ourselves, having the firstfruits of the spirit, groan within ourselves as well, anxiously
awaiting adoption, emancipation of our body." If, as we know, the sarx cannot inherit the kingdom, then what is the body σῶμα (
soma)?
+++
OK
Thiessen, along with scholars like Troels Engberg-Pedersen, disagree too with the idea ancient spiritual discussions were independent of their cosmological understanding. Paul conceived of pneuma as an actual substance - the very substance of "the astral beings of heaven, the gods." His spiritual concept of the resurrected body ties his idea to a subtle material and cosmological reality prevalent in his time.
I don't have an issue with that.
I'd say yes, on condition that we don't assume they mean 'substance' as we do. The word
pneuma means 'breath'. "
Pneuma passes through all (other) bodies; in its outward motion it gives them the qualities that they have, and in its inward motion makes them unified objects (Nemesius, 47J; cf. Helle 2021).
Pneuma comes in gradations and endows the bodies which it pervades with different qualities as a result. The
pneuma which sustains an inanimate object is a “tenor” (
hexis, lit. “a holding”).
Pneuma in plants is, in addition, “physique” (
phusis, lit. “nature”), and in animals, it is “soul” (
psuchê). (Stanford on Stoic cosmology).
The Greeks explored the idea how two substances, pneuma and matter, could occupy the same space, and thought that it was pneuma that gave matter the properties it possesses. Pneuma acts on the
materia prima, which is the substrate of all material things, itself undifferentiated and without form.
The heavens in Paul's worldview were much closer and filled with these tangible substances and beings. Paul's spiritual concepts were framed within that cosmological and physical understanding.
Yes, again I have no problem with it. He's deploying contemporary philosophy to make his case. Tjhat's how he sees the world.
We see 'substance' differently. We see the world
substantially differently. essentially, it's the same world, we just have access to better technologies and better physics.
Burnett notes that Thiessen and others "point out that . . . Paul, when he talks about a pneumatic body . . . he does not mean a non-corporeal body or incorporeal body . . . He's thinking spirit is actually substance." It's not just conjecture.
I know. A spiritual substance.
I believe Christ is risen. I believe his body can, at will, manifest apparently corporeal integrity – a substantial presence – it can be seen it can be touched. It can pass through solid walls. He clearly wasn't a ghost to those who saw Him. And it can stand unrecognised, even by one who knows Him, and be recognised in a moment,
in the moment of His own choosing.
I'm sure Christ's self-revelation to Paul stood Paul's cosmology on its head, it certainly rocked his Kosmos.
(I tend to follow Galatians, that he withdrew to Arabia, possibly Mount Sinai, to try and figure out what had happened, as perhaps as much as 14 years passed before he went to Damascus.)
The idea is based on historical and contextual evidence. For example, recall Thiessen says that "Paul came from the city of Tarsus, a known hotbed of Stoic philosophy," and that the concept of pneuma as a subtle, material substance was "the conceptual air that most people in the Greco-Roman world breathed." These are the people Paul communicated with. That's why I like scholars like Thiessen: They aim to put Paul in his historical and cultural context.
And I do not disagree with that ...
Your personal opinion doesn't negate the original, integrated nature of ancient thought around pneuma and cosmology.
No, it revels in it.
The point is you're reinterpreting Paul. You want to discard the material aspects of ancient cosmology while retaining the spiritual ones. It's inconsistent cherry picking.
Not really. It's called insight and understanding ...