Pauline Eschatology
Pauline Eschatology
Pauline Eschatology
Table of Contents
Introduction………………………………………………………………………….………2
1. Definition of Eschatology……………………………………………………….………2
Conclusion……………………………………………………………………………….….10
Bibliography………………………………………………………………………………....11-12
1
Introduction
Eschatology is a pivotal issue in Pauline writings. This paper highlights how central
eschatology is to Pauline studies. The purpose of this paper is an attempt to trace Pauline
eschatology to its background and definition. It also elucidates some major Pauline
eschatological events like resurrection, judgment and return of Christ. I think it will help the
reader to understand its relevance for building believers in the present context.
6. Definition of Eschatology
concerned with “final or last things.”1 Eschatology is the teaching concerning last things such as
the resurrection of the dead, the last Judgment, and return of Christ. 2 The term eschatology, first
used in the nineteenth century – is the label for the aspect of systematic theology that deals
broadly with the destiny of the individual (death, immortality, the intermediate state,
resurrection, judgment, eternal life, heaven and hell); the destiny of the nation of Israel (the Day
of the Lord, the coming of the Messiah, the Messianic kingdom) and the destiny of history at
large (the end of the world, final Judgment, the restoration of the universe). 3 Paul’s presentation
of this doctrine with all the dynamics of its development in his letters as we have them today.
This Pauline perspective on has shaped the perspective of today’s Christian Church albeit in
different ways but chiefly concerning itself with all the events aforementioned in a manner
2
7. Eschatology in the Old Testament
In the Old Testament, Jewish has two Hope: the prophetic and the eschatological. 5 The former
centered on a kingdom to come in which a Davidic king would lead the nation to absolute
victory over his enemies – a kingdom that never came to pass literally. The eschatological
dimension, however, centered on a transcendent kingdom beyond history which will interrupt the
present time as it is known, bringing it to an end under the leadership of a heavenly messianic
figure.6 This writer views these two dimensions as a continuum such that the God who will
manifested Himself and does not cease manifesting Himself in the course of history as Edmond
Jacob rightly argued.7 The expression of this OT Hope however differs among the different
Jewish traditions (including primarily the Pharisees, Saducees, and Essenes) with their plurality
of ambiguous and obscure eschatological beliefs.8 Paul, being a Pharisee, has an eschatological
background that is deeply rooted in the Pharisaic understanding of the issues with which
eschatology is concerned. For the fate of individuals, the picture painted in the Old Testament is
that of the dead descending to Sheol for an experience of its ‘shadowy life’– the abode of
righteous and evil men alike (1 Samuel 28:I9; Job 3:I7); a place of darkness (Job 10:22), where
the dead according to their tribes as in life (Ezekiel 32:17-32) receive the dying (Isaiah 14:9).
This ‘state of the dead’ expresses the conviction that human existence does not end with death. 9
5
Rudolf Bultmann, “History and Eschatology in the NT,” NTS 1 (1954-55): 5-16.
6
Geoffrey William Bromiley at el., The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1995), 132.
7
Edmond Jacob, Theology of the Old Testament (trans. Arthur W. Heathcote and Philip J. Allcock; New
York, Harper & Brothers, 1958), 318.
8
S. Sobanaraj, Diversity in Paul’s Eschatology: Paul’s View on the Parousia and Bodily Resurrection
(Delhi: ISPCK, 2007), 132.
9
Jacob, Theology of the Old Testament, 304.
3
The OT anticipates bodily resurrection (Isaiah 25:8; 26:19) and final participation of God’s
people in His kingdom (Daniel 12:2). As such, the major themes of Pauline Eschatology: life
after death (or life after life after death) and bodily resurrection are not Pauline creation, rather
The New Testament further develops the OT eschatological hope in its redemptive
message with phrases that highlight an even sharper contrast: ‘this (present) age’ and ‘the
coming age’ (or ‘age to come’) – a contrast arguably first made by Jesus. 11 The Synoptic Gospels
usher in this development by focusing on the themes of God’s Kingdom and Jesus’ messianic
mission in a manner that brings the fulfillment of the OT promises in the arrival of Jesus with a
consummation post-dated to an age to come. In other words, the OT Hope has found partial
realization in Jesus and an ultimate realization at the consummation of history. 12 Hence, the
Synoptic Gospels speak of ‘entering the kingdom in the present’ (Matthew 21:31; 23:15; Mark
12:34). The writer of the fourth Gospel, while engaging in the tension between futuristic and
realized eschatology found in the Synoptic Gospels seemed to focus more on the realized
eschatological perspective having little to say about the Parousia while substituting the Olivet
10
N. T. Wright, George Van Kooten and Oda Wischmeyer, “How Greek was Paul’s Eschatology, New
Testatment Studies 61.2 (April 2015): 239-253.
11
Bromiley at el., The International Standard Bible, 134.
12
Bromiley at el., The International Standard Bible, 134.
13
George Eldon Ladd, The Gospel of the Kingdom Popular Expositions on the Kingdom of God (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974), 334-335.
4
Understanding Pauline eschatology is central to understanding Pauline theology as a
whole. As Gordon D. Fee states that Paul’s perspective about end times absolutely determines
his theological outlook—how he thinks and talks about Christ, salvation, the church, ethics, the
9.1. Resurrection
Paul discussed future resurrection in more detail in response to rumors that some
Corinthians question the notion of bodily resurrection. The Corinthian converts, or at least some
of them, denied the future resurrection (1 Cor 15:13f.). So Paul emphasized that “the Lord
himself” will descend from heaven and resurrect all believers who had slept (1 Thess 4:16).
These believers, he calls the “dead in Christ” who, according to Paul, will be resurrected and rise
to meet Christ “in the clouds” and will “be with the Lord forever” (1 Thess 4:16-17). 15 As in 1
Thessalonians, he equated the future state of the living with that of the dead in Christ: they will
all be transformed (1 Cor 15:51-52). The change would make them like the risen Lord. ‘Just as
we have borne the image of the man of dust “Adam”, we shall also bear the image of the man of
heaven “Christ”’ (1 Cor 15:49).16 There would be a real transformation. ‘Flesh and blood cannot
inherit the kingdom of heaven’ (1 Cor 15:10). The chief characteristic of flesh and blood bodies
is that they are perishable, and the perishable cannot inherit what is imperishable (1 Cor 15:42,
50).17 Thinking of those who would still be alive when the Lord returned, he wrote that the
‘perishable nature must put on the imperishable, and this mortal nature must put on
immortality.’18 In Paul’s discussion of eschatology, the Christ event is the first in the series of
14
Gordon D Fee, Paul, the Spirit and the People of God, (Peabody: Hendrickson, 2001), 51.
15
Jouette Bassler, Navigating Paul: An Introduction to Key Theological Concepts (Louisville: Westminster
John Knox, 2007), 88.
16
Gordon D Fee, Paul, the Spirit, 149.
17
Ernest P. Sanders, Paul: A Very Short Introduction (New York: Oxford University Press, 1991), 41.
18
Ernest P. Sanders, Paul: A Very Short, 40-41.
5
events (1 Cor 15:20-26). Then there is a chronological sequence in the eschatological process:
Christ was raised first who is first one to be raised from the dead: the first fruit (aparche Vv.20,
23), then those who belong to Christ, i.e., both the living and the dead will be raised in a new
body, then comes the consummation of the Kingdom, when Christ becomes the Lord of all
(15:24). The last act in the eschatological process is the total vanquishing of death (15.26). Thus
The Day of the Lord (yôm YHWH) is a standard feature in OT prophetic literature, one
which Paul takes over and expands within his letters. 20 However, he creatively integrates this OT
hope with his own developing Christology (study of Christ), effectively transforming the “Day of
the Lord (Yahweh)” into the “Day of the Lord Jesus Christ.” The simple phrase “Day of the
Lord” (1 Thess 5:2); the phrase “Day of the Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Cor 5:5); “Day of Christ
Jesus” (Phil 1:6); “the Day” (1 Thess 5:4); and “that Day” (2 Tim 1:12). 21 This creativity stands
as one of the most important contributions within Pauline eschatology. This is a specific instance
where Paul appropriates language that belonged solely to Yahweh and applies it to the risen
Lord’s anticipated eschatological return, Jesus Christ. This language transfer is the result of
Christ’s having “the name” bestowed on him, so that the Day of Yahweh is now the day of the
return of the Lord, Jesus Christ, frequently expressed in terms of his appearing or coming
again.22 Therefore, the parousia of the Lord would be the chief event in the new understanding of
19
B. Varghese, Pauline Thought: An Introduction (Adoor: El-Shalom Publishers, 2008), 103-104.
20
L. J. Kreitzer, “Eschatology,” 208.
21
L. J. Kreitzer, “Eschatology,” 208.
22
Gordon D. Fee, Jesus the Lord according to Paul the Apostle (Michigan: Baker Academic, 2018), 174-
175.
6
the day of the Lord, and as in the Old Testament, this parousia would be an event of both
In Thessalonica, the church is having a major problem that some of their members who
have died before Christ’s return will miss out on the glorious parousia event. The word
“parousia” means coming, arrival, and presence. In Hellenism, it frequently serves to denote the
visit of dignitaries, kings, generals, etc., as well as the coming, the appearance of gods.24 The
term “parousia” has this technical meaning in Paul, the coming (parousia) of Christ (1 Cor
15:23), or of our Lord Jesus (1 Thess 2:19; 3:13; 4:15; 5:23; 2 Thess 2:1, 8). Paul responds to
their concern. He begins by acknowledging “those who have died” (1 Thess 4:13). 25 The ground
for confidence was that ‘Jesus died and rose again,’ and thus those who belonged to him, even if
they died, would be given life with him (1 Thess 4:14). 26 In the early Christian community, the
exaltation of the risen Christ carried with it an earnest expectation of his return of Christ in glory.
Moreover, One of the most interesting is the Greek transliteration of the Aramaic phrase
Maranatha found (1 Cor 16:22). Some dispute remains about how Maranatha should be divided
and separated and whether it should be understood as an invocation for the Lord to come
(marana tha, “Come, our Lord!”) or as a straightforward declaration that he has already come
(maran atha, “The Lord has come!”). In short, the ejaculation Maranatha is a prayer, uttered
within a liturgical context, that may call for the future parousia of the Lord.27 The early church
23
H. Ridderbos, Paul: An Outline of His Theology (trans. J.R. De Wittt (London: SPCK, 1982), 650.
24
D. E. H. Whiteley, The Theology of St. Paul (Oxford: Blackwell, 1964), 233.
25
L. J. Kreitzer, “Eschatology,” 206.
26
Ernest P. Sanders, Paul: A Very Short, 39.
27
L. J. Kreitzer, “Eschatology,” 209.
7
expects that Christ the Lord, who had ascended and thus had assumed the ultimate place of
9.4. Judgment
Paul develops the doctrine of Judgment clearly in Rom.2, where God will judge all
humans according to their works. To the righteous, he will give eternal life and wicked wrath and
fury (vv.6-10). Since God has performed his redeeming work through Christ, the basis of
judgment will be the gospel (Rom 2:16; 2 Thess 1:18). 29 Paul distinguishes between constantly
the plural, ‘works,’ and ‘work’ in Paul. By ‘works,’ he designates humans’ autonomous action,
by which humans can gain no standing before God (Rom 13:12) and the singular, which
describes the action of the Christian. Therefore Paul exhorts the Philippians that he who has
given a good work in you will complete it unto the day of Jesus Christ (Phil 1:6). 30 There is
within Paul’s letters a close association between the parousia of the Lord Jesus Christ and the
execution of final judgment. A classic example of this is found in 1 Thessalonians 3:13, where
declaration of the parousia is placed within a judgment context “before God.” In 1 Corinthians
3:12-15, Paul offers an extended passage about the final judgment, using an image of building
materials being tested by the purifying fires of “the Day” (1 Cor 3:13). In Romans 2:16, God is
said to judge the secrets of humankind by Christ Jesus. 31 Paul contrasts between the judgment of
unbelievers and that of believers. Unbelievers will be judged on account of their unbelief and
constant rejection of the gospel and the outcome is eternal doom and punishment, i.e., the
everlasting separation from God. Believers’ judgment is on account of the good works they
28
H Ridderbos, Paul: An Outline, 649-650.
29
S. H. Travis, Christ and the Judgment of God (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1987), 120.
30
B. Varghese, Pauline Thought, 105.
31
L. J. Kreitzer, “Eschatology,” 209.
8
performed during their lifetime, and the result is the issue of rewards according to the quantity of
their works (1Cor 3:12-15). The claim that we will all “appear before the judgment seat of God
or Christ” (Rom 14:10; 2 Cor 5:10) borrows the image of the public place (bēma) where officials
evaluated cases and made judgments. Christ’s ruling is the judgment of God.32 He prays that the
Philippians may be ‘pure and blameless’ on Christ’s day (Phil 1:10). Paul has already exercised
discipline on one member of the Corinthian community, hoping that he will be saved on the day
of the Lord (1 Cor. 5:1-5).33 By extension, the right of judgment is extended to the Christian
church acting as Christ’s agents. Thus Paul himself feels able to pass judgment on unethical
behavior (1 Cor 5:3-5) and exhorts the church to do the same (1 Cor 5:11-13). He even hints that
the saints will execute eschatological judgment over the world and the angels (1 Cor 6:2-3).34
Apostle Paul used eschatological language aimed at edifying the congregations. When the
question of the status of the believers who died at the parousia caused worry among the
Thessalonians because the feared that these people who have died prematurely have somehow
lost the hope of sharing the benefits promised to those who are living, Paul, in his response,
reminder of the unpredictability and suddenness of the day of the Lord which will come “like a
thief in the night” (1 Thess 5:1-2); he warns them to keep living such lives as is becoming of
“children of light” (1 Thess 5:3-9), and reaffirmation that believers in Christ – alive or asleep
during the Parousia – will not miss the event and they will live together with Christ forevermore
32
Michael J. Gorman, Reading Paul (Eugene: Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2008), 116.
33
Morna D. Hooker, Paul: A Short Introduction (Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 2003), 160-161.
34
Kreitzer, “Eschatology,” 210.
35
S. Sobanaraj, Diversity in Paul’s Eschatology, 369.
9
(1 Thess 5:10). So Paul urges believers to “encourage one another” and “build up each other” (1
Thess 4:18; 5:11). Paul also frequently uses eschatological language to sanction certain types of
behavior and this end-time language also helped him promote higher ethical values. The
eschatological language enabled Paul to standardize the conduct of the believers who were prone
to moral lack of discipline. In Galatians 5:21, after a list of vices, he claims that those who do
such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God. Besides, Paul believed that there would be a
Parousia and judgment of the world (I Thess 1:10; Rom 2:8). The believers, unlike the non-
believers will be saved on that day (Rom 5:10), but for those who have lapsed in their faith there
will be death and judgment (Rom 8:13). So according to Paul, we must be appeared blameless on
the day of our Lord Jesus Christ (Phil 1:10) and “to walk worthy of God who has called you in
his kingdom and to his glory” (I Thess 2:12). Paul finally, emphasizes that the Lord is with us
now. We no longer belong to ourselves (I Cor 6: 19) but our bodies and souls are belong to
Christ (I Cor 3:23). This demonstrates that we are required self-discipline and preservation.
Conclusion
eschatological perspective in which Jesus Christ’s death and resurrection are seen in some way to
inaugurate the long-awaited age to come. We also understand that Paul’s final revelation of the
eschatological age still lies in the future. The final redemption of the believer, the giving way of
the resurrection body, return of Christ and the final judgment are all events that are yet to be
awaited. The present is conditioned by both the past “death and resurrection of Jesus Christ” and
Bibliography
10
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(Summer 2005): 233-245.
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Allcock. New York, Harper & Brothers, 1958.
11
Ladd, George Eldon. The Gospel of the Kingdom Popular Expositions on the Kingdom of God.
Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974.
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12