Paul and Pseudepigraphy (Pauline Studies, Book 8)

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christology, greco-roman religious piety 231


to call the righteous, but sinners”),45 mark 2:17 (“those who are well have


no need of a physician, but those who are sick. i came not to call the righ-


teous, but sinners”),46 luke 19:10 (“the son of man came to seek and save


the lost”),47 a saying of Jesus in the fourth gospel (e.g., “for this purpose


i was born and for this purpose i have come into the world,” John 18:37),48


or the Johannine Corpus as a whole.49 marshall correctly notes that ἦλθεν


and σῶσαι are reminiscent of luke’s ἦλθεν γὰρ ὁ υἱὸς τοῦ ἀνθρώπου ζητῆσαι


καὶ σῶσαι τὸ ἀπολωλός (luke 19:10).50


the theological point of 1 tim 1:15 is also at issue. some say the state-


ment emphasizes Christ’s pre-existence (“Christ Jesus came”)51 or incar-


nation (“Christ Jesus came into the world”).52 others think the focus is on


salvation as universal (“to save [gentile] sinners”) rather than exclusive


(Jews alone).53 still others think the statement has to do with salvation


being present and future.54 according to towner, for instance, it is not


that Christ “came” (past tense) but that Christ “comes” (gnomic aorist)


to save each generation of unbelievers; he comes to the community of


humankind in need of salvation.55


regardless, the salvific purpose of Christ’s entrance into human history


is clear. first timothy 1:15 explicitly connects redemption to the incarna-


tion, making a profound Christological statement thereby. Jesus’ earthly life


and ministry is condensed into a single saving event: “Christ came into the


world to save sinners.” the salvific purpose of Christ’s entrance into human


history is personal. first timothy 2:15b–16 details Paul’s own experience on


the road to damascus: “Christ came into the world to save sinners of which


I [Paul] am the foremost” (1 tim 1:15b). the text recalls how Paul persecuted


the church, albeit out of ignorance, and how Christ saved him instead of


45 oden, First and Second Timothy and Titus, 42.
46 roloff, Der Erste Brief an Timotheus, 90–91.
47 o. michel, “grundfragen der Pastoralbriefe,” in m. loeser (ed.), Auf dem Grunde der
Apostel und Propheten: Festgabe für Theophil Wurm (stuttgart: Quell, 1948), 86; Brox, Pas-
toralbriefe, 111; Kelly, Pastoral Epistles, 54; oberlinner, Die Pastoralbriefe, 43.
48 guthrie, Pastoral Epistles, 15.
49 Collins, 1 & 2 Timothy and Titus, 39–40.
50 marshall, Pastoral Epistles, 397.
51 marshall, Pastoral Epistles, 398; mounce, Pastoral Epistles, 55.
52 Knight, Pastoral Epistles, 102; fee, 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, 53.
53 Quinn and Wacker, The First and Second Letters to Timothy, 134; mounce, Pastoral
Epistles, 57.
54 Kelly, Pastoral Epistles, 54.
55 towner, 1–2 Timothy and Titus, 146; cf. liefeld, 1 and 2 Timothy/Titus, 72; hasler, Timo-
theus und Titus, 16, 56; stott, 1 Timothy and Titus, 53; marshall, Pastoral Epistles, 398; fee,
1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, 53.

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