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Paul, the Spirit, & the People of God by Gordon Fee

Our Comments

In Paul, the Spirit, and the People of God, Gordon Fee is addressing the subject of the Holy Spirit from the writings of the apostle Paul.  Fee has written it in such a way that it will cross denominational boundaries and benefit the whole body of Christ.  
We invited Dr. Fee to speak at a conference on the Holy Spirit which we sponsored.  We spread his book throughout our community to Pentecostals and non-Pentecostals alike, and it received a warm reading in all circles.  Similarly, there were people from varying denominational backgrounds who came to hear Dr. Fee speak on the subject of the Holy Spirit.  We continue to promote the approach given by Dr. Fee in this book as an approach that will bring greater unity in the body of Christ on the issue of the Holy Spirit.

Book Information

Paul, the Spirit, and the People of God
Gordon D. Fee
© 1996 by Hendrickson Publishers, Inc.
Paperback - 208 pages
$9.75

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Paul, the Spirit, & the People of God
by Gordon Fee

Table of Contents

 Preface

Overture--An Invitation to Read Paul Anew

1. A "Theology" of the Spirit?
The Spirit in Pauline Theology

2. God Revisits His People-
The Spirit as the Renewed Presence of God

3. The Holy Who?
The Spirit as Person

4. God in Three Person-
The Spirit and the Trinity

5. The Beginning of the End-
The Spirit as Evidence of the "Presence of the Future"

6. A People for His Name-
The Spirit and the People of God

7. Conversion: Getting In (Part 1)-
The Spirit and the Hearing of the Gospel

8. Conversion: Getting In (Part 2)-
The Spirit at the Entry Point

9. Conversion: Staying In (Part 1)-
The Spirit and Pauline Ethics

10. Conversion: Staying In (Part 2)-
The Fruit of the Spirit

11. The Ongoing Warfare-
The Spirit Against the Flesh

12. Power in Weakness-
The Spirit, Present Weakness, and Prayer

13. To the Praise of His Glory-
The Spirit and Worship

14. Those Controversial Gifts?
The Spirit and the Charismata

15. Where to from Here?
The Spirit for Today and Tomorrow

Appendix-- Spirit Baptism and Water Baptism in Paul

Scripture Index

Preface

This book has had a checkered history. It is the book I had hoped to write some years ago at the invitation of Hendrickson Publishers, when they approached me to "expand slightly" the article on the Holy Spirit in the Pauline letters that appeared in the Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1988). To my great surprise I discovered while writing this article that there was no book available on this subject. So I set out to write a book that would fill this gap.

But I was also anxious to support the conclusions set forth in the dictionary article. So I decided that I needed to give full and careful exegesis to every Pauline text that mentioned the Spirit or the Spirit’s activity. The result, God’s Empowering Presence (Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson, 1994; henceforth GEP), was a massive tome, full of (necessary) detail and careful argumentation.

Thus the first go around resulted in a book targeted primarily for scholars and pastors, and attempted to bring some balance in our presentations of Pauline theology. Even though broad lip service has been paid to the Spirit’s rather significant role in Pauline life and thought, New Testament scholarship in general and Pauline scholars in particular have greatly marginalized that role. I wrote GEP in part to address that situation.

What led to this presentation of the material has been my fear that Paul’s own urgencies—as I perceive them—might have been buried under either the sheer weight of the first book or the catalogue-like presentation of the theology in the final four chapters.

This book attempts to make that material more accessible to a wider audience. It is not simply the "big book" reprinted without the over seven hundred pages of exegesis. Rather, even though most of the content that appears here is from GEP, I have largely rewritten and reordered it so that my own urgencies are more clearly in focus. For the exegetical basis of much that appears here, the reader is regularly referred to the appropriate pages of GEP.

All of this has been helped along the way by three people. First, Patrick Alexander of Hendrickson Publishers, who edited the first book, has persistently encouraged me to take the time to write this one. Second, Chris Armstrong was asked by Hendrickson to do an initial rewrite of chapters 1 and 12-16 of GEP in order to make the material more reader friendly. His suggestive rewriting has served as the basis for much of this book. Third, Wendy Zoba of Christianity Today pursued the possibility of my condensing the conclusions of GEP into a magazine-length article. In attempting to do so, I finally came to terms with my urgencies and priorities for the present volume.

To give the reader an idea as to what drives this book, I here spell out those urgencies (slightly modified from the form I first presented to Wendy):

    1. The bottom line is something that is probably picked up only at the end of GEP, namely, the generally ineffective witness and perceived irrelevancy of the church in Western culture. Here, it seems to me, is where the real difference between Paul and us emerges, where in a culture similar to ours the early believers seem to have been more effective than we are. I am convinced this is due in large part to their experience of the reality of the Spirit’s presence.
    2. This is the concern, then, that makes me uncomfortable with the sometimes either/or approach to the Spirit (between "gifts" and "fruit") that appears to mark much of contemporary Christianity. The Spirit was an empowering presence for the early church, and power had to do with fruit, witness, and gifts.
    3. Crucial to this experience was the early church’s understanding of the Spirit as the fulfillment of Jewish hopes of the return of the divine presence (hence the utter importance of the temple imagery in Paul). What this meant for early Christians was that the Spirit was not only the personal presence of God in and among them (both individually and corporately) but that their understanding of God had to be broadened so as to become trinitarian. Although he did not use this kind of language, Paul’s new understanding of existence (as being in Christ) was thus fully trinitarian at its core.
    4. Equally crucial to the experience of the Spirit was the early church’s self-understanding as "thoroughly eschatological," in the "already/not yet" sense. The first believers really believed that the future had begun, being attested by the gift of the outpoured Spirit, who also served as the guarantee of the future consummation.
    5. At the heart of this new understanding was their perception of themselves as the newly constituted people of God. The goal of salvation in Christ, the core of Pauline theology, was that God should create "a people for his name." And the gift of the eschatological Spirit (the Spirit who served as the evidence that the future had come and the guarantee of its consummation) lies at the heart of such salvation. Central to their new understanding was that one now entered the people of God individually—through faith in Christ and especially through the experienced reality of the Spirit.
    6. Although persons individually became members of the people of God, the goal was not simply to fit individuals for heaven but to create a people who by the power of the Spirit lived out the life of the future (the life of God himself) in the present age. The "fruit of the Spirit," therefore, while effected through individual participation, has primarily to do with the life of the community—as does Paul’s ethics in general.
    7. The "doxological Spirit," who is now the key player in the worship of the newly constituted people of God, also gifts the people so that both in their gifting as such and in the diversity of that gifting, the whole body will be built up to live its new eschatological existence while believers await the final coming of God.

This personal, powerful, experience of the eschatological Spirit not only transformed them individually but made them effective in their being the people of the good news in pagan Greco-Roman culture. And this is why I think they had the better of it, and why we would do well to recapture something of that reality.

This earlier communication of my concerns has served as the basic outline for what follows.

I need to thank four others who read the entire manuscript and offered many helpful suggestions to improve the content and to make it more reader friendly: my present teaching assistant, Den Pinter, who also created the Scripture index; my daughter—

and present student at Regent College—Cherith Nordling; my son Mark, who read it through the eyes of a pastor for the sake of his people; and especially my wife, Maudine, who patiently worked through the whole to remove some of the "fat" and the "professorial talk," and whose own turns of phrase I borrowed from time to time. I gladly dedicate it to her, my wonderful friend and companion, in this our fortieth anniversary year.

A few further notations about unusual usages, derived from my work on GEP, should also help the reader.

First, despite some (expected) objections, I continue to base my theology of Paul on all thirteen of the canonical letters attributed to him. Those who have objected have yet to do so in a way that convinces me to do otherwise.

Second, most lists of references follow what I perceive as the chronological order of these letters: 1 and 2 Thessalonians, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Romans, Philemon, Colossians, Ephesians, Philippians, 1 Timothy, Titus, 2 Timothy.

Third, translations that are not noted (NIV, NRSV, etc.) are my own, although at times I have only slightly altered existing translations.

Fourth, in chapter 2 of GEP I offered a somewhat technical overview of all uses of pneuma ("Spirit/spirit") and pneumatikos ("spiritual") in the Pauline corpus. Two conclusions that affect translation and usage are noted here for the sake of the present reader.

  1. In some places it is extremely difficult to distinguish between Paul’s own "spirit" and the role of the Holy Spirit. For example, when he says in 1 Corinthians 14:15, "my pneuma prays, "the context makes it certain that Paul intends something like, "the Holy Spirit prays through my own spirit." I have translated such usages with the inelegant "S/spirit," in order to preserve the ambiguity as well as to point to the role of the Spirit in such passages.
  2. The evidence is overwhelming that Paul, quite in keeping with first-century usage, never intended pneumatikos to refer either to the human spirit or to some vague idea like "spiritual," which in English serves as an adjective meaning "religious," "nonmaterial," "spooky," "nonsecular," or "godly." In every instance in Paul its primary referent is to the Holy Spirit, even when contrasted with "material blessings" in 1 Corinthians 9:11. Thus I regularly capitalize this adjective (Spiritual; cf. Spirituality) when I use it in the Pauline way; "spiritual" occurs when it is used in a more contemporary way.

Fifth, one of the shortcomings of this book is that I have not tried to compare Paul with the other writers of the New Testament. My aim has been to hear Paul on his own terms. Hopefully, it will stand alongside other books of its kind: by Gary Burge (for John); James Shelton (for Luke-Acts); and Gerald Hawthorne (for Jesus).

Finally, the writing of GEP has transformed my own life. I have been gratified—and humbled—to learn from a goodly number of others, by letter, phone, or personal conversation, that reading the exegetical portions of that book has enriched them. I offer the present version of this material with the fervent prayer that it may have a similar effect on many who read it.

Epiphany 1996

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Overture

An Invitation to Read Paul Anew

One reads Paul poorly who does not recognize that for him the presence of the Spirit, as an experienced and living reality, was the crucial matter for Christian life, from beginning to end.

Contemporary Christians have a right to be concerned. In as increasingly secular, individualistic, and relativistic world-dubbed "post-Christian" in the 1960s and now called "postmodern" -the church is regularly viewed as irrelevant at best and Neanderthal at worst. Frankly, much of the fault lies with the church, especially those of us in the church who pride ourselves in being orthodox with regard to the historic faith. For all too often our orthodoxy has been either diluted by an unholy alliance with a given political agenda, or diminished by legalistic or relativistic ethics quite unrelated to the character of God, or rendered ineffective by a pervasive rationalism in an increasingly nonrationalistic world.

But there is reason for hope as well since contemporary post-modernism looks much like the culture of the Greco-Roman world into which the gospel first appeared some two thousand years ago. The secret to the success of the early believers in their culture lay first with their "good news" centered in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Immanuel had come, bringing both revelation of the character of God ("Have you been with me for so long and don't know who I am? The one who has seen me has seen the Father," John 14:9) and redemption from our tragic fallenness ("You shall call his name Yeshua, for he will save his people form their sins," Matt 1:21). But their success also lay with their experienced life of the Spirit who made the work of Christ an effective reality in their lives, thus making them a radical alternative within their culture.

It often seems otherwise with us. If we have (rightly) kept our central focus on Christ Jesus, we are less sure about the Holy Spirit. Despite the affirmations in our creeds and hymns and the lip service paid to the Spirit in our occasional conversations, the Spirit has been largely marginalized both in the halls of learning and in the life of the church as a community of faith.

I do not mean that the Holy Spirit is not present; he is indeed, or we are not of Christ at all. But the primary emphasis regarding the Spirit's activity has been on his quiescence, based largely on imagery drawn from Elijah's encounter with God on Sinai, where the Lord was not in the wind, earthquake, and fire, but came to Elijah "in a still small voice" (1 Kgs 19:11-13 KJV). Support for this view is then found in the New Testament by emphasizing Paul's "fruit of the Spirit" in 1 Corinthians 12-14 were for the apostolic period only. Quiescence, however, has sometimes fostered anemia, not only in the church corporately but also at the individual level, evidenced in part by the myriad of ways individual believers have longed for a greater sense of God's presence in their lives.

This common "missing out" on the Spirit as an experienced, empowering reality has frequently been "corrected" historically through a variety of Spirit movements-most recently in this century in the form of the Pentecostal and charismatic movements. Emphasis here has been on the "wind, earthquake, and fire," and the primary texts are from Acts and 1 Corinthians 12-14. These Spirit movements have also tended to emphasize sometimes merely experienced in the experience. Such piety has frequently lacked sound exegetical basis or betrayed inadequate theological reflection.

The net result has tended toward a truncated views of the Spirit on both sides, accompanied by an inadequate view of the role of the Spirit in Paul's understanding of things Christian. For him life in the Spirit meant embracing both fruit and gifts simultaneously and vigorously-what I have come to call life in the radical middle. The Spirit as an experienced and empowering reality was for Paul and his churches the key player in all of Christian life, from beginning to end. The Spirit covered the whole waterfront: power for life, growth, fruit, gifts, prayer, witness, and everything else.

But if the empowering, experienced dimension of life in the Spirit is often missed on the one side, too often missing on both sides are two further matters that, for Paul, lie at the very heart of faith. First, the Spirit as person, the promised return of God's own personal presence with his people; second, the Spirit as eschatological fulfillment (see ch. 5 below), who both reconstitutes God's people anew and empowers us to live the life of the future in our between-the-times existence-between the time of Christ's first and second coming.

If the church is going to be effective in our postmodern world, we need to stop paying mere lip service to the Spirit and to recapture Paul's perspective: the Spirit as the experienced, empowering return of God's own personal presence in and among us, who enables us to live as a radically eschatological people in the present world while we await the consummation. All the rest, including fruit and gifts (that is, ethical life and charismatic utterance in worship, serve to that end.

Hence I offer this "invitation" to read Paul afresh, to recognize the crucial role of the Spirit in his life and thought, and in that of his churches. Such a reading, I insist, must be thoroughly exegetical-hence the frequent references to the exegesis presented in GEP-
and fully theological, to see how the Spirit fits into the bigger picture of things Pauline. This fresh reading of Paul will make clear that for him the presence of the Spirit, as an experienced and living reality, was the crucial matter for Christian life, from beginning to end. Since that is a theological assertion, some preliminary theological issues must first be addressed in chapter 1. I encourage readers not to get bogged down here. The chapter is necessary in order to establish a reference point for the rest of the book.

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"In Paul, the Spirit, and the People of God, this Pentecostal scholar has redefined the terms of the discussion about the Holy Spirit in a way that transcends today's paradigm of 'charismatic' or 'noncharismatic' orientation. His words are a strong reminder of what God, through his Holy Spirit, intends the church to be….His work is an attempt to point us back to the Bible and reinvigorate our own vision of bow the Spirit mobilizes the community of believers in the local church."

Wendy Murray Zoba
Associate Editor
Christianity Today

"Gordon Fee, one of our truly master exegetes, has put steel and sinew into the words Spirit, spirit, and spiritual-words that have become flabby through subjectivizing indulgence and lack of exegetical exercise. His accurate, fresh, and passionate recovery of the place and meaning of Spirit in Paul and for us Christians is a provocative stimulus and reliable guide to the recovery of the experienced presence of God in our lives. For those of us who want to live in continuity with all that has been revealed in Jesus and given in the Spirit, this is an eminently practical book."

Eugene H. Peterson
James Houston Professor of Spiritual Theology
Regent College

"Gordon Fee is one of the finest Bible expositors I have known. Whenever he speaks and writes, I listen, and recommend you do the same."

Chuck Colson
Prison Fellowship Ministries

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