EPHESIANS
Henry Clay was one of the greatest of American
statesman. He is often know as the great compromiser, the man
who, more than any other, worked to reconcile the opposing factions in
America prior to the civil war. Yet compromiser though he was,
Clay was also a man of principle. When warned that his stand on a
particular issue would cost him his chance at the presidency, he said,
"I would rather be right than president." At first, we might
think this a rather odd sentiment. The -average politician today
seems to prefer prestige and power to being right. And yet for
many people, maybe even most people, the need to be right is every bit
as deep and even deeper than the need for prestige and power. By
this I don't mean simply need to have correct opinions--need to have
approval of our own conscience, to be confident that the way we are
living our lives truly is right.
And yet it's not so easy--whenever we try to be
right, try to live our lives as we should, we end up blowing it.
Ovid, one of the greatest Roman poets, "I see the right, and approve it
too--I condemn the wrong, and yet the wrong pursue." One of
the ironies of the Roman world is that, although morality had in many
ways collapsed and society had become completely decadent, Roman people
in the midst of this were constantly searching for something that would
make them feel right--overcome the sense of guilt and shame that they
were not living their lives as they ought.
This is one of the reasons that Christianity had a
chance to succeed in the Roman world. The Romans were
looking--not necessarily for Christianity--but looking for something,
looking especially for something that could help them be right and feel
right.
This led to the rise (or rather the increasing
popularity) of what are called the "mystery cults."
Understanding these cults is difficult: to reveal secrets meant the
death penalty, a penalty rigidly enforced. Because of this, the
secrets, for the most part were kept secrets, and, even today, scholars
are unable to speak with confidence about the specific practices and
beliefs of even the most important of these mystery cults. Still, what
little we do know is helpful in understanding the Roman world at the
time of Christ, and often surprisingly helpful in explaining some of
the difficult passages of the New Testament. Particularly this is
true in the case of Paul’s letter to the Ephesians.
The mystery cults centered on a dying and rising god
or goddess. The Eleusinian mysteries celebrated the goddess
Demeter. The Dionysian mysteries celebrated Dionysius, as did the
Orphic mysteries. The mysteries drew on the basic stories of these
figures and on pagan mythology in general.
Pagan belief and teaching was very different from
most of our contemporary religions. Pagan belief was not
clear/consistent/coherent set of doctrines and practices we associate
with religion today, and no one really expected it to be. There
was no authority like the Bible. Various versions of the
myths--and actually this was a good thing for something that is meant
to be mysterious and hard to fathom. Nevertheless, the versions
you have heard of this myths are close enough, thought the high school
retellings often leave out key elements.
The pagan idea was that all things began with some
sort of primordial Chaos. Emerging from this Chaos, Gaia, the mother
goddess and Ouranos, the father god. Or, perhaps, it’s
Chronos that’s the father god. Or maybe Chronos is the son
of Ouranos and Gaia: the myths are simply not consistent. But
they have in common the idea of intense rivalry and conflict among the
pre-Olympian gods. The Cyclopes, Hundred-handers, Titans
battle it out with each other, with their father and mother, and,
eventually, with the Olympians. Zeus eventually emerges as the
chief of gods, but the rivalries and jealousies continue, aggravated in
part by Zeus promiscuity. Zeus fathers Dionysius on Persephone.
The Titans kill Dionysius and feast on his body. Zeus destroys
the Titans with his thunderbolt, saves the heart of Dionysius, which he
later uses to impregnate Semele. The pregnant Semele is destroyed
when she is tricked into asking to see Zeus in his glory, but Zeus once
again saves Dionysius, by taking the foetus, slicing open his thigh and
putting Dionysius inside to incubate until he can be born
again—Dionysius, then, is twice born. From the ashes of the
Titans and the parts of Dionysius body burned with them, Zeus creates
Man. We are created from a mixture of the Titans and Dionysius:
body and soul, good and evil.
The great goal of the mystery cults was to free soul
from body. Death alone was not enough to do this: one’s
soul was constantly reborn in a new body. The trick, then, was to find
a final escape from our bondage to the material world. Just as
Gnosticism promised its followers escape from the prison of the body,
so did each of the various mystery cults.
The Mysteries very hard to pin down. Only
initiaties could learn secrets. But the essence of the mysteries
a kind of conversion experience that took place in several stages.
1. Initial purification
2. Mystic communion/communication that involved
learning a sacred story (Dionysius, Demeter, Orpheus)
3. Sight of holy objects
4. Participating in certain rituals--everything from
castration to temple prostitution--tearing animals apart with hands.
5. Crowning with garlands of initiate and a welcome
to an exclusive community
6. An experience of happiness and enlightenment as a
result of communion with god
7. Assurance of an after-life of bliss reserved only
for initiates.
Keeping these general things in mind is very helpful
in understanding certain aspects of what Paul is doing in the book of
Ephesians.
Ephesus was one of the great cities of Mediterranean
world, a prosperous trading center in what is today Turkey.
Ephesus was prosperous also because it was a center of religious
pilgrimage (Image that fell from heaven: virgin goddess equivalent to
Greek Artemis/Roman Diana--following Bible, we call her Diana of the
Ephesians. Notice that this was intently religious city--maybe why
Christianity did so well there.
But there were some problems for the church in
Ephesus as well. Demetrius the silversmith stirred up an anti-Christian
mob who, in their enthusiasm, spent hours calling out "great is Diana
of Ephesians."
But more of a problem, the tendency of pagan
religion to religion to eclecticism. To be an initiate in the
Eleusinian mysteries was good. To have an additional initiation
into the Dionysian mysteries better. And to be initiated in to
the Orphic mysteries also, better still. Many in Ephesus
probably liked Christianity--but wanted to add it to everything else-
as an extra insurance policy.
What Paul does in Ephesians is present Christianity
as the mystery religion par excellence--the greatest of all mystery
religions. But he is doing this sort of tongue in cheek.
Want secrets? You’ve got the mystery of God’s will,
the mystery of the gentiles included in the kingdom of God, etc., the
mystery of the unsearchable riches of God (Eph. 1:9)
Want a sacred story? You’ve got the Gospel (Ephesians 1:13)
Want to become part of an elect group? Well, there’s the church (Eph.
2:4-6, 2:19-22)
Want a purifying ritual? You got the purification of the blood of
Christ (Eph. 2:13-16)
Want happiness and enlightenment? You’ve got the Holy Spirit
(Ephesians 1:13-19)
Want victory over death and assurance of eternal life? You’ve got
it.(Ephesians 2:1-6)
But, as I say, Paul is doing this all tongue in
cheek: Christianity is no mystery religion, there’s no
secretiveness about it. And Paul and those writing with him
almost certainly were amused no end as the pointed to the advantages of
Christianity over the mystery religions even in those things the
mystery religions most emphasized. Paul’s message: this is
the only mystery you need understand. (Cf. Chapter 3).
Now notice that what is said in these chapters goes
a long way toward making one feel right, and they are some of most
encouraging chapters in Bible in this regard. But the next step
is -to be right, i.e. to do those things that are right and pleasing to
God. This is what second half of Ephesians is all about (4:1, "I
therefore the prisoner of the Lord, beseech you that ye walk worthy of
the vacation wherewith ye are called.").
Groups: come up with standards.
Impressive standards in that they deal with root
causes of problems rather than just externals. Note the commands
to parents, children, husbands, wives, servants, lords, etc. Note
also the armor “panoply” of God.