From Chapter 10 of Christian Anarchy:
The embarrassment, then, becomes acute with the realization that the
early church lived in a society where the terrible injustice of human
slavery was common practice. Yet, rather than fighting or even
protesting this evil, the church apparently condoned it--and that not
only in the life of the larger society but even within its own circles.
And it follows that Paul's little letter to Philemon may represent the
greatest embarrassment of all. Here, circumstances as much as force the
apostle into a direct confrontation with the institution of slavery--and
he appears to poop out completely. He makes no move to protest the
injustice of the practice, speaks not one word in condemnation of
Philemon's being a slaveowner, makes not a hint of a witness to social
justice and human rights.
However, I read Philemon quite differently from what the
liberationists do. So I now undertake to establish this minuscule
missive as the very model of social justice accomplished through
distinctively Christian self-subordination. It is a picture of
liberation and social change so radical that the proponents of arky
justice haven't had a glimmer of what it's all about.
Philemon is a most frustrating book--a brief personal note that
doesn't begin to tell us what we need to know in order to understand it.
As much as we do know is this: Paul is writing to his friend Philemon
regarding Philemon's slave, Onesimus. Yet, although he belongs to
Philemon, Onesimus has just spent time with Paul and is now carrying the
letter from Paul to his master.
Philemon lives at Colossae and is a leader in the church there.
Whether there or somewhere else (the book of Acts never places Paul at
Colossae), Paul had apparently converted Philemon and become his close
Christian brother. There seems little doubt that Colossians--Paul's
letter to the church at Colossae--and this note to a private individual
in Colossae belong together. Most likely, Tychicus, one of Paul's
lieutenants, delivered the letter to the church, while Onesimus
delivered the note to his master (Col. 4:7-9).
At the time of his writing, Paul is in prison--although he isn't
thoughtful enough to tell us where. Because the matter has something to
do with the rest of the story, we are going to guess that he is in
Ephesus. (Acts never has Paul in prison in Ephesus, but it does have him
spending enough time in the city that an imprisonment would not be
incredible. It is not like Paul to stay out of jail for two years in a
row.) What makes Ephesus a good guess is that it is the major
metropolitan (and Pauline) center nearest the little town of Colossae,
about a hundred miles off. It is, accordingly, by far the likeliest spot
for a Collasian slave to try to lose himself--as well as have a chance
of coming upon Paul. Then too, it is the most likely spot from which
Paul would write that he hopes soon to be released and would Philemon
have a guest room ready for him (v.22).
Onesimus, we know, is Philemon's slaveboy ("my child, whose father I
have become" Paul calls him in v.10, which could make Onesimus as young
as a teen-ager). The name "Onesimus," by the way, is based on the Greek
root meaning "beneficial," "of benefit," or "useful." It is a name an
owner might well give to a slave in the hope of its influencing his
character. Paul does word play with the name in both verses 11 and 20.
Onesimus is Philemon's slave. Yet he has just been with Paul in
Ephesus rather than Philemon in Colossae. Paul opines that he has been
"useless" rather than living up to his name "useful" (v. 11). And
Onesimus's returning to Philemon raises questions as to how he will be
received. Only this much the letter actually tells us, but it can hardly
add up to anything other than "runaway." We don't know whether Onesimus
knew (or knew about) Paul and so sought him out through the Ephesian
church, or whether he just happened to be thrown into the same jail cell
with him. In either case, he is now not only a spiritual son but even a
working colleague of the apostle.
In the note Onesimus delivers, Paul is probably asking three things
of Philemon: (1) At the very least, he is asking that Onesimus be
received with kindness and forgiveness rather than with the treatment
customary for a runaway slave--legally, anything up through torture and
death. (2) Surely, he is also asking that Onesimus be released from
slavery ("no longer as a slave but more than a slave, as a beloved
brother"--v. 16). And (3) there are strong hints that Paul wants
Onesimus released to come back and serve with Paul at Ephesus (vv. 13,
20: "I want some benefit (some 'Onesimus') from you").
This is as much as the epistle itself can tell us. So let me now try an interpretation.
In running away from his master, the slave Onesimus was doing
precisely what modern revolutionism says he should do. He was moving to
effect his own liberation--get out from under terrable oppression and
claim the equity of being a freeman alongside Philemon. Although it was a
slave revolt of only one person, it was an entirely praiseworthy one--a
blow against gross injustice and a move toward a truly just society.
This is liberation theology--and a model of what all slaves should do.
So, far from feeling any sort of guilt, Onesimus should have been proud
of what he had done.
Of course, I don't know how Onesimus did feel, but let's
assume he felt good about his thrust toward freedom. Yet the evidence
would indicate that, particularly after he became a Christian and began
to learn from Paul, he started to have second thoughts. His way of
getting liberated did not leave him as free as he had expected. Running
away, he must now have sensed, left something to he desired as a freeing
action. Being a runaway slave is neither as secure nor as relaxed a
position as one might hope. Always to have to be looking over your
shoulder to see who is coming to get you can hardly be the truest sort
of freedom. And I wonder whether anyone can ever run away or lie or
cheat or kill--even in the name of freedom--without feeling pangs of
remorse and guilt in the process.
Further, as a Christian, Onesimus must have realized that his act of
freeing" himself had to have had a reverse effect on Philemon.
Onesimus's grab for equity inevitably would have created an adversary
alignment and made Philemon "the enemy," who now had been put down,
cheated, robbed of a valuable possession he undoubtedly had acquired in
all honesty. No, there were all sorts of things about Onesimus's new
freedom which just could not be right.
So, with Paul's help (although certainly not at his demand), Onesimus freely chose another method of liberation--that of voluntary, Christian self-subordination. He decided to go back, to exercise his freedom by giving it up, to save his life by losing it.
Think what this action had to mean for Onesimus. Here was a runaway
slave--guilty from every legal standpoint--offering to put himself at
the mercy of his offended master. His only defense is a scrap of paper
signed with what he hopes is the magic name, "Paul." It is hardly likely
that Onesimus stood afar off and sent Tychicus in with the note,
awaiting Philemon's response before deciding which way to move. Hardly.
Onesimus must have himself handed that note to Philemon, putting not
just his hard-won freedom but his very life into jeopardy and ready to
accept whatever might result--fully convinced that, whatever did result,
this was the only way to true freedom.
Consider, then, that Onesimus's original running away had not been a
truly free action--it was too much motivated by self-interest, too much
driven by self-serving needs and desires. It was rather his going back,
his voluntary subordination, his willingness to lose his life
for Christ's sake and the gospel--only this was free in a way no other
action could be.
Onesimus's earlier running away had not been a freeing action,
either. We already have imagined the side effects that led him to want
to undo that one. We can be certain, however, that his going back did
create all sorts of freedom. We can say that even without knowing how
Philemon responded--and bear in mind that we don't know. All we have is
the note; Scripture gives us not one word as to how it was received. And
this is how it should be. Onesimus's action was right, no matter what the consequences. My belief is that Onesimus would have wanted to
go back--would have felt himself freed in going back--even if he had
known ahead of time that he would be returning to slavery, torture, and
execution. Yet, even at that extremity, consider the freedoms that would
have ensued.
Through his act of repentance, reconciliation, restitution, and
asking forgiveness, Onesimus would have freed himself from the guilt of
his previous action. He would have freed his relationship to Philemon of
all its animosity, ill will, and adversarial conflict. And although it
does not figure into our customary calculations, don't assume that a
dead slave is for that reason unfree. Because he had acted as a child of
God, Onesimus had guaranteed for himself the coming revelation of what
his sponsor Paul called "the glorious liberty of the children of God."
What Paul wrote to the Galatians he could as well have addressed to his
Philemon-bound friend: "For freedom Chist has set us free;
stand fast therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery
[slavery to what the world calls 'freedom')." Most certainly, Onesimus
is included when Paul says, "For he who was called in the Lord as a
slave is a freeman of the lord." We have all sorts of arky-liberated
people running around who don't begin to know the sort of freedom
experienced by the Christian slaveboy who may voluntarily have gone to
his death.
Because the success of voluntary self-subordination is not measured
by its outward results, the story of Onesimus is right--is the very
model of Christian action--even though we don't know what consequences
there may have been. Yet this, of course, is not to suggest that the
outcome had to he that of enslavement and death. Indeed, the
probability is quite otherwise. Paul, apparently, was a rather good
judge of character; so, if he was reading his pal Philemon at all
correctly, then Onesimus likely was soon on his way back to Ephesus with
Tychicus. It would take a pretty tough nut to resist the blandishments
and loving arguments of Paul's most crucial effort in salesmanship. I
don't think there's a chance in the world that Philemon could have held
out against it. And finally--and to my mind most conclusive--is the fact
that the letter survived.
Think about it: If anything had happened to Onesimus other than his
being freed and sent on his way to Paul, who would have wanted to save
the letter? It was saved, obviously. So who would have wanted it? Well,
it belonged to Philemon, and he undoubtedly valued it. Yet my guess is
that (except for his Christian inhibitions) Onesimus would have knocked
him down and taken it, if Philemon had shown reluctance about giving it
up. After all, to Philemon it was a nice letter from a friend; to
Onesimus, however, it was his reprieve from death and charter of
freedom. In any case, that note was preserved for some period of years
until it could be incorporated as a one-of-a-kind entry in the New
Testament.
Is that the story? Well, maybe so and maybe not. New Testament
scholar John Knox is the one who ferreted out what may be its
continuation. We have to go clear beyond the New Testament now, but
there is more.
Fifty to sixty years after the most probable time of Paul's writing,
there was, in Syria, a Bishop Ignatius who was apprehended by the Romans
and escorted overland to Rome, where, eventually, he was tried and
executed. Because Ignatius was a prominent figure in the church, as his
party came to (or even close to) any Christian locales, the
congregations sent out representatives to visit and offer him
hospitality. After he arrived in Rome, then, Ignatius sent "thank you
notes" to a number of the churches that had hosted him. These
letters--dated about A.D. 110--have been preserved (not in the New
Testament, obviously, but as some of the earliest Christian literature
outside the New Testament). One of them is addressed to the church at
Ephesus; therein, Ignatius waxes eloquent about the welcome he had
received from the Ephesian delegation headed by their Bishop Onesimus.
Hold on! Don't go jumping to conclusions until I tell you; then we
can all jump to the conclusion at once. There is nothing in the way of
positive proof, and Onesimus is not a completely rare name. Yet the
place and timing are right. If our slaveboy went back to help Paul in
Ephesus, he could have worked his way up in the congregation and been a
seventy-some-year-old bishop at the time Ignatius came through.
Moreover, in the first six paragraphs of his letter, Ignatius names
Bishop Onesimus three times and refers to him eleven other times. And it
is in this same section of the letter (and not elsewhere) that scholars
also pick up subtle echoes of the language of Paul's letter to
Philemon--including one play on the word "benefit" that is almost
identical to Paul's. Apparently, Ignatius knows the Philemon letter and
is teasing its language into his compliments of Bishop Onesimus. You can
decide how conclusive that is in proving that Ignatius knows which
Onesimus the Ephesian bishop is, but I am ready to jump. Now!
Here, we must move beyond Ignatius, but the plot continues to
thicken. Scholars are pretty well convinced that the letters of Paul did
not come into the New Testament one by one, from here and there. The
greater likelihood is that someone became interested in Paul at an early
date and made inquiries among his congregations as to whether they had
any of his letters and would be willing to share copies. It would have
been, then, this earlier Pauline collection that was introduced into the
New Testament as a unit.
Where would such collecting most likely have taken place? Among the
Pauline congregations, Ephesus is as well situated and thus as good a
guess as any. And who is most likely to have been the moving spirit
behind such a project? Why not Bishop Onesimus?--he has as good a reason
for remembering and loving Paul as anybody (and a whole lot better
reason than most). But with this suggestion, now, we get a real nice
answer to one of the most troublesome questions regarding the epistle to
Philemon. Within the Bible, it is a unique specimen--a brief personal
note addressed to a private individual on a matter involving neither the
life of a congregation nor the teaching of the faith. So why should it
be in the New Testament? And how did it get there in the first place?
Without recourse to "Bishop Onesimus," I don't see that those
questions are answerable. With "Bishop Onesimus," they become easy. If
Onesimus is the collector of the Pauline corpus, he would, of course, be
eager that "his" letter be part of it. Likewise, the Ephesian
congregation would very much want this letter included, as a
gesture of respect and gratitude--and a matter of record--regarding
their own slaveboy bishop. The very presence of the letter within the
New Testament canon may be the strongest proof that the Ephesian bishop
of A.D. 110 is indeed the very same person as Philemon's slave.
Earlier--under the possibility that Onesimus actually was returned to slavery and executed--we portrayed the minimum of freedom, liberation, and justice that might have resulted from his going back. Now--whether or not it is the maximum--we
have portrayed just how incredibly far God may have taken that
slaveboy's Christlike decision to take up his cross and go back. And
Onesimus's personal rise in equity from slave to bishop is only a
starter. The Ephesian congregation seems to have received the godly
leadership that not only made it a strong church but may even have
spelled its survival into the second century (it is not evident that all
of Paul's congregations lasted so long). Most of all, it may be that
God used Onesimus's going back to give us the Pauline one-fourth of our
New Testament and so preserve an understanding of the faith that has
been of untold value in the life and history of the church to the
present day. When God is in the picture, who's to say how "useful" one
"Onesimus" can be?
But more! I am ready to say that--in a proleptic, representative
way--the example of Onesimus marks the truer freeing of more slaves than
all the emancipation proclamations ever proclaimed and all the class
warfare ever warred. In this case God sounds the death knell of slavery
(all sorts of slavery) for the whole of creation for all time. There is
not the slightest doubt that the Christian church--the Onesimian
church--went on to become the greatest force for freeing slaves the
world has ever seen. And it strikes me that the Onesimian method of
ending slavery is the only sure method of doing so. The secular way of
"revolutionary arky contest" may be quicker and more spectacular, but it
is also far less dependable, carrying all sorts of negative side
effects. Emancipation proclamations and civil wars may create a degree
of justice and eliminate some aspects of slavery. But they also create
all sorts of animosities and hatreds, leave battlefields strewn with
corpses, and take us out of slavery only to put us into Jim Crow.
The Onesimian approach is much the more powerful. It may take a
while, but no slaveholder can forever hold out against the loving
persuasions of a Paul, the loving self-sacrifice of an Onesimus, or the
loving Spirit of an Almighty God. That owner actually has a much better
chance of resisting political pressure and the violence of class
warfare. Moreover, the Onesimian way, rather than demanding the
denunciation and destruction of the moral dignity of the slaveholder;
offers him a gracious way out. Onesimus was liberated without Philemon's
having to be demeaned in the process. Best of all, of course, to go
Onesimian leaves everyone involved--slave, owner, and apostle--as
brothers in Christ. The side effects are all positive, without a trace
of contention's negativity.
Yet the most essential distinction, I suggest, is this: The political
struggle for liberation is posited wholly on human wisdom, idealism,
and moral ability. It thinks there is only one way.... It operates in a
closed system that neither seeks nor expects anything more than its
human methodology can be calculated to achieve--though seldom do the
final results come to even that much. Human beings (and especially
well-intentioned doers of good) are noted for overestimating the power
of their own piety.
With Onesimus, things are quite otherwise. Because his was a theological action taken at the behest of God, in the service of God, through the Spirit of God, with the enablement of God, and to the glory of God--this
action invited God in and urged him to make of it what he would. The
results? Completely incalculable--even to the preserving of the Pauline
gospel for the ages. There is absolutely no telling how much good, how
much social change, how much freeing of slaves, how much gospel, how
much kingdom, might follow from an Onesimian laying down of One's life
for God.
Finally, then, consider how totally Onesimus's was "another way"--an
anarchical way bearing no likeness at all to the accepted arky method of
skinning cats. Not one of the characteristics of arky faith is to be
found.
To be sure, slaves are freed and the classless society is formed.
Yet, throughout, each of the principals (slave, owner, and attendant
theologian of liberation) acts and is acted toward simply as the human
individual he is--brothers three, only that and nothing more. No one
(least of all the theologian directing the action) tries to use Onesimus
as symbol of the "oppressed but righteous poor" whose consciousness of
injustice must be raised to the point that he will join the class
struggle. Paul, rather, convinces him to quit "fighting it" and go
back--even into slavery. No one (least of all the theologian directing
the action) tries, conversely, to use Philemon as a symbol of "the evil,
oppressing, slaveholding class," exposing his injustice as a means of
recruiting class warriors to fight against him. No one (least of all the
theologian directing the action) has any interest in anybody's fighting
anybody, in even seeing the matter as an adversary alignment.
The problem of human slavery is, of course, a political one. But our "theologian of liberation," being truly a theologian, says, "There just has to be more than the one political way of skinning this cat (i.e., the way that is limited to human probabilities and possibilities). Let us act theologically
(i.e., in a way that both obeys God and, at the same time, invites him
into the action). Let's try it that way--and see where God chooses to
take it."
So they did. And so He did. And just see how far it went. You know, it's true: There is more than one way -Eller, link
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