Saturday, February 7, 2026

The Body Politic vs. The Body of Christ

The Body Politic vs. The Body of Christ:
Re-reading Paul through Union rather than Homonoia

Yung Suk Kim


The distinction between "unity" and "union" is more than a semantic nuance; it signifies a fundamental difference in political, social, and theological paradigms. While often used interchangeably, "union" refers to the act of joining or the state of being joined – a connection of distinct entities, often external, structural, or contractual. "Unity," conversely, denotes the state of being one, functioning as a single entity, or existing in harmony – a quality of oneness, often internal, spiritual, or emotional. The critical difference lies between the state of being (unity) and the act of joining (union), and between their implications for hierarchy and individual agency within each.

To better understand this relationship, one can conceptualize "oneness" along a spectrum: 

Type A: Organic/Voluntary Unity: This signifies a genuine harmony arising spontaneously from shared values and mutual respect. It cannot be forced and respects individual differences while finding common ground. It embodies the ideal state of collective well-being.

Type B: Structural Union: This describes a pragmatic "contract" where distinct entities agree to work together. It implies a system (laws, agreements) that binds them, allowing for pluralism and maintaining individual identities within a shared framework.

Type C: Hegemonic Unity: This represents a coercive imposition of a single will upon the many. It often disguises itself as Type A, but functions as a prison, claiming "We are one" to prevent dissent and enforce conformity.

This spectrum is particularly vital when examining the Pauline metaphor of the "Body of Christ" (soma christou) found in 1 Corinthians 12 and Romans 12. For much of its interpretive history, this metaphor has been understood through the lens of "unity," specifically the Greek concept of homonoia. Homonoia, often translated as concord, unanimity, or like-mindedness, was a cherished ideal in the Hellenistic world and particularly in the Roman Empire. It represented political and social cohesion, in which citizens were expected to align their wills and purposes for the good of the state. Within the Roman context, this often manifested as a rigid, hierarchical organism—a Type C Hegemonic Unity—where the "head" (Emperor, elite) guided the "limbs" (lower classes). Disagreement, dissent, or deviation from the established order was seen as a threat to this homonoia, jeopardizing the health and stability of the whole. This form of unity was frequently a tool of control, demanding conformity and assimilation, and framing resistance as a "disease" within the body politic. Indeed, the suspicion often directed at the rhetoric of unity is justified, as it can function as a "Trojan horse" for obedience.

However, a significant body of scholarship, including works such as Christ’s Body in Corinth and A Theological Introduction to Paul's Letters, offers a powerful and necessary corrective. By interpreting Paul’s body metaphor primarily through the lens of Structural Union (Type B) – a deliberate gathering of distinct members – and further asserting that this Union is animated by the Organic/Voluntary Unity (Type A) of shared faith and mutual care, this scholarship unlocks a radically different understanding of the early Christian community. This perspective directly subverts and rescues Paul from the anachronistic imposition of Roman imperial or Stoic hierarchical ideology (Type C), revealing a vision grounded not in coerced conformity, but in covenantal participation.

In this re-reading, the soma christou is not a monolithic entity enforcing homonoia (Type C), but rather a dynamic Union (Type B) of diverse individuals striving for Organic/Voluntary Unity (Type A). The "members" of the Corinthian community, gathered together, are not being subsumed into a singular, undifferentiated whole, nor are they being locked into a fixed caste system. Instead, they are entering into a profound relational bond. The "binding glue" for this Union is not the authoritarian decree of an earthly power or the erasure of cultural or social difference, but rather "Jesus's faith, love, and care." This central commitment facilitates a "spirit of mutual care," fostering the spontaneous harmony characteristic of Type A Unity, where differences are not erased but acknowledged and integrated within a shared purpose.

This shift in interpretation illuminates several critical aspects of Pauline theology:

1. The Dignity of Difference over Uniformity: 
The Roman ideal of homonoia (Type C Hegemonic Unity) often demanded uniformity as a precondition for unity; difference was a potential threat. In contrast, the "Union" model (Type B), animated by the desire for Type A Unity, celebrates difference as foundational. Paul’s intricate discussion in 1 Corinthians 12, where "the eye cannot say to the hand, 'I have no need of you'" (1 Cor 12:21), moves beyond mere functional utility. It becomes a testament to the inherent value and indispensable nature of each distinct part. This is not a call for assimilation, but for mutual recognition and interdependence among those who retain their unique identities. The "Union" protects and elevates its distinctiveness, allowing varied gifts and roles to flourish within a framework that fosters spontaneous harmony. This profoundly subverts the imperial demand for every subject to conform to a dominant cultural or social norm. In Christ’s Union, social distinctions like "Jew or Greek, slave or free" (Gal 3:28) do not vanish, but their hierarchical power within the community is dismantled, as all are equally "in Christ."

2. Love and Care as the Constitutive Element, not Coerced Consensus: 
The homonoia of the Roman world, while idealizing unanimity, often achieved it through the enforcement of hierarchical roles and the suppression of dissent (Type C). Paul's vision of the Body as a Union, however, is premised on radically different terms. His sharp critique of the wealthy in Corinth for shaming the poor during the Lord’s Supper (1 Cor 11) is not an appeal for abstract "unity," but a demand for tangible acts of love and mutual care. A true Christian Union cannot tolerate injustice and humiliation among its members. The "spirit of mutual care" is not a byproduct of unity; it is the very essence that defines and validates the Union itself, creating the conditions for Type A Organic/Voluntary Unity. If the Union fails to embody Jesus’s love and care, it ceases to be the Body of Christ and risks becoming merely another social gathering susceptible to worldly power dynamics.

3. Christ's Faith as the Unifying Covenant, not Human Authority:
In systems demanding homonoia (Type C), allegiance is typically owed to the earthly power that establishes and maintains the order. The stability of such systems rests on human authority and control. In the Pauline Union (Type B) aspiring to Type A Unity, however, the ultimate "binding glue" is "Jesus's work and his faith." The members are united not by their common submission to an earthly hierarchy, but by their shared participation in Christ’s salvific act. This flattens hierarchical structures within the community, as ultimate allegiance is directed towards Christ alone. This is reflected in Paul's emphasis on imitation, where he instructs followers to imitate him only "as I imitate Christ" (1 Cor 4:16, 11:1). The authority resides not in Paul, but in the Christ he proclaims, thereby establishing a Union centered on a divine covenant rather than human coercion.

Conclusion: 
The danger of "unity," particularly when it echoes the demands of homonoia (Type C Hegemonic Unity), is its potential to serve as a rhetoric for control, demanding conformity and silencing difference for the sake of an idealized, often hierarchical, order. When a leader or institution calls for unity, the critical question becomes: "Unity on whose terms?" If unity means "you must accept your place in the hierarchy for the good of the system," it is oppression, embodying the Roman/Stoic trap. By re-reading the soma christou as a Union (Type B) that actively strives for Organic/Voluntary Unity (Type A), we recover the radical counter-cultural ethos of the early Christian communities. It was a gathering of diverse individuals, brought into covenantal relationship not by imperial fiat or the erasure of their distinct identities, but by shared faith, love, and care emanating from Jesus Christ. This is not a unity of coerced sameness, but a union of profound and respected difference, where the "weaker" members are honored and sustained, fundamentally subverting the prevailing Roman political philosophy. In political philosophy, this is often why pluralism—the ability to live with disagreement—is championed over unity that demands the erasing of disagreement. A "Union" that respects pluralism and fosters voluntary harmony is thus often safer for the individual and more genuinely communal than a "Unity" that demands total conformity.


NOTES:
See my publications about this topic of the body of Christ:

Thursday, February 5, 2026

Super Bowl

This morning, I found myself reflecting on a cultural reality. Despite being a naturalized citizen, the frenzy surrounding the Super Bowl always reminds me that I am not originally from here. While I honor these cultural differences, I also recognize individual ones, be they in personality or speech. I have realized it is okay to live here amidst things I don't fully understand. I embrace the unfamiliar and the adventure of it all. I maintain who I am, while always being ready to evolve.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Reflection on Jesus: A Johannine Perspective

In popular Christianity, and among uninformed believers, Jesus is often reduced to little more than a superior Shaman—a figure expected to resolve any issue through magical power. Many babble empty phrases like "Jesus is everything" or "Jesus is the Way," asserting that there is no other path to salvation. They demand simple belief and worship, but in this context, faith becomes nothing more than a packaged product they purchase and think they possess. Consequently, they weaponize the gospel to invade or intrude upon others.

However, Jesus is not a Shaman of that sort. Declaring that "Jesus is everything" without substantial explanation is hollow. In the Fourth Gospel, Jesus never explicitly states, "I am God." His primary title is "Son of God," the one who does the work of God. It was a misunderstanding by his contemporaries to claim he blasphemed God; his point is always that he does the work of the Father as the one sent by him. He says, "I delivered the word (logos) of God," and explicitly states that the sender is greater than the one sent. 
Even when he says "the Father and I are one," this signifies not sameness, but a union with God, as he performs God's work.

He is the Son of God, sent to save the world by exemplifying the invisible word of God—truth, life, and light—within it. He was born to testify to the truth of God. The Johannine claim that "the Word became flesh" (John 1:14) does not necessarily suggest that God became Jesus or that Jesus is identical to God in a simplistic sense. Rather, the point is that the logos took the form of human flesh, specifically in the person of Jesus. This distinction suggests that the logos and the human Jesus are not synonymous; rather, the former is embodied by the latter. This is the hallmark of the Fourth Gospel, which was written so that people might believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God.

In John's Gospel, truth is not a possession; it is something experienced or manifested through following Jesus's teaching. His teaching points to the truth of God, insisting that God's word, or logos, must shine in the darkness.

With this Christological understanding, we can reinterpret the Gospel. All of Jesus's actions fulfill a specific mission: to do the work of God, not his own work, and to speak God's logos, not his own. Through this lens, John 14:6 ("I am the way...") can be reinterpreted not as an exclusive statement regarding salvation, but as a critical invitation to engage with Jesus's mission. It is a call to embody the truth, never meant simply to exclude other religions.

*For more of my works regarding John's Gospel:

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

The Three Dimensions of Life

To live fully is to exist at the intersection of three distinct dimensions: the celestial, the terrestrial, and the communal. When we look up, we find the stars' perspective—that vast, silent "upward" reach that reminds us of our smallness and our capacity for wonder. When we look below, we are grounded by the "downward" pull of the material world—the fruit, the grain, and the rhythmic flow of rivers that sustain our physical forms. Yet, it is the horizontal dimension that defines the quality of our days. While the sky gives us vision and the earth gives us substance, our relationships provide the meaning. We are not solitary pillars standing between heaven and earth; we are part of a vast, interconnected web where our survival and joy depend entirely on the person standing next to us. To be truly "alive" is to balance this vertical orientation with a wide-reaching lateral embrace, acknowledging that while we may dream in the stars and eat from the soil, we navigate the world heart-to-heart.

Moderate Accomplishment

Sometimes, a simple accomplishment upholds ourselves.
#Vuu #PantherPride

Monday, February 2, 2026

Jesus as a subversive storyteller

Jesus wasn't just a teacher of morals, but a subversive storyteller who challenged the status quo. His entire ministry hinged on one central inquiry: "What is the right thing to do?"

Threefold Theology of Paul

Dr. Yung Suk Kim’s "threefold theology" of Paul represents a significant shift from traditional Protestant interpretations. While traditional views often focus on a legal or forensic understanding of salvation, Kim’s approach is participatory and transformative. Refer to his book, A Theological Introduction to Paul's Letters: Exploring a Threefold Theology of Paul.
 
His primary departure lies in how he interprets the "genitives" (the "of" phrases) in Paul’s letters, reading them as subjective (describing the subject's action) rather than objective (describing the object of a person's belief).
 
1. The Righteousness of God (Dikaiosyne tou Theou)
-Traditional Protestant View: Often seen as a forensic status—a legal declaration by God that a sinner is "not guilty" based on faith alone.
-Kim’s Interpretation: He argues for God's participatory righteousness. It is not just a gift given to humans, but God’s own saving activity and justice that believers are invited to participate in.

2. The Faith of Christ (Pistis Christou)
-Traditional Protestant View: Usually translated as "faith in Christ"—the individual's act of believing in Jesus as Savior to receive justification.
-Kim’s Interpretation: He translates this as the "faithfulness of Christ". The focus shifts from the believer's mental assent to Christ’s own faithful obedience to God, which serves as the model and foundation for the believer's life.

3. The Body of Christ (Soma Christou)
-Traditional Protestant View: Typically understood as an organism metaphor emphasizing church unity and harmony among different members.
-Kim’s Interpretation: Kim views it as a political and ethical metaphor. He argues it was a critique of the "body politic" of the Roman Empire and powerful in-groups in Corinth. Instead of a call for uniform unity, he sees it as a mandate for solidarity with the marginalized and a celebration of diversity.
 
For a deeper dive into how he applies these concepts to modern social issues and the "politics of love": "Jesus and Paul within Judaism: The Good News of God."

METANOIA

POEM: Metanoia

https://drkimys.blogspot.com/p/roots-and-starlight-poetry-book.html
#poem #metanoia #yungsukkim #spirituality

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Birds are free!

Through my window, I noticed a flock of small birds foraging on the snow-covered, frozen yard and streets. They were busy finding food or perhaps enjoying the cold white snow; I wasn't sure which. I felt a wave of empathy. They came as guests, or a reminder that I shouldn't get stuck in my place. There is freedom out there. It seemed to tell me to go out and enjoy myself. But I couldn't, because it was a frozen world. There wasn't much I could do right now. Still, I would remember the lesson from the birds: that I can find freedom everywhere. Moments later, they all flew away together from me. They soared through the air and the cold wind. They were gone. I hoped they would continue to enjoy their lives. They are free.


Tuesday, January 27, 2026