Paul's point is not that the church is the body of Christ but that "you (ὑμεῖς, plural "you") are the Christic body." The key is the ethical union with Christ, not merely existential or mysterious relationships with him. That is, the Corinthians must follow Christ and honor one another. Then, they can maintain a Christ-like community. Christ is not the owner of the church, but its foundation. The point is not mere membership to the church but impregnable participation in Christ and his faith. --From my talk on "Deconstruction and the body of Christ"
Friday, December 9, 2022
Meditation on 1 Cor 12:12-27: Deconstruction and "the Body of Christ"
Friday, November 18, 2022
Cross-cultural Wisdom
-Jesus: “In everything do to others as you would have them do to you, for this is the Law and the Prophets" (Golden Rule, Matt 7:12).
-Hillel: "What is hateful to you, do not do to others. This is the whole Torah, and the rest is commentary" (Talmud Shabbat 31a).
-Confucius: Zi Gong asked: “What is the single word that we can take as a moral guide for our whole life?” Confucius said, “Is it not reciprocity? What you don't desire don't impose on others” (Analects 15:24). 子貢問曰。有一言而可以終身行之者乎。子曰。其恕乎。己所不欲、勿施於人。
Human-centered thought:
-Jesus: “The Sabbath was made for humankind and not humankind for the Sabbath" (Mark 2:28).
-Confucius: The person unfolds the way; it is not the way that unfolds the person" (Analects 15:29). 子曰。人能弘道、非道弘人。
Thursday, November 3, 2022
2 Corinthians: Contextual Critical Commentary
1:1–2 Salutation
1:3–11 Blessing and Thanksgiving
1:12—2:13 Reflection and Advice
7:5–16 Joy of Ministry
13:11–13 Final Greetings
2:14—7:4 A Letter of Defense of Paul’s Ministry
2:14–17 Thanksgiving
3:1–18 Ministers of the New Covenant
4:1—5:10 Assurance of the Gospel
5:11–21 Ministry of Reconciliation
6:1—7:4 Exhortations
8:1–24 A Letter of the Collection
9:1–15 Another Letter of the Collection
10:1—13:10 A Letter of Tears
10:1–18 Defense of Paul’s Ministry
11:1–15 False Apostles
11:16–33 The Fool’s Speech
12:1–13 Weakness and the Power of God
12:14—13:10 Final Appeal
Wednesday, November 2, 2022
The Surgeon General’s Framework for Workplace Mental Health and Well-Being
Monday, October 31, 2022
Paul's Gospel, Empire, and Race/Ethnicity: Through the Lens of Minoritized Scholarship
Yung Suk Kim
Part I. Paul, Gospel, and Empire
2. The Politics of Interpretation: Paul’s Gospel, Empire, and Race/Ethnicity
Yung Suk Kim
3. Paul the Apostle of the Nations and Pedro Albizu Campos, the Apostle of Puerto Rican Independence: A Comparative Study of Empire & Resistance
Efraín Agosto
Part II. Paul, Empire, and Race/Ethnicity
4. “Let This Mind Be in You”: Paul and the Politics of Identity in Philippians—Empire, Ethnicity, and Justice
Demetrius K. Williams
5. Mainstreaming the Minoritized: Galatians 3.28 as Ethnic Construction
Sze-kar Wan
Part III. Paul, Empire, and Community
6. The Pursuit of Impossible Hospitality: Reading Paul’s Philoxenia with Jacques Derrida
Jeehei Park
7. From Alienation to Inclusion: Reading Romans 3:21-26 from a Diaspora Lens
Ekaputra Tupamahu
Wednesday, October 19, 2022
New Testament Theology
Paul deals with sin's problem in Romans. It may be overcome when persons die to it through "the body of Christ" (Rom 6:4). Here, "the body of Christ" may be understood as Christ's crucifixion. In other words, through the way of Christ who lived faithfully to embrace the love and justice of God, one can live away from sin or its power. Otherwise, Paul never says that Christ's death alone resolved sin's problem. Rather, Paul's logic is because Christ died, all who follow Jesus have to die with him. Then sin's power will be dismissed. Paul says in 2 Cor 5:14: "For the love of Christ urges us on, because we are convinced that one has died for all; therefore all have died." For more see Rereading Romans from the Perspective of Paul's Gospel or Rereading Galatians from the Perspective of Paul's Gospel. Jesus's death is the result of his faithful obedience to God, which means the cost of demonstrating God's righteousness (Rom 3:22). Also, see my latest book: How to Read Paul.
The Johannine Jesus is portrayed highly as close to divine. But the Fourth Gospel never claims that Jesus is God. Rather, Jesus says the one who sent him is greater than he. Also, he always makes it clear that he does the work of God. He does not do his work. His primary identity is the Son of God. Even when he says "the father and I are one," this does not mean that he is the same as God. It means "union" relationship between the two. If I say our family is one, it does not mean all members of my family are the same. The point is our family is united with the same love and solidarity. In the Fourth Gospel, there are lots of "embodiment" language by Jesus that can be understood metaphorically as his living of the Logos. That is, he embodies God's love in the world. "I am" sayings of Jesus, accordingly, must be understood as the description of his work, rather than as signs of his divinity. For more, see my book: Truth, Testimony, and Transformation.
Monday, October 17, 2022
How to read "difficult stories" in the Bible
Do you try to justify a complex story or explain it away? Or do you find a way to understand it critically?
How can you read Joshua's conquest narrative with the story of liberation (Exodus)?
God liberated oppressed Israelites from slavery in Egypt. That is an Exodus story of liberation. But soon, they became oppressors of Canaanites because God told them to take the land by destroying everything. Is this a good story? Whose story is this? Who is happy? Can you shut your eyes to the cries of many innocent people in Canaan?
Robert Allen Warrior, an American Indian scholar, laments the popular reading of Joshua's conquest narrative because there is no justice for those who are oppressed. He says European settlers came to America to seek freedom from oppression or persecution from their countries. At the same time, they thought God gave them America as a promise and turned into oppressors, expelling many American Indians. You might find his article: "Canaanites, Cowboys, and Indians: Deliverance, Conquest, and Liberation Theology Today."
How can "freedom-seeking people" become oppressors of other people? Do you think God is such a callous deity to the deaths of innocent people? Is the God of Jews a tribal god?
Some people read the story of promise and conquest together to support the covenantal theology manifest in Abraham's story. But that cannot justify the innocent deaths in Canaan. Others may read the whole narrative to undergird Jewish political power or independence. Still, others read it spiritually, as some Christians do these days. But that does not mean that "others" can be sacrificed in the name of God. No one is predestined for damnation. Aside from this, we must note that there are no historical records evincing Joshua's conquest narrative. Often, the story is composed to communicate a message to the audience. Then, all "objective" readers are to be mindful of the story that is told from one side only.
God is beyond the Bible, cannot be stuck in frames of the story, and is above human thoughts. With this in mind, biblical stories need critical evaluation rather than uncritical acceptance. Perhaps, if not the best, we can appreciate God's care for his covenanted people.
How about Matthew 15:21-28?
In this story, does Jesus test the Canaanite woman's faith? I would say "no." What is harsh is harsh. Jesus said derogatory things. He was mean to the woman and said he was not for the Gentiles. Earlier, in 10:5-6, he limited his mission to the Jews only.
But she challenges Jesus kindly and humorously and stays with him until she gets what she needs. Her faith is that God loves her and her daughter. She also deserves food and care. Her faith is "really" a challenging faith.
Finally, Jesus gives in to her and allows for her daughter's healing. We don't know whether Jesus changed his mind.
We need to consider two different contexts to understand this story. One is about Jesus's own time and his work. The other is about the Matthean community's time and issues. You might read him as the one who struggles to open the good news of God to the Gentiles because he is a Jew like others who believe that God is for them first. Reading him in such a context does not mean we must accept his attitude toward the Gentiles and a woman. Others think this story of Jesus's encounter with a woman reflects Matthew's context. In fact, Matthew edited Mark 7:24-30 (a Syrophoenician woman) and added details about the Jewish exclusivist position through the mouth of Jesus and that of the disciples. The pressing issue for the community was the boundary of the community. So, Jesus here in this text represents the community's struggle with whether they must open the door for the Gentiles. If they have to do it, what might be the condition? Even with this context, the harsh treatment of a woman or Jewish exclusivist thinking is problematic.
Sunday, October 2, 2022
Mary Magdalene
Thursday, September 22, 2022
Derrida's Différance and Biblical Interpretation
Yung Suk Kim
Derrida's deconstruction theory challenges readers to rethink meaning altogether. He argues that there is no absolute unity or coherence in the text, which is an entangled web of various signifiers/significations that defy one single meaning. Derrida coins différance to connote the double meaning of differing and deferring. The signified is not fixed once and for all and must be different because the signifiers are like drops of water in the ocean. Likewise, we should delay meaning forever. Derrida differs from Saussure, who believes that even though there is no one-to-one link between the signifier and the signified, the signified is achieved in a given system of relations.
A common misunderstanding about Derrida is he undermines faith and relativizes truth, promoting "anything goes." That is not true because deconstruction challenges the orthodoxies that subjugate the marginalized or voiceless. It defies "closure" in the text and sees new voices of fairness and justice. A parable is a type of deconstruction literature that resists conventional wisdom and helps readers to see something differently, subverting their world.
As a case in point, we can take 1 Cor 12:27: "You are the body of Christ and individually members of it." The traditional interpretation focuses on the body's metaphorical organism: "You are the members of the body, which is the church, whose head is Christ, and individually, you are members." Here, the body is an organism metaphor, and the achieved meaning is unity in Christ and membership in him. But in fact, there is an alternative reading that resists the tradition. I read the body of Christ as the "Christic body" in the sense that the Corinthians must embody Christ, individually and communally. Here, the body is a metaphor "for a way of living" (for example, see 1 Cor 6:15-20). 1 Cor 6:15 reads: "Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? Should I, therefore, take the members of Christ and make them members of a prostitute? Never! " (NRSVue). Paul’s point is the body is for God, which means they must embody Christ in their lives.
If we translate the body of Christ as “Christ-like body,” this use of the genitive case is called an attributive genitive. We see this example in "the body of sin” (Rom 6:6), which we understand as "the sinful body."
The alternative interpretation underscores the ethical union with Christ and the diversity of the community. That is the Corinthians must follow Christ and honor one another. Then, they can maintain a Christ-like community. Christ is not the owner of the church, but its foundation. The point is not mere membership to the church but impregnable participation in Christ and his faith.
*Note: I have argued for an alternative reading of "the body of Christ" through a number of articles and books. My debut book is Christ's Body in Corinth: The Politics of a Metaphor (Fortress, 2008). The most recent book on Paul is How to Read Paul: A Brief Introduction to His Theology, Writings, and World (Fortress, 2021).
Tuesday, September 20, 2022
Kant, Modernity, and Biblical Interpretation
Understood this way, postmodernity, if it exists at all, is not a blow to the Kantian modern sensibility. Instead, it is an heir to modern philosophy in ways that we can embrace lofty standards of universal law coupled with self-critical observations about our world.
Likewise, in biblical interpretation, we can distinguish between the knowable and the unknowable. The former is a rough representation of reality reflected in ancient texts, communities, societies, and empires. Otherwise, reality itself is unknowable. So, what we need is a humble spirit as well as a critical mindset.