Pre-Existence or Adam Christology? An Evaluation of James Dunn's Exegesis of Philippians 2.6-11


In the middle of the first volume of his five-volume work on the history of Christian theology, Jaroslav Pelikan writes "The truth, even the truth of the Gospels, is never pure and clear, and rarely simple."[1]  How much more so, we might say, must this axiom apply to the Pauline epistles—Paul having the seemingly singular ability to make a relatively clear point by utilizing a glissando of many obscure ones.  Hence when we affirm that Christianity has always been a faith in the Incarnation—in one form or another—we can be sure as we come to Philippians 2 and the famous “Kenosis Poem” things are perhaps not as straightforward or uncontested as we originally thought them to be. 
Though traditionally thought to be an image of the pre-existent Christ descending into the form of a slave to redeem us—much as in the prologue to John’s Gospel—James Dunn has recently and powerfully argued otherwise, noting “the common belief that Phil. 2.6-11 starts by speaking of Christ’s pre-existent state and status and then of his incarnation is, in almost every case, a presupposition rather than a conclusion, a presupposition which again and again proves decisive in determining how disputed terms within the Philippian hymn should be understood.”[2]  Rather than an image of the descending preexistent redeemer, Dunn argues that this is a case rather of Paul’s Second Adam Christology.[3]  It will thus be the burden of this essay to investigate Dunn’s claims in relation to the passage and to see whether or not it constitutes a viable reading and hermeneutical strategy for approaching the text.  We shall end this essay with our own brief analysis, utilizing the research of Larry Hurtado, Richard Bauckham, and Wolfhart Pannenberg in relation to Philippians and Christ’s pre-existence.

I.               Over and Dunn With Pre-Existence: The Background of James Dunn’s Analysis of Phil 2.6-11
It would behoove us at the outset to set the stakes of Dunn’s exegesis which we are going to cover.  While in no way denying a theology of the Incarnation, Dunn believes the only actual example of pre-existence Christology resides in the Gospel of John.[4]  Dunn is fairly critical of the tradition which shifted its primary focus to the theme of Incarnation, as opposed to what he views as the more authentic eschatological Adam Christology: “Incarnation became steadily more central as the decisive act of redemption—a tendency already evident in Irenaeus who can speak of Christ ‘attaching man to God by his own incarnation’ (Adv. Haer. V.1.1) so that later theology had to look for meaning in Christ’s death more as the paying of a ransom to the devil than as the ending of the first Adam that last Adam might come to be.”[5]  Hence in Dunn’s opinion most of the tradition, if not a complete aberration, is indeed a misreading of a majority of Pauline and New Testament texts, and a misplacement of certain soteriological emphases.  If true this would certainly, to say the least, call for drastic revisions of long cherished ideas and their texts. 
Dunn’s argument, like most of his work, is a very intricate and sophisticated gestalt and one can easily get lost in the forest and forget the trees.  Before we get to his reading of Phil. 2.6-11 we must first establish some background of where he is coming from, and what presuppositions are driving his thought.  The first and major one is his working presupposition (or perhaps anti-presupposition) that incarnational texts cannot be assumed, they must be proven,[6] and this proof, argues Dunn, comes from literature which would have framed and given context to any New Testament writing—such as Paul’s—which we have.  The second major premise we must understand, is that up to the point of his analysis of Philippians Dunn is not convinced that any viable concept of pre-existence or Incarnation yet exists to give context to the hymn under contention.  Thus, without assuming incarnation, and finding scant evidence for pre-existence traditions, up to the point just before he turns to Phil. 2.6-11 Dunn has elaborated what he sees as the absolute presupposition of Pauline Christology: the Adamic narrative.  Lets briefly turn to this in order to build up to Philippians.
Going through a bit of the history of interpretation,[7] Dunn follows recent scholarship in rejecting Bultmann and others famous thesis that Incarnational patterns of Christology were based in part on a nascent Gnostic redeemer myth of a descending and ascending savior.  As with most scholars now, Dunn says these Gnostic accounts have no pre-2nd century evidence, and it is far more likely they have taken their own pattern from Biblical literature, rather than vice versa.[8]  Hence “while there is no clear talk in pre-Christian sources of a redeemer being sent from heaven, we do have some indications that speculation on the heavenly man/earthly man contrast was already current at the time of Paul.”  He goes on to cite, for example, Philo (Leg. All. 1.31, 1.53f; Opif. 134; Qu. Gen. 1.4) and says “Paul himself seems to be aware of some such distinction—‘the first man is of the earth, the second man is from heaven (1 Cor. 15:45-7)—his denial that the spiritual (= heavenly) man precedes the earthly in his own interpretation of Gen. 2.7 being possibly directed against something like Philo’s heavenly man/earthly man interpretation.”[9]
Though we cannot linger too long here, Dunn then turns to Romans in order to gain an initial elaboration on the Adamic soteriology he sees in Paul.  At Romans 1.18-25 he sees a retelling of the entire Genesis 1-3 story.  For example “lying behind vv.19ff is almost certainly the picture story of Gen. 2—Adam as man enjoying knowledge of God plainly revealed to him (1.19, 21)…enjoying the full benefits of God’s power manifest in creation (1.20), enjoying the truth of God unclouded by sin (1.25).”  And he goes on “But as Gen. 3 goes on to relate Adam did not honour God as God…(1.21), he did not acknowledge God (1.28) instead he believed the serpents distortion of God’s command, exchanged the truth of God for a lie (1.25—Gen. 3.4f).”[10]  In Romans 3.3 “All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God,” Dunn translates hysterountai not as “fallen short” but as “fail to reach” as in “All have sinned and failed to reach the glory of God.”  In other words Dunn is attempting to say “they lack the glory of God in the sense that they fail to reach the eschatological glory in which only the righteous will share…there is a growing consensus among recent commentators that the primary allusion is to the glory once enjoyed by Adam.”[11]  Dunn goes through three more passages in Romans—of course 5.12-19 which he does not spend much time on due to its specific allusion to Adam—7.7-11 and 8.19-22 where “the creation was subjected to futility” is interpreted that creation itself was caught up in Adam’s fall—recalling Gen. 3.17 “cursed is the ground because of you.”
At this point we can summarize three statements made by Dunn before we move on to the Kenosis hymn.  The first is that Dunn wants to argue that for Paul “Salvation is the reversal of Adam’s fall.”  In other words salvation is the fashioning or reshaping of the believer into the image of God.  Thus also “salvation is the restoration of the believer to glory which man now lacks as a result of his/Adam’s sin.  Thus being transformed back into the renewed image of Adam, says Dunn is described as “being transformed into God’s image ‘from one degree of glory to another’ (II Cor. 3.18; 4.17).”  And “it is Paul’s conviction that Jesus is the indispensable model or pattern for this process.”[12]  One final note should be added, Dunn contends “when Paul uses Adam language explicitly of Christ he is referring primarily to Christ risen and exalted.”  This last point is key to remember when Dunn argues against pre-existence interpretations, as what he sees is something more of a “post-existence” in exaltation, the eschatological Adam.  With this background context of Dunn’s insightful observations of Adam Christology in Paul, we are ready to turn to Phillippians.

II.        Phillippians 2:5-11 Re-Dunn

            To help us along we would do well to go over Phillippians 2:5-11 ourselves, in order to better manifest the differences of Dunn’s exegesis.  Here is the passage at length in the Greek[13]:


τοῦτο φρονεῖτε ἐν ὑμῖν ὃ καὶ ἐν Χριστῷ Ἰησοῦ, 6ὃς ἐν μορφῇ θεοῦ ὑπάρχων οὐχ ἁρπαγμὸν ἡγήσατο τὸ εἶναι ἴσα θεῷ, 

7ἀλλὰ ἑαυτὸν ἐκένωσεν μορφὴν δούλου λαβών, ἐν ὁμοιώματι ἀνθρώπων γενόμενος: καὶ σχήματι εὑρεθεὶς ὡς ἄνθρωπος 8ἐταπείνωσεν ἑαυτὸν γενόμενος ὑπήκοος μέχρι θανάτου, θανάτου δὲ σταυροῦ. 

9διὸ καὶ ὁ θεὸς αὐτὸν ὑπερύψωσεν καὶ ἐχαρίσατο αὐτῷ τὸ ὄνομα τὸ ὑπὲρ πᾶν ὄνομα, 10ἵνα ἐν τῷ ὀνόματι Ἰησοῦ πᾶν γόνυ κάμψῃ ἐπουρανίων καὶ ἐπιγείων καὶ καταχθονίων, 11καὶ πᾶσα γλῶσσα ἐξομολογήσηται ὅτι κύριος Ἰησοῦς Χριστὸς εἰς δόξαν θεοῦ πατρός.

[Maintain this attitude among yourselves, which was also in Christ Jesus: who, being in the form of God, did not consider His equality with God something to be exploited

Rather, he emptied himself, taking on the form of a servant, making himself in the likeness of man; and having been found to be in appearance like a man, he humbled himself, becoming subordinate to the point of death, even death (upon) a cross.  

Therefore God highly-exalted (beyond-exalted) him and gave to him the name beyond every name, in order that by the name Jesus every knee of those who are in the heavens, and upon the earth, and under the earth might bow, and (so that) every tongue might confess that Jesus Christ (is) Lord, to the glory of God the Father.]

            There are several interpretive difficulties in this passage (for example, the exact meaning of ἁρπαγμὸν) but Dunn’s interpretation is not necessarily based upon translation differences.   What is important is the background context of Adam Christology which we just briefly outlined, and so the hermeneutical question of control-context: what is the overall puzzle into which this piece fits?  At this point already we notice something interesting: much of Dunn’s interpretation comes based upon the presupposition of the Adam Christology context.  There is, of course, no lead in or explanation linking the hymn to Adam Christology.  Rather what Dunn had wanted to do up to the point where we now turn to Phillippians is build up the argument that Adam Christology, and not Incarnation or pre-existence, would have been the immediately relevant and recognizable context which readers of his time would be familiar with and discern.  As Dunn says “In brief, the most informative and probable background in my judgment is the one we have been sketching throughout the chapter—that of the Adam Christology which was widely current in the Christianity of the 40’s and 50’s.  It seems to me that Phil. 2.6-11 is best understood as an expression of Adam Christology, one of the fullest expressions that we still possess.”[14]
            Going line by line through his analysis, we can see how he constructs his argument.  Dunn sees a clear movement of thought running from 6a to 7c, and thus from “who being in the form of God…becoming in the likeness of man.”  Dunn notes that 7c “provides the bridge” to the next movement, as it seems to indicate the end result of the first stage of Christ’s odyssey.  Thus the contrast of ἐν μορφῇ θεοῦ ὑπάρχων [being in the form of God] and μορφὴν δούλου λαβών [taking the form of a slave] the former, of course, being what οὐχ ἁρπαγμὸν ἡγήσατο τὸ εἶναι ἴσα θεῷ [he did not consider being equal to God a thing to be exploited] and the latter was what he became.  The traditional exegesis sees this as a transition from the pre-incarnate and pre-existent state into flesh—here the movement of incarnation being equated to “receiving the form of a slave” and pre-existence being indicated by a prior state “being in the form of God.”  Yet this is not so, argues Dunn.  “The best way to understand this double contrast is an allusion to Gen. 1-3,” an allusion to the creation and fall of man.
            To make this major transition from traditional interpretation to what Dunn sees as more acceptable Jewish meaning which would have existed at the time of Paul and before, is Dunn’s identification of μορφῇ θεοῦ not with the logos asarkos but as a reference to Adam being made in the image (eikon) of God.  He argues that “it has long been recognized that morphe and eikon are near synonyms, and that in Hebrew thought the visible ‘form of God’ is His Glory.”[15]  Following this line he thus says μορφὴν δούλου [form of a slave] “probably refers therefore to what Adam became as a result of his fall: he lost his share in god’s glory and became a slave.”  As to the second contrast, Dunn notes the οὐχ ἁρπαγμὸν ἡγήσατο [did not consider it something to exploit] phrase is an easy parallel to Adam’s original temptation to be like God, which Christ has overcome.  At this point Dunn wants us to recall Romans 1.21 where Paul says “they changed the glory of the immortal God for the likeness of the image of mortal man.”  Here the obvious parallel that Dunn is trying to draw is that Christ is now found ἐν ὁμοιώματι ἀνθρώπων γενόμενος [to be in the likeness of man].  Hence the parallel with “form of a slave” and “likeness of man” in contrast to “form of God” and “did not consider equality with God a thing to be exploited” are not, for Dunn, intimations of a difference between pre and post-incarnate states, but within the one state of the human being—namely the new Adam.  “Not content with being like God, what God had intended, he [the first Adam] became like men, what men now are.  The contrast in other words is between what Adam was and what he became, and it is this Adam language which is used of Christ.  It is quite probable therefore that the author of the Philippian hymn was conscious of this ambiguity in the Adam narrative and intended to reflect it in his own formulation.”[16]
            Hence, turning to the ἐκένωσεν [he emptied] and ἐταπείνωσεν [he humbled] movement, Dunn maintains a similar soteriological picture to the models taken by those espousing Incarnation, just now completely within the context of Adam: “Christ faced the same archetypal choice that confronted Adam, but chose not as Adam had chosen (to grasp equality with God).  Instead he chose to empty himself of Adam’s glory and to embrace Adam’s lot, the fate which Adam had suffered by way of punishment.”[17]  To strengthen his case he turns our attention momentarily to Hebrews 2.6-8 in order to demonstrate similarities.  The parallel between Philippians and Hebrews and their relation to Adam Christology is strengthened in that both indicate the fulfillment of man in Ps. 8.6 “you have put all things under his feet,” is at last fulfilled in Christ.
            Thus Dunn notes μορφὴν δούλου [form of a slave], ἐν ὁμοιώματι ἀνθρώπων [in the likeness of man], and σχήματι εὑρεθεὶς ὡς ἄνθρωπος [was found in appearance as a man] are all more or less synonymous, and have their meaning as variant ways of describing the character of fallen Adam.  This is not too far off from the Incarnational interpretations, again simply without Incarnation.  The form of fallen man, as contrasted with the μορφῇ θεοῦ is between two Adamic states, pre and post fall.  “Notice,” says Dunn “not as a man, but as man—that is, as representative man, as one with fallen man, as Adam.”[18]  Yet not merely Adam, but the eschatological second Adam whose “super-exaltation” (ὑπερύψωσεν) “attains a far higher glory than the first Adam lost.”  At this point Dunn summarizes his findings and makes a statement regarding pre-existence in this passage, to which it benefits us to quote at length:
This means that the initial stage of Christ’s odyssey is depicted as equivalent to Adam’s status and choice in the garden.  Now Adam was certainly not thought of as pre-existent—though perhaps strictly speaking as pre-historical, or, being the first man on earth, as transhistorical/typical.  So no implication that Christ was pre-existent may be intended.  If Christ walks in Adam’s footsteps then Christ need be no more than pre-existent than Adam.  Nor indeed is there any implication that Christ was contemporaneous with Adam, acting in a similarly transhistorical situation.  In point of fact, in earliest Christian Adam theology Christ always presupposes Adam, Christ’s odyssey presupposes the plight of Adam, of Adam’s offspring.  As I Cor. 15.45ff insists, the temporal order is clear: Adam first, Christ second—Christ is last Adam, Adam precedes Christ.  Adam was not a copy of a pre-existent Christ, but ‘a type of him who was to come’ (Rom. 5.14)  It would seem therefore that the point of parallel between Adam and Christ is not dependent on any particular time-scale—pre-existence, pre-history, or whatever.  The point focuses rather on the choice confronting Adam and Christ.  The Philippian hymn does not intend to affirm that Jesus was as historical or as prehistorical as Adam, but that the choice confronting Christ was as archetypal and determinative for mankind as was Adam’s; whether the choice was made by the pre-existent Christ or the historical Jesus is immaterial to the Philippian hymn.[19]

           
III. Dunn and Dunner: Has the Tradition Simply Misunderstood? An Appraisal of Dunn’s Reading.

            What are we to make of all this?  Dunn has made a very convincing case, it seems.  But we have to remember the edge that comes along with it: it is only when Adam Christology is forgotten as the control-context that theologies of the Incarnation creep in as the proper interpretation of passages such as this: “It is quite true,” says Dunn “that once the context of the original Adam theology faded from the immediate perspective the language which derived from that theology lent itself to a pre-existence-incarnation interpretation, particularly in the case of Phil. 2.6-11.”[20]  This is, as we saw briefly at the beginning of our essay, something that Dunn feels is a misappropriation of texts.  We of course have to remember that Dunn is not denying the divinity of Christ, rather he wants to resituate our exegesis in order to bring out what he feels to be the missed richness of Adam Christology, overwhelmed as it has been until now by the supernal light of incarnation.  Dunn, rather, sees incarnational doctrines as emerging (albeit legitimately) in second-generation Christianity and only finding pure exemplification in the Bible in the writing of John.[21]
            In order to evaluate Dunn’s claims I want to turn to three other scholars and their works, who provide an important corrective to Dunn’s hyper-focus on Adam Christology as against Incarnational ideas in the same passage.  These three are Larry Hurtado,[22] Richard Bauckham,[23] and Wolfhart Pannenberg.[24]  Each in their own way are, or would be, skeptical of Dunn’s analysis.
            First and foremost I should say what I find most unconvincing about Dunn’s reading is his turning of Adamic Christology against Incarnational Christology.  He is certain he has found no evidence for credible antecedents which would provide a plausible, evolutionary reading without, we might say, a sudden and staggering chronological paradigm shift in development.  I mentioned it briefly in a footnote above it seems Dunn keeps expanding his definition of Adam Christology in order that old wineskins resist bursting.  Certainly Adam Christology is a profound background context to understand the Philippians hymn, and certainly Dunn has fruitfully engaged in Paul’s thought through this lens as a whole.  Yet to isolate this as the sole context, and then when Philippians exceeds and breaks the mold, to call this “the fullest form of Adam Christology,” seems to me to die the death of qualification and perhaps even circularity.  For if Dunn has found no antecedent forms of pre-existence against which to judge what most scholars take to be a pre-Pauline hymn which Paul utilizes, for Dunn can only mean that Adam Christology, despite whatever further qualifications, is the lens whereby we read kenosis.  Thus despite whatever novelty or exception this passage takes, it merely in Dunn’s mind appears to become a more robust form of Adam speculation.
            Thus for example we need to notice a subtle shift in Dunn’s analysis.  He considers 6ὃς ἐν μορφῇ θεοῦ ὑπάρχων οὐχ ἁρπαγμὸν ἡγήσατο τὸ εἶναι ἴσα θεῷ, 7ἀλλὰ ἑαυτὸν ἐκένωσεν μορφὴν δούλου λαβών [who, being in the form of God, did not consider equality with God a thing to be exploited, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave/servant] to be analogous to Christ refusing Adam’s temptation to “eat the fruit” as it were, accepting instead the path of obedience to God.  Yet immediately we need to recall that Adam attempted to become equal to God.  “Being equal to God” is a difficult to accept stretch and really bears no identifiable allusion to Adam or his sin.  It would appear more likely, we might say, that Philippians is precisely contrasting Christ’s status which was already his, as opposed to man who attempted to become such.[25]
            To bring in some heavier hitters at this point, we can fruitfully at this stage point out Hurtado’s main thesis: his analysis of texts like Phil. 2.6-11 and others are seen by him as evidence that at an incredibly early period Jesus was accounted as divine through worship, an act, of course, reserved only for God (in antithesis to Dunn’s own slower, more evolutionary view).  Hurtado asks “how can we account for such a significant innovation in a religious tradition in historical terms?”[26] and that “I argue that the remarkable nature of earliest devotion to Jesus is more clearly appreciated when we see it in the context of ancient Jewish concerns about the uniqueness of the one God.”[27]
            In fact in the first chapter of his book he spends a lot of time debunking other theories on the rise of Christ worship, and criticizes previous attempts that deal with Christology but dismiss worship as a late addition or antithetical to the original Jesus.[28]  In fact this is not merely an anecdotal account, but given its early nature and the intensity with which worship fomented and even became proto-creedalized: “devotion to Jesus as divine was such a novel and significant step, and appeared so early as well, that it can only be accounted for as a response to the strong conviction in early Christian circles that the one God of biblical tradition willed that Jesus be so reverenced.”[29]  And again: “to gain a full appreciation of the historical significance of this devotion to Jesus it is important to remember that earliest Christians, both Jewish and Gentile believers, seem characteristically to have practiced otherwise a rather strict ‘monotheistic’ worship, rejecting all deities of the wider religious environment as bogus and even demonic forces unworthy of reverence (e.g. 1 Cor 10:14-22) and worshipping only the one God of the Jewish scriptures.”[30]
But how does Hurtado back this up?  Clearly we are dealing with the same text—but what is at variance between Dunn and Hurtado—and Bauckham and Pannenberg—is that Dunn believes a strict Adam Christology is the only option because of another important presupposition we briefly outlined, namely his hesitance to ascribe any radical discontinuity in tradition.  Incarnational Christology to Dunn could have only arisen gradually.  Hurtado argues otherwise.  He believes that the Philippians hymn is also drawing on OT imagery, but differs in how he interprets it.  When “every knee shall bow and every tongue confess,” to Christ, Hurtado points out that this is a direct parallel to the LXX version of Is. 45.18-25 which reads:
Turn to me and be saved, those from the farthest part of the earth.  I am God, and there is no other.  By myself I have sworn; righteousness shall go forth from my mouth; my words will not be turned aside.  To me every knee shall bow and every tongue shall confess saying righteousness and glory shall be brought to him, and all who separate themselves shall be ashamed; from the LORD shall be vindicated, and in God shall be glorified, all the seed of the sons of Israel.

  Hurtado rightly points out this is an “unexcelled…ringing declaration of the uniqueness of the God of biblical Israel.  Three times we have the refrain that there is no other deity…and in 45.22-25 all the earth is summoned to join a universal submission to this one true God.”  He notes therefore “it is nothing short of astonishing…to find phrasing from this passage appropriated to describe the acknowledgment of Jesus’ universal supremacy.”[31]
Two other very important points arise which mitigate Dunn’s thesis.  First is the exaltation of Christ’s names “above all names,” in Philippians.  “[This] reference to Jesus…practically requires us to think of the traditional, devout Jewish estimation of the sacred name of God.”  Moreover Hurtado mentions that this exaltation of the name is probably another call to remember Is. 45.18-25.  Richard Bauckham puts it quite explicitly: “the exalted Jesus is given the divine name, the Tetragrammaton (YHWH), the name which names the unique identity of the one God, the name which is exclusive to the one God in a way that the sometimes ambiguous word ‘god’ is not…though most commentators do not think so, this can only refer to the divine name…”[32]  Significant in this regard too is the corresponding universality of worship, [33]says Bauckham, “in this way [Paul] can only wish precisely to include Jesus Christ in the unique divine identity.”[34]
Second, and a very important corrective to Dunn’s analysis where he says (without argument) that morphe and eikon are synonymous and in the same semantic field.  David Steenburg has cogently argued otherwise.[35]  “What we need to know is not whether the Greek words morphe and eikon have some sort of general conceptual linkage, but whether the two words were used interchangeably, particularly in this sort of expression.”  Hurtado notes, following Steenburg, that the answer is clearly negative.  On top of this it will hardly do, as Dunn has, to compare morphe and eikon in the abstract; even if they display significant semantic overlap what is at issue is morphe theou and eikon theou, not morphe and eikon alone.  The relevant LXX translations of the Genesis passage use the expression eikon theou, and furthermore the NT writers are consistent in utilizing eikon when they appropriate the idea of divine image as a way of indicating Jesus’ significance.[36]  Hurtado says “by contrast morphe is never used elsewhere in any allusion to Adam in the NT, and morphe theou is not used at all in the Greek Tanach/Old Testament or in any other Jewish or Christian text where we can identify an allusion to Adam.  So [Dunn’s] alleged use of morphe theou to link Jesus with Adam in Philippians 2:6 would be a singular case without any analogy or precedent.”[37]  A much different picture all of a sudden than Dunn’s singular insistence that Adam Christology is the only option!  To encapsulate this particular point Hurtado notes
remember from our preceding analysis of [Phil.] vv.9-11 that we have there rather clear appropriation of, and allusion to, biblical and Jewish traditions.  We can judge these to be so because they are signaled by the use of phrasing that can easily be identified with a biblical passage (as in Is. 45.23)…or phrasing that connotes a traditional concept (“the name above every name”).  So we must ask why an author…who readily knew how to make allusions by use of such verbal devices would have failed so completely in vv.6-7, if in fact he sought there to make an allusion to and contrast with Adam…the more likely conclusion is that no allusion or direct contrast with Adam [in Phil.] was intended.[38]

            One final nail in Dunn’s thesis is that part of his link depends upon the soteriological context of Adam Christology.  Recall that for Dunn a key aspect of the Adam-Christ link is soteriology: for Paul Christ is the reversal of the Adamic fall.[39]  True enough in itself.  Yet we should observe in Philippians, as Hurtado thoughtfully does, “the redemptive efficacy of [Christ’s] actions are not in view in these verses.”[40]  In this case there is no mention of benefits to others, and the apex of the entire hymn is the incomparable exaltation.  The possible warrant of a link to Adam Christology via a soteriological context is absent, in other words. Far from losing sight of the Adam-Christ parallel as a control context as Dunn claimed, it seems quite the opposite: ironically Dunn has located an artificial control context and so forgotten about incarnation.[41]
            Can we locate the reason for this?  In other words whereas Dunn posits a gradual, Religiongeschichtlichschule type thesis of the gradual evolution of understanding, Hurtado, Bauckham, and as we shall see in a moment, Pannenberg, all posit an almost immediate recognition of Christ’s divinity—Hurtado by stressing the worship paid to Christ, and Bauckham by stressing Christ’s exaltation was seen as his becoming one with the Divine identity.  Can we locate the mechanism of this difference?  The answer for all three, of whom we shall deem Pannenberg’s extensive analysis representative—is resurrection.
            To use Bauckham’s term,  Jesus’ identity was at stake on the cross—his entire life and claims to be the unique representative of the Father, the inaugurator of the kingdom—seemed forfeit and the lies of a criminal.  Yet Easter changed all of that—Christ was seen as justified by the Father.  That Jesus has been raised could to a Jew only mean God has acted to validate this one, including his entire pre-Easter message.[42] Indeed “from the perspective of his resurrection [this] points back to the pre-Easter Jesus insofar as it has confirmed his pre-Easter claim to authority.  Jesus’ unity with God, established [verified] in the Easter event, does not begin only with this event—it comes into force retroactively from the perspective of this event for the claim to authority in the activity of the earthly Jesus.”[43]
            We can see in Philippians too, that the resurrection appears presupposed.[44]  This appears not only in the exaltation language at the end of the hymn but also that, in general in the New Testament Jesus’ resurrection was not just seen as a revivification: it involved God’s exaltation of him to a unique status “at the right hand of God.” (Ps.110:1).[45]  Dunn agrees with the importance of the resurrection,[46] yet is concerned to show this represents a forward-looking eschatological contrast to the “first” Adam—in other words Christ in this sense is after Adam, not before in pre-existence.  Yet Pannenberg, while fully acknowledging the eschatological nature of Christ’s victory, notes also how this necessarily includes a retroactive or “backwards looking” logic to it.  Jewish Apocalyptic, as Pannenberg notes, expected God’s full revelation as an event at the end of time.  Insofar as the raising of Christ was both an apocalyptic event and a confirmation by God of Christ’s claim, Christ was God’s own and (proleptically) final self-revelation.  “In this process in the history of traditions the recognition of the fact that Jesus belongs to the sphere of God, which is established through the revelatory character of his resurrection, expresses itself.”  He goes on an elaborates “viewed from the confirmation of Jesus’ claim by his resurrection, the inner logic of the matter dictates that Jesus was always one with God, not just after a certain date…and in view of God’s eternity the character of Christ’s resurrection must mean that God was always one with Jesus.”[47]   And perhaps most fully at the end of his book:
The transition from Jesus' announcement of the imminent Kingdom of God to the confession by his community of Jesus' own kingly rule is to be understood as a materially established step in the primitive Christian history of traditions, not to be judged as an arbitrary leap or even as falling away from Jesus' proclamation. Because Jesus' resurrection confirmed his earthly claim to authority by the fulfillment of the eschatological future in his own person, he no longer just anticipated the judgment of Him with whom the eschatological reality begins as he did in his earthly activity, but he himself has now become in person the reality of the future eschatological salvation...Differently expressed, through the resurrection, the revealer of God's eschatological will became the incarnation of the eschatological reality itself; the ultimate realization of God's will for humanity and for the whole of creation could therefore be expected from Him. Moreover, because Jesus' claim was eschatological in character, no other could be conceived alongside Him to bring in the eschatological consummation...[48]

Indeed this is why Pannenberg earlier notes “worship [of Christ] is an Easter event,”[49] because either we worship one who was always one with God, or we worship a divinized creature.  Hence we see an echo of Hurtado’s claim regarding how “startling” it is to see a pure attribution of OT worship to Christ in the Philippian’s hymn, in a manner that is unhesitant, unashamed, and early—probably predating Paul’s letter itself.  In Bauckhams words again, Christ in the resurrection is seen as identified with the Divine identity.  As a corollary, with the preceding analysis in place, it seems the question of pre-existence in Philippians 2.6-11 comes to the fore again to be heartily affirmed.  These are not concepts superfluous or alien—added theological constructs to Philippians, as Dunn contends, but brings out the very logic of the hymn itself.  Without preinscribing it within a limited use of Adam typology and a slow “uniformitarianism” type view of evolving Christologies, the more inductive approaches of Hurtado, Pannenberg, and Bauckham open the way again to see preexistence as a very real, and not exegetically and historically misplaced, hermeneutical option for the Philippians passage.

Conclusion
            Thus from all of this we can see that despite the prima facie accuracy that Dunn’s analysis appears to have, on a deeper look his Adam parallelism with Phil. 2.6-11 maybe be a case of mistaken identity.  Far from not affirming Christ’s divinity, it seems hermeneutically it could be affirming little else.  Its explicit parallels with Isaiah, its embodiment of exaltation logic contained in resurrection, its identification of Christ with morphe theou—decidely not merely the pre-lapsarian Adamic state, but pre-incarnate existence—the Philippians hymn is, as Hurtado, Pannenberg, and Bauckham each in their own way proclaim: a shocking identity statement, made through the form of worship, radically attributing to Christ what is the prerogative of YWHW, and summarizing the entire pre-existence, descent, life, and re-ascent of Christ.


[1] Jaroslav Pelikan, The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition vol. 1 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1971) p.266
[2] James D. G. Dunn Christology in the Making: A New Testament Inquiry into the Origins of the Doctrine of the Incarnation 2nd ed (Grand Rapids: Eerdman’s Publishing Co, 1989) p.114.
[3] Ibid p.114-115.
[4] Ibid p.258f.
[5] Ibid p.128.  It is notable that this hardly approaches a fair summary of either the tradition or Irenaeus, whose incarnational theology is intimately related to the theme of recapitulation in Christ as the Last Adam.  Dunn’s polemical turning of Adam Christology against Incarnational pre-existence Christology is overdrawn and indeed misplaced.  This will be important for our brief critique at the end.
[6] Ibid pp.ix-xl.
[7] Ibid pp.98-100.
[8] Ibid p.99-100.
[9] Ibid.  All italics are original to Dunn.
[10] Ibid 101.
[11] Ibid p.102.
[12] Ibid pp.105-107.
[13] Unless otherwise noted all translations are mine.
[14] Ibid p.114.  Though I don’t want to make too much of it at this point, it seems odd to me that on the one hand Dunn is taking great pains to argue for the Adam Christology background of the hymn, yet here in passing he says its actually one of the fullest forms of Adam Christology we currently possess.  I do not want to accuse Dunn of circularity but obviously the modifier “fullest form” indicates the Phillipians version has unique components over and against other Adam Christologies—which means indeed that it exceeds prior models.  Thus to calls this Adam Christology in this sense and simply modify it as “the fullest form” of it we’ve seen, seems to be shifting the definition of Adam Christology as we go along.
[15] Ibid p.115.
[16] Ibid p.116.
[17] Ibid p.117.
[18] Ibid p.118.
[19] Ibid p.121; c.f. his comments on pp.124-125.
[20] Ibid p.128.
[21] Ibid p.256ff; C.f. p.261 where Dunn says it is through searching for increasingly varied and powerful ways to express Christ’s significance that eventually the community came to “real pre-existence.”
[22] Larry Hurtado, How on Earth Did Jesus Become a God? Historical Questions About Earliest Devotion to Jesus (Grand Rapids: Eerdman’s Publishing, 2005).
[23] Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the God of Israel: God Crucified and Other Studies on the New Testaments Theology of Divine Identity (Grand Rapids: Eerdman’s Publiushing, 2008).
[24] Wolfhart Pannenberg, Jesus: God and Man 2nd Ed. trans. Lewis L. Wilkens and Duane A. Priebe (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1977)
[25] Hurtado How on Earth p.100, agrees.
[26] Ibid p.8
[27] Ibid p.7.
[28] Ibid p.13ff.
[29] Ibid p.29.
[30] Ibid p.136.
[31] Ibid p.91.
[32] Bauckham Jesus and the God of Israel pp.24-25.
[33] Ibid p.25
[34] Ibid p.27.
[35] David Steenburg, “The Case Against Synonymity of Morphe and Eikon,” in  Journal for Study of the New Testament 34 (1988): 77-86.
[36] Hurtado How On Earth p.99.
[37] Ibid
[38] Ibid p.101.
[39] Dunn, Christology in the Making p.105.
[40] Hurtado How on Earth p.104.
[41] I should note of course that I do not mean to intend Adam or Incarnational Christologies are opposed.  I am merely wanting to show how Dunn’s monolithic use of the Adam typology as against Incarnation is perhaps not the best choice.
[42] Pannenberg, Jesus: God and Man p.67
[43] Ibid p.137.
[44] Hurtado How on Earth p.93
[45] Martin Hengel Studies in Early Christology (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1995) pp.119-225.
[46] Dunn Christology in the Making pp.254ff.
[47] Pannenberg Jesus: God and Man p.153.
[48] Ibid p.367.
[49] Ibid p.113.

Comments

wayne said…
Thanks for this - I found it extremely helpful!
Anonymous said…
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