Showing posts with label substance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label substance. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Communion: Not Transubstantiation but Consubstantiality

 

And as they were eating, Jesus took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to the disciples and said, “Take, eat; this is My body.” Then He took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, “Drink from it, all of you. For this is My blood of the new covenant, which is shed for many for the remission of sins. (Matthew 26:26-28 NKJV)

 

 

 


Called by various names—the Lord’s Supper, the Eucharist, Communion—the meal at which Jesus gave bread to his apostles and called the bread His body and gave the fruit of the vine to his apostles and called it His blood is one of the two great sacraments or ordinances of the Church (the other being baptism). Various denominations have debated the sacrament of baptism:

1.      When should it be administered? Soon after the birth of a child? As soon as a child can understand what it means to believe in Jesus? When a child reaches the age of accountability, when s/he is held accountable for any sins s/he may commit since Acts 2:38 (NKJV) says “be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins”? (The Jews teach that this age of accountability begins at age 13 for boys and age 12 for girls—corresponding roughly with the commencement of puberty.) At an age corresponding to Jesus’s age when He was baptized?

2.      How should it be administered? By immersing the entire body in water (as the Greek word baptizō/βαπτίζω actually means)? Sub-question: Should the water be living/running water (as in the Jordan River where John baptized), or can it be standing water (as in the Pool of Bethesda or Siloam)? The Didache chapter 7 states: “And concerning baptism, baptize this way: “Having first said all these things, baptize into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, in living water. But if you have no living water, baptize into other water; and if you cannot do so in cold water, do so in warm. But if you have neither, pour out water three times upon the head into the name of Father and Son and Holy Spirit.” (Remember, however, that the Didache is not part of the inspired scriptures.) I discuss the proper baptismal formula in my blogpost “Excessive Righteousness 2: Monotheism.”


Likewise, various denominations have debated the sacrament of taking communion:

1.      How frequently should it be taken? Every first day of the week (as Acts 20:7 NKJV indicates: “Now on the first day of the week, when the disciples came together to break bread”)? Since the Jews have always understood the first day of each week to begin at sundown on Saturday (based on the “evening and the morning” language of the six days of creation in Genesis, should Christians take it Saturday night or Sunday morning? Or since it is so precious, should Christians take it only once per month or even once per year (during Passover or Easter)? Conversely, one might argue that since Jesus uses the two substances that were present in the Jewish meal, every day, should communion (even if one is by oneself) be taken daily or at every meal?

2.      Should the wine be fermented or unfermented? (In the Qumran/Essene/Dead Sea Scrolls messianic meal on which the Lord’s Supper may have been based, it was to be [unfermented] new wine.)  1Q28a [1QSa] of the Dead Sea Scrolls states: “[the Me]ssiah of Israel shall ent[er] and … [when] they gather at the table of community [or to drink] the new wine, and the table … is prepared [and] the new wine [is mixed] for drinking, [no-one should stretch out] his hand to the … the bread and of the [new wine] before the priest, for [he is the one who bl]esses the … bread and … new wine [and stretches out] his hand towards the bread before them.”

3.      Should the bread be leavened or unleavened? (Since Jesus was celebrating Passover, we assume that the bread was unleavened at the time He instituted the meal, but if it is taken every week or month or day, does leavening matter?)

4.      Is Jesus using metaphors or is He being literal about “My body … My blood”? This question brings us to the issue of transubstantiation, the focus of this blogpost.

 

Metaphor

 


There is no question that Jesus frequently uses metaphors. When He says “you are the salt of the earth” or “you are the light of the world” (Matthew 5:13-14 NKJV), He is not talking about the sodium content or any literal luminescence of His listeners. When He says “
a good tree does not bear bad fruit, nor does a bad tree bear good fruit,” in Luke 6:43 (NKJV) or Matthew 12:33-37, He is not literally speaking of agricultural matters. Neither is He concerned with literal agriculture in His parable of the sower (Matthew 13:3-9, Mark 4:1-9, and Luke 8:4-8) or His parable of the lost sheep (Matthew 18:12-14 and Luke 15:3-7). Instead, just as with His similes about the wheat and the tares (Matthew 13:24-30), the mustard seed (Matthew 13:31-32, Mark 4:30-32, and Luke 13:18-20), the hidden treasure (Matthew 13:44), and the pearl of great price (Matthew 13:45-46), He is using analogy. The fruit trees, sower and seed, lost sheep, wheat and tares, mustard seed, treasure, and pearl all represent or stand for something or someone else. When He tells His disciples, “I have food to eat of which you do not know” (John 4:32 NKJV), He is not talking about literal “meat” or “food,” though the disciples think He is. Hence, protestants rejecting the teaching of transubstantiation, often say that the bread and wine of communion “represent” Jesus’s body and blood. Huldrych Zwingli emphasizes memorial aspect of communion: “do this in remembrance of Me” Luke 22:19 (NKJV). According to Zondervan Academic, John Calvin’s view is “usually called the spiritual presence view. It's not transubstantiation, and it's not consubstantiation. And it goes beyond Zwingli’s memorial view. For John Calvin, there are symbols that are very powerful. They are the signs of the bread and the wine He says they are indeed symbolic—they are signs—but they're not empty signs. They really do render that which they portray, so they render to us the presence of Jesus Christ and his salvific benefits: all the work of salvation that he has accomplished on our behalf.”

 

Transubstantiation

 


On the other hand, Catholics opt for a literal understanding of Jesus’s statements “
this is My body … this is My blood.” Brittanica.com defines: “transubstantiation, in Christianity [as] the change by which the substance (though not the appearance) of the bread and wine in the Eucharist becomes Christ’s real presence—that is, his body and blood.” By receiving the Eucharist, Christian are understood to be literally consuming the body and blood of Jesus. At least some of Jesus’s audience in John 6:52-60 (NKJV) interpreted such statements by Jesus as being literal: “The Jews therefore quarreled among themselves, saying, ‘How can this Man give us His flesh to eat?’ Then Jesus said to them, ‘Most assuredly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood, you have no life in you. Whoever eats My flesh and drinks My blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day. For My flesh is food indeed, and My blood is drink indeed. He who eats My flesh and drinks My blood abides in Me, and I in him … This is the bread which came down from heaven—not as your fathers ate the manna, and are dead. He who eats this bread will live forever.’”

 

Consubstantiation

 


Zondervan Academic explains
consubstantiation: “A second historical view is that of Martin Luther, generally called consubstantiation, though that was not a term that he himself used. By consubstantiation, we mean that Jesus Christ is present in, with, and under the bread and the wine whenever the Lord’s Supper is celebrated. Luther very clearly distinguished his view from transubstantiation. There's no mystical change of the substance of the bread and the wine. However, when the church celebrates the Lord’s Supper, Christ is present in, with, and under the elements of the bread and wine.”

Consubstantiality

 



Edward Lamoureux, a Catholic former professor of rhetoric at Bradley University, in his introductory course on Kenneth Burke (it has been suggested in Wikipedia) taught that Burke borrowed the concept of consubstantiation
to explain his concept of logology. Having never sat in Lamoureux’s course, I cannot be certain of his teachings on Burke and “consubstantiation,” but as the author of the Expanded Kenneth Burke Concordance, I can assert that Burke was employing the concept of “consubstantiality” long before Burke used the term “logology.” Furthermore, the only instance I have found in which Burke uses the term “consubstantiation” is in his later work The Rhetoric of Religion and, even there, Burke does not attach any real importance to the term by including it in his Index list of terms.

Burke only uses the term consubstantiation” at that one time, on page 260, after he is discussing (on pages 257-258) the first three chapters of Genesis, and there he appears to be using the term only as Theodor Reik uses it. Burke analyzes Reik’s Myth and Guilt, the Crime and Punishment of Mankind. In that work, Reik connects the two Trees of the Genesis Garden of Eden (of Life and of the Knowledge of Good and Evil) with the Cross of Christ which is frequently called a “tree” in the King James Version (Acts 5:30, 10:39, 13:29; Galatians 3:13; 1 Peter 2:24 KJV). (Actually, the Greek word translated “tree” in the KJV in those instances is xulon/ξύλον, which means simply “wood” or anything made of wood.) Burke comments that from his own “point of view, the … merging of Christ, the two trees and the Cross … would suggest another route whereby the principle of sacrifice could be shown to be implicitly present … in the vessels of life and temptation, at the very beginning.” Burke is not commenting from a biblical studies perspective; he is commenting on Reik’s application, not the Bible, itself. Although Burke does not use the term “consubstantiality” (or even consubstantiation”) at this point, he easily could have applied the term “consubstantiality” to the Trees and Cross observation. It is a good illustration of “consubstantiality” in the realm of physics (and even biology). In physics, the Tree of Life, the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, and the Cross of Christ all have consubstantiality (but not consubstantiation). They are all composed of a “common” (con-) “substance” (-substant-)—i.e. wood or xulon/ξύλον. Burke uses the noun “consubstantiality” more than a dozen times in his earlier works. He uses the adjective “consubstantial” another dozen or so more times—but not in The Rhetoric of Religion.

Whereas The Rhetoric of Religion was first published in 1961, Burke’s first mention of the terms “consubstantiality” and “consubstantial” was in his 1941 book The Philosophy of Literary Form where he comments that “in the communion service, consubstantiality is got by the eating of food in common” (pages 28-29). It is that common (communion) meal that makes Christians consubstantial with each other. On pages 44-45, he speaks “of familistic consubstantiality by which parents take personal gratification” in their children. Parents and child are of the same “substance.” He even speaks of “the delegation of one’s burden to the … scapegoat,” suggesting that the one whom we scapegoat is actually of the same substance as we are. In Leviticus 16, the scapegoat sent into the wilderness on the Day of Atonement took with him all of the sins of Israel. He was consubstantial with Israel. In Christian theology, the suffering servant of Isaiah 53, understood as Jesus, bore our griefs and carried our sorrows. He consubstantially became our scapegoat. This is not the same as the theological doctrine of consubstantiation.


On pages 29-31 of his 1945 book, A Grammar of Motives, Burke lists his types of substance which might qualify for consubstantiality, including “Familial substance … [which] stresses common ancestry in the strictly biological sense,” which substance he repeats on page 102. On page 372, he describes the Declaration of Independence as something that gave Americans of various ancestries consubstantiality, by giving them a common enemy—the Crown of England. On pages 21 of his 1950 book, A Rhetoric of Motives, Burke identifies the “offspring” as “consubstantial with its parents, with the ‘firsts’ from which it is derived.” He then presses this “firsts” concept to other circumstances. Needless to say, we can trace any and all humans back to some common (first) progenitor, such as Adam. This is to say that all humans have a certain level of consubstantiality with each another. There is certainly a closer level of consubstantiality, however, among members of the same contemporaneous family, living in the twenty-first century. There is a level of consubstantiality between rain, ice, clouds, seas, and rivers (H2O). There is a closer level of consubstantiality between the Illinois river and the Mississippi River, since one flows into the other. There is a level of consubstantiality between the Cross, the Tree of Knowledge, the framework of my backyard shed, my bookshelves, and even toilet paper. They all experience a descent, of sorts, from the trees God created on the Third Day (Genesis 1:11). There is a closer level of consubstantiality between Sawtooth Oak trees, Pin Oak trees, Bur Oak, Live Oak, and even Poison Oak, etc. There is an even closer level of consubstantiality between the large live oak behind my house and the smaller live oak trees that have sprung up from its acorns.

So, what consubstantiality exists between Jesus’s body and bread and wine? There is a level of consubstantiality in the fact that his flesh, like bread, wine, rocks, minerals, gasses, and animals are all composed of “natural” substances (in “physics/φυσική”). There is a closer level of consubstantiality in the fact that substances of His flesh, like bread and wine, are all biologic, organic material/hulē/ὕλη. They were all living (biological as opposed to mineral or gaseous) substances on Earth. Why would that be significant for communion? Because only biological substances can die. When the Word became flesh and dwelt among us (John 1:14), Jesus tabernacled in living, biologic, organic material/hulē/ὕλη. Rocks and minerals neither live nor die, but Jesus’s body lived biologically and died biologically.


As I mentioned in my previous blogpost on The Antichrist/s, “
Like Judas and those who are described in Hebrews 6:4-6 (NKJV), [the antichrist/s] ‘crucify again for themselves the Son of God, and put Him to an open shame.’ An antichrist is not an agnostic, unbeliever, or even an honest atheist. Indeed, the antichrist knows who Jesus is! He ‘is a liar … who denies that Jesus is the Christ’” (1 John 1:22). The antichrists deny the incarnation of Christ. This has been taken by many scholars to indicate that (at least, an incipient form of) docetic gnosticism (the belief that Christ just “appeared” to come in human form, but did not actually do so) was present in the church(es) to whom John wrote in 1st and 2nd John (the only places in the New Testament that discuss the Antichrist/s), but docetic gnosticism does not rear its ugly head until the 2nd century. I find it just as compelling (or more so) to understand that they are making reference to the prologue of John's Gospel (and 1 John 1:1-3) where the Logos “became flesh and dwelt among us.” This denial of the incarnation of Christ is, then, tantamount to a repudiation of Jesus as Christ. So, I don't believe we need a 2nd century theological explanation in the epistles.

When Jesus came to Earth, He chose not to come as a mineral or as a gas or a liquid. He came into a living, biologic, organic material/hulē/ὕλη, a body that lived biologically and died biologically. Furthermore, He came, not as a lower-level living, biologic, organism, such as a grain of wheat or a grape, or any vegetation, or insect or any other zoological organism other than the highest living, biologic, organism that He himself created: a man, the organism created in God’s image. Nevertheless, as a man, He took on the nature of ALL biologic, organic material/hulē/ὕλη—He lived and died. Just as wheat dies before it is baked into bread and as the grapes die before being crushed into new wine, Jesus himself died, organically. I point out on page 77 of my book The Logic of Christianity: A Syllogistic Chain that “the Crucifixion and Resurrection combine to form the Key Links” in the logic of Christianity. “He died one of the cruelest deaths of any human. Jesus was mortal.” On page 94, I conclude:

 

Thinking of the LEX TALIONIS, what should we think the fair maximum penalty [for whatever sins we have committed] could possibly be?  Could it be any worse than CRUCIFIXION?  What kind of sin or crime could one possibly commit that would suggest a fair maximum penalty greater than Crucifixion?  I cannot think of one.  If that is so, Jesus’ Crucifixion was JUSTICE for any sin known to mankind.  Jesus did receive justice.  He received justice, not for his own actions, but for the actions of any human that has ever lived.  He paid the price.  The CRUCIFIXION, then, is Judicial Rhetoric/The Justice Link in the Logic of Christianity.

 


Ephesians 1:7, Colossians 1:14, Romans 3:24-25, and 1 John 1:7 all indicate that it is the blood of Jesus that redeems us and purifies us from sin.
That is a fact that we might remember, as we “do this in remembrance of” Jesus (Luke 22:19), as Zwingli admonishes. As Paul teaches: “For as often as you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death till He comes” (1 Corinthians 11:26). True, there is metaphoric significance to the fact that bread often resembles human flesh and that new wine resembles human blood, but the fact that Jesus died organically as a scapegoat for our sins offers us all kinds of consubstantiality with Jesus, as His organic flesh—His body and blood—have consubstantiality with his organic creations of wheat and grapes. As we, in communion, all over the world share in the same organic meal of bread and new wine, we have consubstantiality with Christ and with each other.

As a final note, the passage where Burke uses the term “consubstantiation” in The Rhetoric of Religion, page 260, states: “Reik’s interpretation … circulates around the imagery of eating … with the ideas of both transubstantiation and consubstantiation being conceived after the same image.” The word “substance” in the Greek New Testament is hypostasis/ὑπόστασις, with the “hypo-/ὑπό-” meaning “sub- or under,” as in a hypo-dermic needle that goes under the skin (dermis) and the “stasis/στασις” meaning “standing.” Together, the word hypostasis/ὑπόστασις means that which “stands under,” as when wood “stands under” or is the “substance” of all wooden furniture, etc., and as “Faith is the substance (hypostasis/ὑπόστασις) of things hoped for” (Hebrews 11:1). This term hypostasis/ὑπόστασις is, I think, misused by the later Church in trying to explain Trinity as a “hypostatic (ὑπόστασις) union.” That will be the topic of my next blogpost.

Thursday, October 27, 2022

The Locomotion Entelechy and Jesus’ “Race” (Gospels 9)

 


Therefore we also, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily ensnares us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus, the author [
archēgon/ἀρχηγόν from the root archē/ἀρχή] and finisher [teleiōtēn/τελειωτὴν from the root telos/τέλος] of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.

(Hebrews 12:1-2 NKJV)

 

           

Coming to Aristotle’s fourth and final type of entelechy or kinēsis, we encounter it as a metaphor, as it pertains to Jesus, such as in the “race” referred to in the Hebrews 12:1-2 passage (above).  Paul is also fond of the “race” metaphor for his own life, and sees his life as having been a race, in 2 Timothy 4:6-8 (NKJV):

[T]he time of my departure is at hand. I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Finally, there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will give to me on that Day, and not to me only but also to all who have loved His appearing.

A race is an example of Locomotion Entelechy.

In addition to the “race” metaphor, the book of Hebrews uses entelechial terminology (cognates of of archē/ἀρχή and telos/τέλος) in describing the beginning and end of the work Jesus came for:

·         Hebrews 2:10 (NKJV) says: “For it was fitting for Him, for whom are all things and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons to glory, to make the captain [archēgon/ἀρχηγόν from the root archē/ἀρχή] of their salvation perfect [teleiōsai/τελειώσαι from the root telos/τέλος] through sufferings.”

 

·         Hebrews 5:9 (NKJV) says: “And having been perfected [teleiōtheis/τελειωθεὶς from the root telos/τέλος], He became the author [i.e., cause/aitios/αἴτιος—indicative of Aristotle’s four “causes” of kinēsis or entelechy (of which one is archē/ἀρχή)] of eternal salvation to all who obey him.”

 

Loco-Motion and Kinēsis

          


        

Kinēsis generally means motion or movement.  And, in order for entelechy to exist, there must be some type of motion/kinēsis.  In English-speaking countries, we know the word kinēsis from such phrases as “kinetic energy,” the energy that exists when something, such as a train, is in “motion.”  An advertising slogan for Trane HVAC Heating and Cooling uses the play on words: “It’s hard to stop a Trane.”  Of course, they want you to picture in your mind a “train” in motion.  The kinetic energy of such motion is so great that, even if the fuel is removed, the engine stopped, and the brakes applied, the train will continue to move forward, due to kinetic energy.  This is why one would not be wise to remain in a vehicle that is stalled on a railroad track with a train approaching.  It’s hard to stop a train!  However, the motion described in the train example is only one of Aristotle’s four types of kinēsis.  This type is appropriately entitled “locomotion.”  I point out on page 43 of Implicit Rhetoric that the four types of kinēsis are:

 

(1) substance--the one is positive form [morphê], the other privation [sterêsis]; (2) in quality, white and black; (3) in quantity, complete [teleion] and incomplete [atelês]; (4) in respect of locomotion, upwards and downwards or light and heavy. (Physics 201a5ff.)

 

Types #1, #2, and #3.  We have already encountered the first three types of kinēsis (or entelechy).  Type #1 was involved in the “growth” of Jesus’ human body. His body increased in physical substance.  Type #2 was involved in the qualitative change of Jesus’ form from the human form to the form of God (at his transfiguration) to the form of a servant (again) to the resurrected form to the ascended form.  His form changed in quality.  Type #3 was involved in Jesus’ filling his mind with knowledge/wisdom and filling up his authority until “all authority” had “been given to” him.  There was an increase in the quantity of knowledge and authority Jesus possessed.

Type #4.  Since trains are often called “locomotives,” I used the train example for type #4.  Notice that the word “loco-motion” includes both the term “motion” and the root of the term “location.”  This type of change or kinēsis involves a change of location, moving upwards or downwards, or (as a train does) moving from place (location) to place (location). 


One may observe that in the “locomotion” entelechy, there is no need for the concepts of form/eidos/εἶδος or material/hulē/ὕλη.  There is a need for both of these terms in a “substance” entelechy, because the form/eidos/εἶδος is either “growing” (as in the seed example or as Jesus’ material/hulē/ὕλη “substance” began to grow in form/morphē/μορφή in Mary’s womb) or it is withering/decaying/diminishing.  There may sometimes be a need for both terms in a quality entelechy, but if the quality of Jesus’ body changed again, at the ascension, to a purely spiritual essence, the terms would be unnecessary, there.  There is sometimes a need for both of these terms (form/eidos/εἶδος and material/hulē/ὕλη) in a “quantity” entelechy, because the form/eidos/εἶδος is either a complete “filling” (“full” form as in the grain tank example and the material/hulē/ὕλη “substance” with which it is filled is grain).  However, when it comes to Jesus’ “filling” his head with knowledge or filling his authority, it is hard to see that knowledge or authority acquisition has an actual form/morphē/μορφή or material/hulē/ὕλη.  We return, therefore, full circle to an observation I made in my earlier blogpost The Logos and Entelechy (Gospels 3): “The Book of Revelation employs the same important terminology that is fundamental to Aristotle's concept of entelechy.  I note, especially, the language of archē/ἀρχή and telos/τέλος, usually translated ‘the beginning archē/ἀρχή and the end telos/τέλος’ with which Revelation refers to God and Jesus.”  These two terms, archē/ἀρχή and telos/τέλος, are required and fundamental to all four types of entelechy, including (4) locomotion.  Whereas, the terms “form/eidos/εἶδος” and “material/hulē/ὕλη” are important or required only in the entelechies of (1) substance, (2) quality, and (3) quantity.  I conclude that, wherever there is discussion of the two primary terms (causes), archē/ἀρχή and telos/τέλος, in the New Testament, an entelechial interpretive perspective is appropriate.

 

Other Biblical Examples of Locomotion Entelechy

                  


One can easily recall numerous locomotion entelechies in the Bible.  The heavenly bodies God created usually travel on circular routes (around other heavenly bodies).  The Earth (to put things simply) completes a circular entelechy of locomotion around the sun, once annually, just as the moon orbits the Earth each month (or 28 days).  These circular motions starting from one relative location and ending at the same relative location comprise entelechies of locomotion.  Not all entelechies of locomotion are circular, however, and not all are matters of “nature.”  When God told Abraham to leave his home in Ur of the Chaldees in order to go to the promised land, Abraham began an entelechy of locomotion—motion from one location to another.  Likewise, in Exodus, when Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt to the promised land, they traveled from an Egyptian location to the land of Canaan location, with various important (middle) stops in the wilderness, in between (such as the Red Sea and Mt. Sinai). 

 

Jesus’ Locomotion Entelechy

                  


The Gospel of John 19:30 (NKJV) indicates the precise end/telos/τέλος of Jesus’ race when Jesus, on the cross, declares “It is finished [tetelestai/τετέλεσται from the root telos/τέλος]!’ And bowing His head, He gave up His spirit.  John 19:28 (NKJV) had prepared us for this final declaration by Jesus with the observation: After this, Jesus, knowing that all things were now accomplished [tetelestai/τετέλεσται from the root telos/τέλος], that the Scripture might be fulfilled [teleiōthei/τελειωθῇ from the root telos/τέλος], said, “I thirst!” 

When Jesus left Samaria, writes Luke, “it came to pass, when the time had come for Him to be received up, that He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem” (Luke 9:51 NKJV).  This was “purposeful” motion on Jesus’ part.  Jesus knew that a telos/τέλος awaited him at the Jerusalem location.  So, when Hebrews 12:2 uses a “race” analogy for Jesus, it is not far removed from the actual, literal locomotion entelechy of Jesus going to Jerusalem: “Jesus [was] the author [archēgon/ἀρχηγόν from the root archē/ἀρχή] and finisher [teleiōtēn/τελειωτὴν from the root telos/τέλος] of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame” (NKJV).  Jesus’ “race,” like all races had a starting line (archē/ἀρχή) and a goal line (telos/τέλος).  We’ll consider his starting line in the next blogpost.  Jesus (as he was both archē/ἀρχή and telos/τέλος in Revelation) serves as our paradigmatic example of author (archēgon/ἀρχηγόν from the root archē/ἀρχή) and finisher (teleiōtēn/τελειωτὴν from the root telos/τέλος) of our faith.  Paul, who wrote to Timothy that he had “finished [teteleka/τετέλεκα from the root telos/τέλος] the race [and] . . . kept the faith” (2 Timothy 4:7), understood who defined the race for the faith by his own example.  Jesus defined the starting line (archē/ἀρχή) and goal line (telos/τέλος) for each Christian.  Jesus’ race, therefore, serves as what Kenneth Burke would call our ”representative anecdote.”  His “race” entelechy “represents” ours.

 

In terms of Jesus’ and Paul’s respective races, as well as our own by extension in Hebrews 12:1-2, our “finish line/end/telos” (enduring the cross and sitting down at the throne of God) is implicit at our “starting line/archē.  Hebrews 12:1-2 spells out the entelechy: “[L]et us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus, the author [archēgon/ἀρχηγόν from the root archē/ἀρχή] and finisher [teleiōtēn/τελειωτὴν from the root telos/τέλος] of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God”).  Jesus is the archē/ἀρχή and telos/τέλος of our own individual “races.”  Paul may well have died a martyr’s death, but (despite church legends from the second century) we do not know for certain when or where that may have occurred.  Clearly, not every Christian dies a martyr’s death.  Not even will every


Christian “die.”  As Paul observes, “We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed . . . the dead will be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed(1 Corinthians 15:51 NKJV).  Nevertheless, as Mark sets out the entelechy (See my blogpost The Four Extremist Gospels (Gospels 2), every Christian must be prepared to die a martyr’s death.  Whoever desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me. For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake and the gospel’s will save it” (Mark 8:34-35 NKJV).  This is the entelechy of locomotion.  The life of Jesus represents the starting line and the finish line.  When one becomes a Christian, one begins the “race.”  The point at which Jesus began his “race,” as I mentioned, is grist for the next blogpost.