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Jerusalem Conference

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Title: Jerusalem Conference


1
Jerusalem Conference
  • (Apostolic Council)

2
Background on the Jewish Ritual of Circumcision
  • The Jewish practice of circumcision as a
    religious ritual goes back to Genesis 17, where
    God tells Abraham to circumcise himself and his
    descendants as a sign of belonging to the
    covenant people of God.
  • By the Second Temple period, circumcision had
    become a key distinction of the Jewish people,
    marking them off from the pagan Gentiles (who
    often ridiculed the Jewish practice as rather
    barbaric).
  • Male Jews who were born into the faith were
    circumcised as infants when they were eight days
    old. (According to Luke 2, baby Jesus was
    circumcised in keeping with Jewish custom.)
  • Gentiles who wished to convert to Judaism
    (proselytes) were circumcised as part of the
    conversion process (which also involved a kind of
    baptism and a temple sacrifice). Circumcision
    symbolized their becoming part of the covenant
    people and obligated them to observe the Jewish
    law and rituals just as if they had been born
    Jewish.
  • The issue for the early Christians was whether or
    not to continue this ancient Jewish practice. Can
    we claim to be the true Israel, Gods covenant
    people, without adopting the sign? How Jewish
    does the church need to be in observing the
    Jewish law and customs?

3
Arguments for Christian Practice of Circumcision
  • Some conservative Jewish Christians (sometimes
    called Judaizers) insisted that all Christians
    should be circumcised. Jewish Christians would
    have already been circumcised as infants, but
    Gentiles joining the church would have to be
    circumcised as part of their conversion (so the
    Judaizers demanded).
  • We do not know exactly what arguments the
    Judaizers made to support their position, since
    none of their writings have survived. But the
    following arguments may reasonably be inferred
    from the NT discussions of the issue (mainly in
    Acts, Galatians, Romans, and Philippians)
  • The practice of circumcision is biblical. God
    commanded it in Genesis 17. (Keep in mind that
    for the early church what we call the OT was
    their whole Bible there was no NT yet.)
  • Circumcision is the God-given sign of belonging
    to Gods covenant people. How can we claim to be
    Abrahams heirs and recipients of the covenant
    promises of salvation without adopting the sign?
  • Jesus, the apostles, and all of the earliest
    Christians were circumcised. Those wishing to
    admit Gentiles without circumcision are turning
    the church into something it has never been,
    making it un-Jewish, removing it from its origin
    in Gods ancient covenant with Israel.
  • Circumcision is a sign of submission to Gods law
    as revealed in scripture. If we dont circumcise
    Gentile converts and put them under the
    discipline of the commandments, how can they have
    proper moral guidance?

4
Arguments against Christian Practice of
Circumcision
  • Jewish Christians connected with Antioch (such as
    Paul and Barnabas) pioneered a mission to
    Gentiles without requiring circumcision. This
    precipitated the Apostolic Council, where the
    Jerusalem apostles (Peter, John, and James)
    recognized the basic legitimacy of their mission.
  • But some Jewish Christians did not buy into the
    agreement, so Paul had to keep defending his
    position. In several letters (notably Galatians,
    Romans, and Philippians), he makes detailed
    arguments against requiring that Gentile
    Christians be circumcised.
  • In Genesis 156, God recognized Abrahams
    righteousness based on his faith, even before his
    circumcision and before the giving of the law.
    Therefore, it is faith, not circumcision and the
    law, that makes us heirs of Abraham and the
    covenant promises.
  • To require circumcision would imply that
    righteousness before God is based on works of law
    instead of faith, but works of law is a dead-end
    path since no one can keep the law perfectly (and
    even if they did, it would just make them
    arrogant).
  • It is evident in the Gentile mission that God is
    saving Gentiles and filling them with the Holy
    Spirit on the basis of their faith in Christ even
    though they have not been circumcised. To impose
    a circumcision requirement would surely hinder
    this mission.
  • Even without circumcising the Gentile Christians
    and putting them under the Jewish law, they still
    have the moral guidance of the law of love. Jesus
    himself said that whenever we love our neighbor
    as ourselves we have fulfilled the whole law. And
    the indwelling Holy Spirit provides guidance and
    power for loving the neighbor.

5
Controversy in Antioch
  • After First Journey, controversy erupts over
    inclusion of Gentiles (Acts 151-3).
  • Some from Jerusalem were demanding that Gentile
    converts be circumcised.
  • Paul, Barnabas, and Antioch church had not been
    requiring it.
  • Circumcision was the key Jewish sign of the
    covenant, going back to Abraham (Gen. 17).
  • Male Jews were circumcised as infants.
  • Gentile converts to Judaism were circumcised as
    adults, marking them as Jews and putting them
    under obligation to follow Jewish law, rituals,
    and customs ( such as observing Sabbath, holy
    days, eating kosher food, etc.)
  • Issue is whether Gentiles (as such) can join
    church and be Christian or whether they have to
    become Jews first and follow Jewish rituals and
    customs.
  • When no resolution was found in Antioch, the
    debate was moved to Jerusalem for a high-level
    Conference.

6
Jerusalem Conference(Acts 154-29)
  • Key participants
  • Paul, Barnabas, and Titus represent Antioch.
  • Peter, John, and James the brother of Jesus
    represent Jerusalem.
  • Key issue Must Gentile converts be circumcised
    and follow Jewish law and customs in order to be
    saved and belong to the church.
  • The debate
  • Pharisaic Christians demand circumcision and
    following Jewish law as necessary for salvation.
  • Peter recalls experience of Gentiles receiving
    Spirit and having their hearts cleansed by
    faith/grace apart from yoke of law.
  • Paul and Barnabas recall their experiences among
    Gentiles.
  • James the brother of Jesus proposes the
    resolution
  • Circumcision and keeping whole law will not be
    required.
  • Compromise requirements known as Apostolic
    Decree
  • Gentiles must abstain from food offered to idols
  • from sexual immorality
  • and from meat not ritually slaughtered (v. 20).

7
Jerusalem Conference(Galatians 21-10)
  • Most scholars think Gal. 2 is Pauls account of
    the Jerusalem Conference.
  • Two main differences from Acts 15
  • Timing in Acts, it is Pauls 3rd visit to
    Jerusalem after his conversion in Galatians, it
    is his 2nd visit to Jerusalem.
  • Substance Galatians does not report the
    compromise requirements known as Apostolic
    Decree and seems to rule them out (they added
    nothing to me).
  • Possible explanations of timing discrepancy
  • Acts and Galatians report 2 different meetings on
    circumcision issue (not likely).
  • Galatians omits a visit to Jerusalem (not
    likely).
  • There is some confusion in Acts chronology (more
    likely).

8
Jerusalem Conference(Galatians 21-10)
  • 4. Problem of compromise requirements known as
    Apostolic Decree
  • Paul never mentions it (in Gal. or elsewhere) and
    does not follow it (1 Cor. 8-10 allows eating
    idol-meat under certain conditions).
  • Even Acts 2125 assumes Paul does not know these
    requirements.
  • These rules may have been formulated by Jerusalem
    church after Conference as way of allowing Jewish
    Christians keeping kosher to fellowship with
    Gentile Christians who were not.
  • May be Christian adaptation of Rabbinic Noachian
    laws, a list of minimal restrictions that
    allowed Gentiles to have close contact with
    observant Jews.
  • Attempts to impose these restrictions on Antioch
    church may have precipitated the incident in
    Antioch (Gal. 211-16).

9
Significance of Jerusalem Conference
  • Most important event in early history of church.
  • Preserved unity between Paul and Jerusalem
    leadership.
  • Opened the door for a wider mission to Gentiles.
  • Paved the way for the eventual separation of
    Christianity from Judaism. (If the circumcision
    requirement had prevailed, Christianity would
    have remained a sect of Judaism.)
  • There remained a faction not buying the
    agreement they will keep pressing the issue
    Paul will have to fight this battle again and
    again.

10
Incident in Antioch (Galatians 211-16)
  • Recorded only in Gal. 2 (not in Acts).
  • Involves a visit of Peter (Cephas) to Antioch.
  • First he ate with uncircumcised Gentile
    Christians.
  • Then, under pressure from representatives of
    James, he refused to eat with Gentiles. (Perhaps
    James was trying to impose Apostolic Decree
    restrictions on Antioch church.)
  • Peters refusal to eat with Gentiles caused other
    Jewish Christians (including Barnabas) to break
    fellowship as well splitting the church.
  • Paul publicly denounced Peters action.
  • No resolution is reported. Possibly, the church
    sided with Peter/James against Paul, who then
    went independent.
  • This episode likely had much to do with the split
    between Paul and Barnabas at the beginning of the
    Second Journey.
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