It hasn't been quite as long that I posted this "analysis" of the Ehrman vs Allison exchange. It is about 5 printed pages of goodness. Hmmmm. However, I think I have covered just about all the quirks of the debate therein.
The following are abstracts I made of the debate. At heart it is an attempt to resolve the problem of why Gal 2 contains both the names Peter and Cephas. Are they referring to the same person, as is generally held, or are these really two different persons? You decide for yourself.
Introduction:
Back in 1990, Bart Ehrman wrote a provocative article called "Cephas and Peter" (JBL 109: 463-74), that argued that Paul may have known of BOTH a Peter AND a Cephas, on the basis of an analysis of Galatians 2.
The article generated a number of letters to the editors to the journal. Finally, in 1992, Dale Allison responded with "Peter and Cephas: One and the Same" (JBL 111, 489-95). The title says it all: To Allison, Peter and Cephas are the same person.
Conservatives and moderates embraced this defense of the traditional equation of Peter with Cephas. Even today, Allison's article is often said to have destroyed Ehrman's assertions, "point by point."
Having my own reasons for identifying Paul's Cephas with a different person than the Peter of the Gospels and Acts, I was not so ready to accept such a blanket assertion (which, by the way, is how I heard of the debate to begin with) without more than casual investigation. In the end I did not find this particular debate very helpful to my own cause, but I am better for having had made the investigation.
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My "Analysis" below may contain a "few" personal opinions about the literary emplotments these two are employing. At that time I was closely following the deconstructive techniques of Hayden V White described in his book Metahistory (1974?).
JBL 109: "Cephas and Peter", 463-74 (1990): Ehrman wrote the article as a re-evaluation of the question whether the Cephas and the Peter mentioned in Gal 2 could have referred to two different individuals. The evidence from early Church traditions for Cephas and Peter being different individuals is reviewed and his interpretation offered:
E1 A distinction between Peter and Cephas, as individuals, is found in a number of early Christian documents. He also notes that these speculations fly in the face of the equation of Peter with Cephas in John 1:42.
E2 That the variations between identifications of where these Peters and Cephases fit into Church tradition about Jesus and his followers suggest that a living tradition was at work rather than a direct literary borrowing of earlier statements by later writers.
Ehrman reviews alternative explanations for the two names in Gal 2:
C1 The "most common" explanation is that it derives from an apologetic concern to show that the person whom Paul opposed at Antioch (Cephas of Gal 2:11) was not the great Apostle of the Church (the Peter of Gal 2:7-8).
Ehrman counters that:
E(C1)a the fact that none of the authors of the Church documents cited make an apologetic point of these identifications argues against this explanation, and
E(C1)b that in some of these cases the two individuals are both identified as Apostles, weakening an apologetic explanation.
Ehrman here offers his own reasons for
E3 assuming that two different individuals are indicated:
E3a This would be the plain suggestion if the passages in Galatians are read without reference to John 1:42,
Although at this point Ehrman introduces a new section heading (III, pg. 467), the reason outlined below (which is found in this section, pp. 467-8), is clearly intended to support the explanation made near the end of the preceding section (E.3).
E3b Paul's readers/audience would not necessarily be aware that the Greek name Peter and the Aramaic name Cephas are rough equivalents in meaning.
A second, recent, "popular explanation" is described:
C2 In Gal 2:7-8, Paul is citing some kind of officially transcribed document of the Jerusalem conference mentioned in Gal 2:2. This assumes that a) The document used the name Peter, and that b) in Paul's "own language" and preference, he prefers to use the equivalent name Cephas.
Ehrman counters that:
E(C2)a the whole account (of Gal 2:2-10) is in the first person, without a hint that he is quoting an official document, and especially as it would have strengthened his case to have done so, and
E(C2)b he notes that the wording of 2:7-8 is characteristic of other writings in the Pauline corpus, inferring (without actually stating it) that this would not then represent the wording of a document he did not draft himself.
E(C2)c Any argument that the presence of the name "Peter" (in Gal 2:7-8) is itself proof enough that this passage likely reflects the wording of a Jerusalem agreement, is a case of circular reasoning.
At this point Ehrman summarily dismisses all alternative explanations, without elaboration, as
C3 "well known and frequently discounted for a similar want of evidence and probability", and states that "for our purposes it simply need be noted that if in fact there were two different persons, Cephas and Peter, then the matter would be handily solved."
Ehrman now resumes by describing an observation of earlier researchers, that:
C4 1 Cor 15:5 contains what some see as two parallel lists of those to whom Jesus had "appeared":
vss 5-6 |
vss 7-8 |
| Cephas |
James |
| the Twelve |
all the Apostles |
| 500+ brethren |
Paul |
It is generally interpreted that Cephas is head of a group he was a member of, the Twelve, and James is head of a similar group that he is member of, all of the Apostles.
Ehrman objects (and I had a hard time following Ehrman here, as his examples and explanations did not tie together very well, so the following in E(C.4) is my own reconstruction of his intent):
E(C4) That the assumption of a parallel between James as head of the Apostles and Cephas (assuming this is the same as Peter) as head of the Twelve is weakened by the fact that elsewhere Paul does not consider James, who here seems to be James the brother of the Lord, as head of all the Apostles. Consequently, James must be considered separate from "all the Apostles", and if the parallelism holds, then Cephas must be considered distinct from membership in "the Twelve". Since Peter is undoubtedly to be considered a member of the Twelve, then Cephas must be different than Peter.
Accepting the existence of two parallel lists, Ehrman then offers his alternative explanation for them, noting that any disparity between a Peter commissioned to evangelize Jews and a Cephas who evangelizes Gentiles is solved by considering them distinct persons.
E4a In Gal 2:8, taken at face value, Paul was committed to evangelizing Gentiles and Peter was committed to evangelizing Jews.
E4b In Gal 2:11 Cephas is associating with Gentiles at Antioch, and living like them (vs 13), evidently in the course of evangelization, which is at variance with a commission to Jews.
E4c In 1 Cor 9:5, Paul presupposes that his Gentile readers/hearers would be familiar with Cephas, which again suggests that Cephas was connected to efforts to evangelize Gentiles in Corinth.
In consequence to a conclusion that Cephas and Peter could not be the same person, Ehrman then concludes that:
E5 Some adjustments are necessary to commonly held "facts" about Peter, namely:
1) Paul conferred with Cephas, not Peter, in his trip to Jerusalem three years after his conversion (Gal 1:18-20),
2) Peter may not even have been present,
3) We know nothing about Peter being accompanied by his wife,
4) the confrontation at Antioch (Gal 2:11-14) was not between Paul and Jesus' closest disciple and most avid Apostle, but between a Jerusalem and a Pauline form of Christianity, and
5) there would be no evidence of Peter's presence in Antioch to support church tradition that he was its first bishop.
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Here is the outline of Allison's reply to Ehrman:
JBL 111 "Peter and Cephas: One and the Same" 489-95 (1992): Allison's response to Ehrman's article is interesting in its own right, if only for the rhetoric employed.
A.1 Allison begins by noting that Ehrman bases his analysis on the research of K. Lake, M. Goguel and D. W. Riddle. However, he recaps these scholars research as follows:
A.1.a "Goguel doubted the traditional identification but still held it more probable than not."
A.1.b "Lake believed there was a Simon Cephas and a Simon Peter."
A.1.c Riddle's article was "confused and confusing", and seems to "strongly imply" that "Galatians 2 indicates that there was a Peter and a Cephas" in the beginning of the article, while seeming to conclude "that there was a Simon and a Cephas." [I think he is criticizing the fact that this makes it look like Riddle uncritically equated Simon and Peter, but I am not sure why, since it would appear that Allison also makes this same - and probably correct - equation]
Next, Allison proceeds to recap Ehrman's article (E1, E2, C1 and particularly Ehrman's responses E(C1)a and E(C1)b).
Allison responds:
A(E(C1)b) He does not have difficulty imagining that apologists could have wished to salvage Peter's reputation at the expense of tarnishing that of the twelve. There was much debate in the 2nd & 3rd centuries over Peter's theological and ecclesiastical heritage, but nary any controversy over the heritage of the twelve.
A(E(C1)a) He separates the genesis of an apologetic tradition from its subsequent use. The implication, which is really not stated by Allison, is that an apologetic origin may still underlay these statements, although the statements themselves are not used in a polemical manner.
A(E1-2)a He lists several accounts in early Christian literature where a polemical motive concerning Cephas' or Peter's heritage can indeed be discerned.
A(E1-2)b He also notes that those traditions which speak of Cephas and Peter as two different individuals do not seem to be aware that they had "removed a great stumbling block".
A(E(C1)a,b) He first asks a rhetorical question: Even if those early writers, by means of "careful reading of the NT", reached the same conclusion as Ehrman, "were those Christians correct?" The implication, of course, is that they were not.
Ehrman's thesis is then outlined (utilizing only E3b, which is supported by E(C4), and E4a).
In response, Allison says:
A(E(C4)) "1 Cor 15:5 does not *exclude* the possibility that Cephas was one of the twelve", as the text alone cannot settle the matter.
A(E4a) "Gal 2:8 cannot be proof that Peter never ministered to Gentiles, just as it cannot be proof that Paul never occupied himself with Jews." In support, he noted that Gal 2:9 states that Cephas is to "go to the circumcised" while Gal 2:12 has Cephas eating with Gentiles at Antioch, and which Ehrman did not treat.
A(E3b) That the use of multiple names for the same person is not as unusual as Ehrman implies. Examples are given: 1) Joseph & Aseneth 22:2 (Jacob = Israel), 2) Mark 14:37 (Peter = Simon), 3) Luke 22:31 (Simon = Peter). Allison suggests that variations of names in these examples can, at least in part, be ascribed as stylistic traits of the authors.
A(E(C2)b)a The employment of characteristically Pauline language in a description of the contents of a hypothetical "pre-Pauline text" at Gal 2:7 was not a problem for H. D. Betz in his 1979 rhetorical analysis of Galatians. Betz's reasoning is that "rather than 'quoting' from the written protocol, Paul reminds the readers of the agreements by using the terms upon which the parties had agreed" (i.e., he paraphrased the terms of the agreement in his own language).
A(E(C2)b)b Allison suggests that the proposal that this verse as an allusion to the material embedded in Matt 16:17-19 may "perhaps have something to be said" for it, and notes that Pseudo Clementine Homilies 17:19 combines clear allusions to Matt 16:18 and Gal 2:11 in a manner consistent with this proposal.
Finally, Allison offers his own reasons for taking Cephas and Peter as a single individual:
A1a The underlying meaning of the names Peter (stone, sometimes rock) and Kephas (rock, stone) make the names near synonyms. Since known pre-Christian sources use Aramaic Kepa as a name only once, and PETROS not at all (although he notes that C. C. Caragounis stated that "in view of the predilection of the ancients for names derived from PETROS/PETRA ... it is only natural to suppose that PETROS was in existence [in pre-Christian times], though no examples of it before the Christian era have turned up as yet", and he "can demonstrate pagan use of the name in the first and second centuries CE"), he thinks it highly unlikely that there could be two men with such rare (sur)names.
A1b If Aramaic Kepa was a nickname rather than a birth name, it is to be expected that the Aramaic name will be translated for the benefit of Greek-speaking Christians. Examples are given: Acts 9:36 (TABIQA <transliterating Aramaic tabyeta> = DORKAS); John 11:16, 20:24, 21;2 (QWMAS = DIDUMOS <translating Aramaic toma>; Mark 3:17 (BOANHRGES = "sons of thunder"); and Luke 6:15/Acts 1:13 (hO ZHLWTHS probably translates Aramaic qan'an).
A2 The author of John 1:42 knew of a tradition in which one person, Simon, was also called "Cephas" and "Peter". Objections that the author of John 1:42 and/or his tradition may have conflated Peter and Cephas because the names mean the same thing are dismissed as "sheer speculation, and the more dubious given that John's tradition seems to have had independent and presumably reliable information about several of Jesus' first followers (e.g., Jesus drew disciples from the Baptist movement; Philip and Andrew and Peter were from Bethsaida; Simon was the "son of John"; see 1:35-36, 42, 44)." The implication is that he can be trusted here as well.
A3 While the present form of the gospels relate nothing about Peter being the first to see the resurrected Jesus, Luke 24:34, relating the experiences of the two unnamed disciples while on the road to Emmaus, has them tell the disciples "[t]he Lord has risen indeed, and has appeared to Simon". If the appearance to the women is discounted (and I will momentarily duck), and Simon is considered to be Simon Peter, then the author of Luke is giving Peter the same distinction that the author of 1 Cor 15:5 does to Cephas.
A4 The grouping of "James and Cephas and John" as "pillars" in Gal 2:9 is paralleled in Acts by the pairing of Simon Peter "with John (e.g., Acts 3:1-26; 4:1-31; 8:14), once with James (15:1-21); and the three men are clearly the dominant figures among the so-called "Hebrews" (1;13,15-26; 2:1-42; ..." just as were the "Pillars" mentioned in Galatians.
A5 If Peter is not Cephas, why "do the traditions in Acts have nothing at all to say about the latter?" The implication is that they should have, but do not, and thus cast doubt upon the idea. He asks how a person with the kind of authority ascribed to Cephas in Galatians, or who had important contacts with the Corinthian converts, could "manage to leave no sure trace of himself in the NT apart from Paul's epistles?" He implies that the only alternative to assuming Cephas and Peter are one and the same person is to assume that "apart from Paul's epistles, every tradition about Cephas came to be, through conscious or unconscious error, a tradition about Peter".
A6 "Paul says that Peter was an "apostle" entrusted with the mission to the circumcision (Gal 2:8). Paul says that Cephas was an "apostle" entrusted with the ministry to the circumcision (Gal 1:18-19; 2:9)."
A7 1 Clement, presumed by Allison to be an "early witness", while not directly equating Peter with Cephas, speaks of Peter using language that is drawn from language employed in Paul's writings as they relate to Cephas (1 Clem 47:3 from 1 Cor 1:12; and 1 Clem 5:7 from Gal 2:9).
A8 Allison lists 10 parallels between Peter and Cephas:
Peter-Cephas
1) Both mean "rock" (A1)
2) The lord appeared first to both of them (A3)
3) Both were Jews and prominent leaders of the primitive Jerusalem community (A4)
4) Both were associated with James and John (also A4)
5) Both participated in the Gentile mission (A6)
6) Both were married (Mark 1:30 & 1 Cor 9:5)
7) Both were of "fickle character" (Mark 14 & Gal 1-2)
8) Both knew Paul personally (Acts 15 & Gal 1-2)
9) Both were itinerant missionaries (Acts 1-15 & 1 Cor 1:12; 3:22, etc)
10) Both came into conflict with Jerusalem Christians over eating with the uncircumcised (Acts 11 & Galatians 2)
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David C. Hindley
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