Are all these same questions raised about 1 Cor 15:35 about some mysterious
Mr. Tis?
ALLA EREI TIS, PWS EGEIRONTAI hOI NEKROI?
While I confess that I have not read what may be a voluminous literature on
this question, I would suggest that anyone who has read a bit of ancient
rhetoric will have seen ALLA EREI TIS more times than he/she can readily
count. It is the standard ploy of one who argues forcefully for any
proposition to answer in advance all expected hypothetical objections, and
ALLA EREI TIS is one common forumula for introducing the hypothetical
objection. Maybe I've read too much Cicero but I think I'd be rich if I had
a quarter for every "Quaeret quispiam ...", "Sed dicet aliquis ...",
"Attamen dicunt quidam ..." and such like phrases that I've seen over the
years. There's no need then to butt heads over whether James is referring
to Paul. He wouldn't need to go that far, even if Paul was in fact the
first to proclaim a doctrine that faith is what effects salvation. I have a
by-no-means hypothetical sister-in-law who honestly believes that a verbal
profession of faith without any serious commitment to transform a person's
existence toward faithful obedience to God's will is perfectly efficacious
to win a ticket of admission to the pearly gates, and I think James could
just as well have been predicting what she tells me. I have serious doubts
whether she's read enough of the Pauline letters to consider whether that's
really what he ever meant to imply. The last thing in the world I want to
get into is a theological discussion on the question of SOLA FIDE; my point
rather is that the rhetorical formula, ALLA EREI TIS, does not require at
all that one look for the hidden person that the formula's user has in mind.
Carl W. Conrad
Department of Classics, Washington University
One Brookings Drive, St. Louis, MO, USA 63130
(314) 935-4018
cwconrad@artsci.wustl.edu OR cwc@oui.com
WWW: http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~cwconrad/