J.A. Harrill’s book Paul the Apostle: His Life and Legacy in Their Roman Context (2012) is an “anti-biography” of the Apostle Paul, with a significant focus on the Roman context in which Paul lived and operated. A key argument in the book is that Paul was not anti-imperialistic as if he was opposing Roman culture; instead he fully lived within this culture. Furthermore, we should avoid overly dichotomizing cultural identities. As Harrill writes, “We need to move beyond thinking about Romanness as a bounded entity against which the ‘opposing’ cultural identity of Paul can then be contrasted or otherwise measured” (p. 79). The author aims to demonstrate that Paul functioned entirely within the framework of Roman culture, including in his rhetoric. Paul’s rhetoric was characteristically Roman, particularly in his use of auctoritas (authority), which Harrill illustrates through a comparison between Paul’s rejection of “official” apostolic rights (1 Cor. 9:1-6, 12-18) and Augustus’ rejection of honors in the Res Gestae (p. 81f.).
In addition to this chapter on Paul’s Life in Its Roman Context (ch. 3), Part I: The Life contains a chapter entitled From Pharisee to Apostle (ch. 1), in which the author argues for continuity between Saul’s early life in Judaism and Paul’s later Christian mission. Chapter 2, Communities in the Making, also belongs to Part I and focuses on Paul’s mission and the formation of Messianic communities in the Mediterranean region. In this chapter, Harrill discusses the possibility that Paul was not executed in Rome as tradition suggests, but rather attacked and killed in Jerusalem when he brought the collection from the Gentile community to Jerusalem.
Part II – The Legend – consists of chapters 4-6. Chapter 4, Competing Stories about Paul in Late Antiquity, examines the “legendary Paul” as depicted in works such as The Martyrdom of Paul (ca. 190) and The Correspondence of Paul and Seneca (4th century). This chapter addresses the reception of Paul after his death. In his anti-biography, Harrill does not treat the Acts of the Apostles “as a primary source providing independent information about his life,” but rather “as one of the first interpretations of Paul” (pp. 97-98). Chapter 5, Paul the Scriptural Authority: Contradictory Discourses, presents contrasting views of Paul, such as those of Marcion and Valentinus, the “two Pauline rivals at Rome” (p. 122). Besides these two rivals, Irenaeus, Origen, and John Chrysostom are also discussed. Chapter 6, How the West Got Paul Wrong, describes how Paul has been portrayed throughout the history of Western culture (e.g., “as the prototypical religious convert,” alongside other characterizations). Harrill argues that Paul “became this key figure most familiar today not for who he was but for who he came to be in the eyes of his later interpreters” (p. 138). Notably, and somewhat disappointingly, Martin Luther is addressed only in a brief section entitled A Note on Martin Luther’s Paul. I would have appreciated a more detailed treatment of this topic.
In the Conclusion, Luther reappears briefly when Harrill writes: “Paul was not the converted sinner whom Martin Luther reinvented in his Protestant theology of ‘Justification by Faith Alone,’ based upon Augustine’s theology” (p. 165). The author concludes his book with the statement: “Finishing this book does not bring closure to Paul,” followed by: “There is no end to Paul” (p. 166). As Harrill emphasizes in both his introduction and conclusion, we are not dealing with a singular Paul but rather a diversity of different (and rival) Pauls.
I read Harrill’s “anti-biography” of Paul with great interest. The cultural focus on the Roman context is well executed, while the biblical references are also thoughtfully addressed. The book effectively conveys that Paul did not oppose Roman culture but operated within it. The presentation of how Paul has been understood and interpreted in (Western) church history is particularly fascinating and serves as a valuable reminder that the Paul we know today is shaped by interpretive traditions.