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Naming the Powers: The Language of Power in the New Testament

por Walter Wink

Series: The Powers (1)

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292489,943 (4.21)1
The reader of this work will search in vain for a definition of power. It is one of those words that everyone understands perfectly well until asked to define it. … Our use of the term 'power' is laden with assumptions drawn from the contemporary materialistic worldview. Whereas the ancients always understood power as the confluence of both spiritual and material factors, we tend to see it as primarily material. We do not think in terms of spirits, ghosts, demons, or gods as the effective agents of powerful effects in the world. … Thus a gulf has been fixed between us and the biblical writers. We use the same words but project them into a wholly different world of meanings. What they meant by power and what we mean are incommensurate. If our goal is to understand the New Testament's conception of the Powers, we cannot do so simply by applying our own modern sociological categories of power. We must instead attend carefully and try to grasp what the people of that time might have meant by power, within the linguistic field of their own worldview and mythic systems. … "I will argue that the "principalities and powers" are the inner and outer aspects of any given manifestation of power. As the inner aspect they are the spirituality of institutions, the "within" of corporate structures and systems, the inner essence of outer organizations of power. As the outer aspect they are political systems, appointed officials, the "chair" of an organization, laws—in short, all the tangible manifestations which power takes. … This hypothesis, it seems to me, makes sense of the fluid way the New Testament writers and their contemporaries spoke of the Powers, now as if they were these centurions or that priestly hierarchy, and then, with no warning, as if they were some kind of spiritual entities in the heavenly places."—from the Introduction… (más)
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The author hypothesizes that principalities and powers are neither demonic nor otherworldly spirits: rather they are interdependent inner and utter poles of any given manifestation of power. It is only when a particular power becomes idolatrous that the power becomes demonic.
  PendleHillLibrary | Aug 22, 2023 |
The beginning of at least a three part exploration into "the powers".

The author spends his time in this first edition setting forth the situation, exploring lexical data and usage, discussing disputed passages, and providing provisional conclusions based on the data. Appendices go into greater detail about the usage of certain words and concepts.

The author sets forth the fundamental challenge: what does it mean to say that a given person or entity has "power"? How is power exercised? Who is behind power? In this book the author's purpose is to attempt to answer the question in terms of how those who wrote and read the New Testament in its original context would answer the question, to come to an ancient understanding of the powers to the best of our ability.

To that end he explores the "power" words used in the New Testament and related apocryphal/pseudepigraphal/patristic literature: arche, archon, exousia, dynamis, thronos, kyriotes, and onoma. He also addresses angels, evil spirits, demons, and the "angels of the nations." In those lexical discussions he provides passages with meanings that are fairly clear and uncontroversial. In so doing he demonstrates that human powers and authorities are most often the ones described but that many of the same terms are used to describe that which certain heavenly or spiritual beings control or possess as well -- the Powers.

He then discusses the various passages regarding which there is understandable dispute whether the authorities involved are human or spiritual: Romans 8:38-39, 13:1-3, 1 Corinthians 2:6-8, 15:24-27a, Ephesians 1:20-23, Colossians 1:16, 2:13-15 (although not in that order). While human or spiritual are sometimes more in view than the other in these passages, he most often encourages the reader to consider that the author has both in mind. He also addresses the use of stoicheia in Ephesians 2:1-2, 3:10, 6:12 and Colossians 2:9-10 (again, not in that order), and does well to show how the term can be used to describe the basic 4 elements of the earth but also the current conception of the order of things, the "philosophical consensus" about reality, so to speak, as well (but not astral forces, a far later concept too often retrojected upon the NT).

He then makes his conclusions based on the evidence, speaking of the portrayal in a "mythic" sense, not as an attempt to suggest it may not speak to reality, but in terms of genre of conception. He then addresses many of the issues raised in detail: material reality as pervaded by the spiritual, and thus the spiritual reality as the inner aspect of the material reality, the suggestion the spiritual powers do not have the understanding we often would imagine they do, considering heaven as the transcendental "reality" or "substantiation" of present reality, parallelism of what exists spiritually and materially, and all to suggest that in the ancient conception of things, the Powers are the spiritual forces behind both manifest physical human powers and the systemic forces behind any exercise of power, made by God as good to govern His creation but many of whom have sinned just as humans have in their exercise of free will, and able to be directed to the good or to the evil, and to which we ought to give some heed.

This is one of those issues where the post-Enlightenment mentality makes it incredibly hard to conceive of "pre-rational" conceptions of reality, too often dismissed over the past 250 years as "mere superstition." But Wink desires to take what the Scriptures are saying about the Powers deadly seriously. Even if one would ultimately conclude that the conclusions drawn are not entirely consistent with reality, if we would profess to seek to understand the nature of reality according to what God has revealed in Scripture, the endeavor itself is at least worthwhile as a process.

So far I may find reason to question some of the details; one might wonder how much weight should be given to apocryphal and especially pseudeipigrahal conceptions of things (yes, sure, they reflect someone's ideas at the time about things, and others found it at least interesting enough to read and preserve, but does that mean that what these people are thinking is right and consistent with what is revealed in the OT and NT?). And yet substantially it is hard, at least at this point, to entirely reject the endeavor and not be given reason to think deeply about these things. Perhaps indeed YHWH is YHWH of Powers, and we ought to give more consideration to the Powers than would be deemed acceptable according to the post-Enlightenment synthesis. ( )
  deusvitae | Jul 6, 2017 |
This book was excellent in starting the Powers Trilogy by beginning to set the stage for a biblical understanding of the powers and their implications then and now(whether earthly or spiritual; good or bad, etc.). Unbeknownst to me I actually read The Powers that Be first several years ago and only discovered after the fact that it was a summary of the trilogy. While at first I felt silly for it, I'm glad that I had that and so the language was familiar as I approached this book. I don't believe I'm at the place to fully comprehend all the different implications Wink presents(mostly because some of the conversation is unfamiliar to me), I greatly appreciate what he brings to the conversation by means of trying to understand the powers. I'm looking forward to the two following books as well as getting my hands on anything I can by Wink. ( )
  jd234512 | Jul 9, 2010 |
Great intro to the series. hold on though, he is about to blow you away in the next two volumes! ( )
  tcatchim | Mar 26, 2007 |
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Wikipedia en inglés (1)

The reader of this work will search in vain for a definition of power. It is one of those words that everyone understands perfectly well until asked to define it. … Our use of the term 'power' is laden with assumptions drawn from the contemporary materialistic worldview. Whereas the ancients always understood power as the confluence of both spiritual and material factors, we tend to see it as primarily material. We do not think in terms of spirits, ghosts, demons, or gods as the effective agents of powerful effects in the world. … Thus a gulf has been fixed between us and the biblical writers. We use the same words but project them into a wholly different world of meanings. What they meant by power and what we mean are incommensurate. If our goal is to understand the New Testament's conception of the Powers, we cannot do so simply by applying our own modern sociological categories of power. We must instead attend carefully and try to grasp what the people of that time might have meant by power, within the linguistic field of their own worldview and mythic systems. … "I will argue that the "principalities and powers" are the inner and outer aspects of any given manifestation of power. As the inner aspect they are the spirituality of institutions, the "within" of corporate structures and systems, the inner essence of outer organizations of power. As the outer aspect they are political systems, appointed officials, the "chair" of an organization, laws—in short, all the tangible manifestations which power takes. … This hypothesis, it seems to me, makes sense of the fluid way the New Testament writers and their contemporaries spoke of the Powers, now as if they were these centurions or that priestly hierarchy, and then, with no warning, as if they were some kind of spiritual entities in the heavenly places."—from the Introduction

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