THE EXPERIENCE OF FAITH
By Hans Urs von Balthasar7
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The analogy between the pre-Easter and the post Easter testimony
(comparable to the analogy between testimony in the Old and the New
Testament) signifies the decisive step forward: the leaving behind of the old,
which had served as basis, in order to become established in the new. Paul is
the eyewitness of this step forward, since he not only had to defend his
eyewitness arduously in itself, but his eyewitness in this matter against the
privileges of the original Apostles. Whoever disregards the element of analogy
in the Apostles’ witness, will hold unswervingly to the testimony of the other
Apostles and will with them consider Paul’s credentials as an eyewitness to be
secondary, if not altogether doubtful. But his legitimacy stands under the
protection of Scriptural inspiration and thus remains unassailable.
This is of the highest theological interest. Paul’s witness to the
Resurrection dispenses with the ‘analogy’ between witness to Christ’s earthly
existence and witness to the Resurrection; he is a witness only to Jesus’
Resurrection. For Paul, the identity of the risen Christ with the Jesus who
suffered and died lies in the vitality exhibited by the Kyrios. Because he is the
new man, he was also the old. If this holds for Paul and if it is to this that he
witnesses, the same does not necessarily apply to the others. For Paul there is
no other legitimation than that of his own turning from the Old to the New
Covenant and to the new man, his conversio morum, the fact that in all things
he shows himself to be a servant of God, the fact that his existence has been so
transformed that it has become an incontestable mirroring of the image of
Christ. Paul proves himself to be one who has seen essentially by letting himself
be seen and by being, in fact, seen. He gives himself wholly over to seeing,
hearing, and touching: by the grace of God, in him a Christian has been formed
who is not a ghost, but who has flesh and bones. Paul cuts right through the
analogy that runs across the testimony of Peter and others, and this cannot be
his work, since he himself is the work of the grace of the Risen One.
Paul straddles the boundary between the apostolic and the ecclesial era.
He fights for his inclusion in the apostolic era, and the Lord himself gives the
warrant for this inclusion; and yet his experience of Christ bears essential
features of the ecclesial era, namely, that of private revelation and its
confirmation by personal sanctity. He shares this transitional character with
the whole period of the Acts of the Apostles: this is the period of archetypal
Church history. This is certainly so, on the one hand, because this is the span
of time in which Christ’s original eyewitnesses lived. And yet Paul falls outside
these limits, while still dominating in a central way the events in the Acts of the
Apostles. For, on the other hand, this period of history is more than just the
timespan in which the original eyewitnesses lived; it is the privileged space in
which the Holy Spirit became visible, audible, and palpable: it is the expansion
of the explosion that occurred on Pentecost.
7 The Glory of the Lord. Vol. I Seeing the Form. Hans Urs von Balthasar, Ignatius Press, 1982, pp. 347-348.15