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"O Wretched Man!

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Author: Dwight A. Pryor

WHO IS THE “WRETCHED MAN” OF ROMANS 7?

The identity of the tormented figure in 7:14-25 has long sparked debate among
theologians. Indeed the pervasive influence of this passage upon the Western church and
culture is hard to overestimate.

I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very
thing I hate (7:15)… For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what
I do (v.19)… O wretched man that I am! (v.24)

Answers to this question have been diverse, but the two most prevalent views share a
common conviction: the passage is autobiographical; it is the Apostle Paul himself. The
two differ however as to which Paul is speaking: Paul the Jew/Pharisee (before
conversion) or Paul the Christian (after conversion)?

In my judgment neither of these traditional interpretations does justice to Paul’s Hebraic


worldview nor to the historical context of his letter. The first reflects the deep-seated but
shameful prejudice against Jews and Judaism that has plagued Christianity. The second
displays the overly individualized and interiorized approach to spirituality that has
characterized Western spirituality and Protestantism in particular since Augustine.

CONSIDER THAT ROMANS 7 may not be autobiographical.

First, if Paul were speaking of his life as a Pharisee, prior to faith in Messiah, this text
would be inconsistent with—even contradict—statements he makes elsewhere, such as
his vivid recounting of his life in Philippians 3:4-6. He explicitly declares that “as to the
Law [he was] blameless (without fault)” (v.6).

For one who was a “Hebrew of Hebrews” and “circumcised on the eighth day” (v.5), how
could he possibly say, “I was once alive apart from the Law…” (Rom 7:9)? When would
that have been?

Paul, unlike Augustine and Luther (an Augustinian monk), was not besieged with inner
turmoil and guilt. He was fervent and zealous in his faith and continued to honor the
Torah and the traditions of the fathers even as an apostle in the Jesus Movement.

Second, consider the target audience. Given comments within the letter itself as well as
its first-century setting, Paul writes principally to Gentile believers in Rome: “I am
speaking to you Gentiles” (11:13). He repeatedly emphasizes his identity and mission as
a Jewish apostle called to bring the Gentiles to the “obedience of faith” (1:5; 15:18;
16:26).
The Gentiles most receptive to the gospel were found by Paul in the synagogues. These
“God-Fearers” were non-Jews (Greeks and Romans) attracted to the ethical monotheism
of Judaism and the worship of the true and living God. Like Cornelius (Acts 10), they
were noted for their piety, prayers and almsgiving.

Though not proselytes to Judaism, per se, the “God-fearing” Gentiles were Torah
observant in many respects, even if within the framework of their own Greco-Roman
moral ideals of self-mastery, of overcoming the desires and passions of the lower nature.
Thus, they could find themselves in spiritual turmoil, delighting in the Torah in their
“inmost selves,” but finding their “fleshly” impulses justly condemned and even inflamed
by it (Rom 7:22-23).

Paul assures them that the Torah truly is spiritual (v.14) and its commandments, “holy,
righteous and good” (v.12). Further, united with Messiah, the frustrated Gentile believers
can die to “this body of death” (v.24) and be raised up in the power of the Spirit to “fulfill
the righteous requirements of the Torah” (8:4).

Third, as a native, educated Greek speaker, Paul sometimes employs classical rhetorical
skills in his writings. The “I” (Gk: ego) of Romans 7 is a “fictive I” that Paul assumes for
dramatic effect. He speaks to the audience as if he were one of them—a Gentile believer
struggling with issues of the moral life and the Torah. The technique is known as
“speech-in-character” and was recognized as such by the early church theologian and
Greek scholar, Origen (Stowers, Rereading of Romans). First-century Greek speakers,
like Paul’s audience, would have recognized the “wretched man” not as autobiographical
but as rhetorical.

In the centuries following, this historical context was displaced by caricatures of


legalistic, prideful Jews assiduously laboring under an onerous Law. Paul the Pharisee
became a stereotype of Judaism’s miserable “religious man” and Paul the Apostle, a
model of Christianity’s “spiritual man” heroically struggling in the perennial internal
conflict between intellect and will.

© 2011 The Center for Judaic-Christian Studies.


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