Paul Foster, «The Pastoral Purpose of Q’s Two-Stage Son of Man Christology», Vol. 89 (2008) 81-91
It is argued that Q constructs a two-stage Son of Man Christology. The first stage presents a suffering figure whose experiences align with the contemporary situation and liminal experience of the audience of Q. The second stage focuses on
the future return of the Son of Man. It is at this point that group members will receive both victory and vindication. However, these two stages are not always maintained as discrete moments. By employing the title 'the coming one', Q at some points collapses this temporal distinction to allow the pastorally comforting message that some of the eschatological rewards can be enjoyed in the contemporary situation of the community.
The Pastoral Purpose
of Q’s Two-Stage Son of Man Christology
For those who advocate a titular approach for investigating the Christology of
a document, Q must seem a particularly impoverished source in terms of its
reflection on the person of Jesus. Cullmann, himself a classical practitioner of
titular Christology, while privileging such an approach, nevertheless
acknowledges that in some ways it creates a false dichotomy between the
person and the work of Christ. He states, “The New Testament hardly ever
speaks of the person of Christ without at the same time speaking of his
workâ€(1). Thus in discussing the Christology that Q may present, it is
necessary to consider both the titles used and the significance it attributes to
the work of Christ.
Here it is argued that Q constructs a two-stage Son of Man Christology.
The first stage presents a suffering figure whose experiences align with the
contemporary situation and liminal experience of the audience of Q. This
motif of the shared liminality of the Son of Man and the first readers of Q is a
product of the respective experiences of the rejection of theological claims,
marginalization of status, a lack of a sense of “placeâ€, and a perception of
being “stateless†people (2). The second stage focuses on the future return of
the Son of Man (3). It is at this point that group members will receive both
victory and vindication. However, these two stages are not always maintained
as discrete moments. By employing the title “the coming oneâ€, Q at some
points collapses this temporal distinction to allow the pastorally comforting
message that some of the eschatological rewards can be enjoyed in the
contemporary situation of the first readers of Q.
1. Missing Titles
A preliminary survey of the infrequent or non-use of certain titles is both
instructive and perhaps a little surprising. Depicting Jesus as “Christ†was, in
certain strands of the early Jesus movement, a way of encapsulating messianic
hopes and expectations. Admittedly, this title later became transformed into
little more than part of a double-barrelled name, but nevertheless its usage
remained a constant feature in references to Jesus. This makes its total absence
from Q striking. Commenting on the Jewish background of the semantic
(1) O. CULLMANN, The Christology of the New Testament (London 21963) 3.
(2) For the classic discussion of liminality as a transitional phase see V. TURNER,
“Betwixt and Between: The Liminal Period in Rites de Passageâ€, ID., The Forest of Symbols.
Aspects of Ndembu Ritual (Ithaca, GA 1967) 93-111.
(3) It may be the case that such a two-stage Christology arises from a sense of confusion
in the community over the delay of the parousia, see H.T. FLEDDERMANN, Q: A
Reconstruction and Commentary (BiTS 1; Leuven 2005) 130. However, while this remains
a possible motivation for constructing a two-part Christology, this suggestion is ultimately
not provable from the text. Hence it is considered more appropriate to take the Christology
of Q as it stands in the reconstruction of that document without speculating about the forces
that led to the formulation of such a Christology.