Slaves of the crucified Lord

Paul – the “slave” of Jesus (Rom. 1.1; Gal. 1.10) – showed us how to follow a crucified King. His encounter with the Risen Lord on the Damascus Road marked Paul’s “crucifixion” (cf. Gal. 6.14) regarding the self-assertive ethos that had guided him up to that moment and his “resurrection” into a new life of self-emptying, obedient service to his crucified-and-risen master (cf. Phil. 2.5-7; 3.4-11). Indeed, Paul’s autobiographical remarks in his letter to the Philippians showcase two kinds of apologetic strategy – on the one hand, Paul’s former apologia had involved him in the pursuit of intellectual brilliance, socially mobility and respectability, and what’s more – zeal to the point of using violence to defend the integrity of Jewish tradition, and, on the other, a strategy of downward mobility, accompanied by the loss of status, credibility and security, that was albeit no less zealous. Only that, once he had been commissioned as an apos...