The Odes of Solomon, an early Christian collection of hymns preserved largely in Syriac, constitute an important yet underutilized witness to Christological reflection at the turn of the first and second centuries. This article re-examines the Christology of the Odes by situating them within Jewish Wisdom traditions and assessing their relationship to the Johannine Prologue and other early Christian texts. Against interpretations that read the Odes as expressing an orthodox Logos Christology, a quasi-Docetic view, or early Gnostic speculation, I argue that they articulate a distinctly Human Christology, centred on the exaltation of a righteous human Messiah. Apparent motifs of pre-existence and heavenly provenance are shown to arise from sapiential categories—especially Wisdom and Word—rather than from ontological claims about a pre-existent divine person. In the Odes, the “Word” denotes God’s revelatory activity, closely associated with Wisdom, while the Son functions as its vessel and mediator; the Son pre-exists only in the foreknowledge and purpose of God. By clarifying the conceptual relationship between Word, Wisdom, and Son, this study illuminates an early form of Christology that precedes later hypostatic developments and offers fresh perspective on the interpretation of the Johannine Prologue and the Christology of Ignatius.
Thomas E. Gaston (Mon,) studied this question.
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