Showing posts with label Paul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul. Show all posts

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Judaism described in the New Testament - Interview by Lawrence H. Schiffman

Bernard Starr, of the Huffington Post has done a superb interview to Lawrance H. Schiffman, on how the New Testament describes Jewish practices and beliefs of the Second Temple Judaism period.

Here it's a piece of the interview:

Q. The Sabbath mandate for rest and renewal in Jewish law and tradition invokes many restrictions on activities---particularly work. Acts 1:12 mentions the allowable distance one can walk on the Sabbath before it is considered a violation. Didn't Jews always know and practice that?
A
. Yes and No. Yes we know about that law, but some say that these particular Sabbath laws only came into existence after the destruction of the Second Temple. But here we have verification that the laws existed in Jesus' time in the first century--- and that the disciples were scrupulously following Jewish law. In Acts 1:12 they were able to walk to the Mount of Olives (Olivet) on the Sabbath because it was in the allowable distance --"A Sabbath day's Journey away" of 3000 ft (2000 cubits). In fact, archaeological excavations have uncovered stones in some locations for marking the Sabbath limits. . 

It's an interesting read. Go ahead and have a look. You will learn heaps. 

Friday, July 26, 2013

Objections against the Church

Intro:
Some people who want to defend the faith, start by trying to destroy the belief of the one they want to “witness” to, cf. II Cor. 10:4-5. Yet, we have to take into consideration what the whole of Scripture tells us about this matter, cf. I Peter 3:15 and Jude 3. 

We have a mandate to refute others in their beliefs, but to do it wisely. There are a lot of objections against the church, but we must learn how to answer them, so we can win those making the objections over to our side.

We will see 3 examples. 1. Paul at the Aeropagus. 2. People think they are spiritual, therefore, they don’t need to come to church. 3. Christians are just too hypocritical.

1. Paul at the Aeropagus. Acts 17:16-32.
Paul finds a way to connect to his audience. Explain who the Epicurians are, who the Stoics are. A good connection till the resurrection of the dead is mentioned.

2. Spiritual but no need of Church.
God is everywhere, so no need to go to church. Some churches are unspiritual. Some churches don’t promote love for one another. I believe in the Bible, yet don’t believe in what the church says.

But following the horoscope, the lottery, spiritual sightings, become also a chain, and one that does not help our spiritual life. This is also a very individualistic approach to the spiritual life.

Heb. 10:25.   Rom. 8:9-11.

3. Christians are Hypocrites.
I grew up in church, and saw the hypocrites. My mom and dad were hypocrites. The pastor/priest was a hypocrite.

We don’t stop going to work because our co-workers are hypocrites. We don’t stop going to a party, because we know some of our friends or hypocrites.

Is anyone who is not a hypocrite? Matthew 19:17;  Mark 10:18; Luke 18:19 and Romans 3:11, 22-23. 


If they believe in the Bible, and want to different from the hypocrites, they must obey what the Bible says.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Top scholars including N.T. Wright headed to Australia in July


NEWS | Sophie Timothy
Thursday 4 April 2013
Writer and popular New Testament theologian N.T. Wright will be among hundreds of scholars visiting Perth in July for the largest gathering of New Testament specialists ever to be held in the southern hemisphere.
It will be the first time the Society for New Testament Studies has met in Australasia, and a number of local scholars have been selected to present papers alongside their international counterparts.  Among them are Ridley Melbourne’s Principal Brian Rosner (formerly of Moore College, Sydney) and Theology Lecturer Mike Bird (previously of Queensland Theological College).
Mike is currently working on a New Testament Introduction co-authored with N.T. Wright and he’s organised for N.T. Wright to spend a week in Melbourne before heading to Perth.
N.T. Wright will speak at three public conferences in Melbourne during the week of July 16-20, the first of which will be held at Ridley, where he will speak on “Paul, Jesus, and the Mission of God’s People”, while the second conference is based on his new book: “Paul and the faithfulness of God”. He’ll then finish his visit to Melbourne with some filming and a two-day conference for the Uniting Church of Australia on “Wisdom’s Feasts” before leaving for Perth.
N.T. Wright is a Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at the University of St Andrews, Scotland, and was the Bishop of Durham until 2010.  Not afraid to challenge the status quo, N.T. Wright has made ripples in evangelical circles in the last 20 years by questioning the reformed/traditional understanding of the relationship between salvation and the law in the Apostle Paul’s writings. This so-called “New Perspective” aims to take into account a more positive view of Jewish beliefs at the time of Christ. The traditional view is seen as oversimplifying their relationship to God, as based on keeping the law. The most outspoken critics of the New Perspective include John Piper and D.A. Carson. It is a topic which will no doubt be canvassed during Tom’s time in Melbourne.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The Cult of the apostle Paul



It's true, I couldn't believe it myself, but Larry Hurtado has pointed to the fact that Paul, has been worshipped, or at least, held in a  place of devotion.

A recently arrived book merits notice:  David L. Eastman, Paul the Martyr:  The Cult of the Apostle in the Latin West (Atlanta:  Society of Biblical Literature, 2011).  The object of the book is to analyze the evidence for the ways that the Apostle Paul came to be the object of reverence in the early centuries (Eastman’s chronological scope takes us down to ca. 600 CE). In Part 1, he discusses the emergence of devotion to Paul in Rome.  This includes archaeological as well as textual evidence.  One of the more interesting facts is that two rival sites for Paul’s martyrdom were touted, one on the Ostian Road, the other on the Appian Road.  In the first of these (where the Emperors Constantine and, subsequently, Theodosius I erected basilicas in Paul’s honor) excavations turned up a sacrophagus claimed by the Vatican (in 2009) to contain the bones of Paul.  Eastman’s discussion of the archaeological data on the two Roman sites is measured, careful, and seems thorough.Part 2 addresses the spread of “the Pauline cult” in Latin Europe and in North Africa.  Here as well, Eastman continues to provide an impressively thorough discussion.  There’s also a 34-page bibliography, reflecting the depth of Eastman’s engagement with scholarly resources on his subject.The time-frame takes us well past the period of “Christian origins” that I usually try to monitor myself, but I commend the book as a highly informative account of how, especially in the post-Constantinian period, Paul came to hold such a prominent place in Christian devotion.

Friday, December 9, 2011

A Conference you might want to attend if you are in the UK


Beyond Old and New Perspectives on Paul:
A two-day conference critically engaging with Douglas Campbell’s proposals in
The Deliverance of God: An Apocalyptic Rereading of Justification in Paul

Friday 16th December: The Problem 
(venue: conference room, KCL)
10:00-10:10am: Opening and welcome, Richard Burridge, KCL
10:10am-12:00 midday: Presuppositional issues, chair Eddie Adams, KCL

∞ Opening remarks on the recent debate: Chris Tilling, St Mellitus (15 minutes)
∞ The presuppositional theological issues: Alan J. Torrance, St Andrews (25 minutes)
∞ The view from the Reformation: Graham Tomlin, St Mellitus (25 minutes)
∞ Panel discussion, followed by plenary discussion (45 minutes)
12:00 midday-1:00pm: Lunch (catered)
1:00-3:00pm: Arian versus Athanasian readings of Paul, chair Eddie Adams
∞ The capture of Paul’s Gospel by Arianism: Douglas Campbell, Duke (25)
∞ Campbell’s Apocalyptic Gospel and Pauline Athanasianism: Chris Tilling (35)
∞ Panel discussion, followed by plenary discussion (60 minutes)
3:00-3:45pm: Afternoon tea (catered)
3:45-5:30pm: Towards the elimination of the Arian reading, chair Alan J. Torrance
∞ Connecting the dots: one problem, one text, and the way forward: Douglas Campbell (35)
∞ Response: David Hilborn, St Mellitus (20)
∞ Panel discussion, followed by plenary discussion (50 minutes)
5:30pm- : Wine reception (sponsored by Eerdmans, and Duke Divinity School)
 

Saturday 17th December: A Solution
(venue: the Chapel, KCL)
10:00-10:05am: Welcome, Richard Burridge, KCL 
10:05-12:00 midday: The interpretation of Romans 1-3, chair Chris Tilling

∞ Rereading Romans 1-3: Douglas Campbell (40 minutes)
∞ Response: Robin Griffith-Jones, KCL (15 minutes)
∞ Panel discussion, followed by plenary discussion (60 minutes)
12:00midday-1:00pm: Lunch (catered)
1:00pm-3:00pm: The Interpretation of Paul’s dikaio- language: chair Eddie Adams
∞ Rereading Paul’s terminology: Douglas Campbell (45)
∞ Response: Scott Hafemann, St Andrews (15)
∞ Panel discussion, followed by plenary discussion (60 minutes)
3:00-3:45pm: Afternoon tea (catered)
3:45-4:45pm: The interpretation of Paul’s faith language: chair, Eddie Adams
∞ Campbell’s proposals concerning “faith” in Deliverance: Chris Tilling (25)
∞ Response: Douglas Campbell (5)
∞ Panel discussion, followed by plenary discussion (30)
4:45-5:45pm: Conference plenary: Where do we go from here?: chair, Jeremy Begbie, Duke (60 minutes)

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Where is the true church found?





One of the slogans of the XVI century Protestant Reformation was:
The true church is found where the Word is preached and where the sacraments are correctly administered.
Although the slogan talks about the church, with a further look into it, it only applies to those doing the action of preaching and giving the sacraments. The rest, it seems, are not part of the church. I understand that this was not the original intention of the Reformers, but it is pretty the much outcome of such a slogan.

Some would say that I have misunderstood and therefore find fault with such formulation from the Reformation. That the slogan makes it understood that those who hear the word preached as well as receiving the sacraments -or as a good Baptist that I am would call them, ordinances- do form part of the church. However, I find the slogan at fault for its ambiguity, confusing and inadequate for the following two reasons.

First, as I have mentioned before, it only talks about the action done by one group of the church, in this case, the clergy. From this perspective, the slogan only deals with the members of that group within the church. It is of interest to note that in churches such as the Lutheran (Luther is alleged to have said that slogan in particular), the Reformed, and the Anglican, only those correctly ordained can offer the two sacraments or ordinances, these being baptism and communion. This to me, gives an unintentional turn from what the Reformers where trying to affirm, that was the priesthood of all believers.

Second, the word of God can be preached with orthodoxy, precision, etc., but that doesn't guaranteed that it will have the effect sought for (here, I am reminded of the parable of the sower). An example of this would be the prophets in the Old Testament warning both Israel and Judah to repent or be destroyed, and the people didn't listen. In the New Testament, the highest example of this is Jesus, God incarnate, who people didn't listen to him either, (to my mind comes the doctrine of election, but that's not the point I want to make today). In more recent times, it comes to my mind the sermon by Jonathan Edwards, "Sinners at the hand of an angry God", which he preached to a congregation, that although orthodox, did not show any signs of regeneration in their lives.

Which is then, the mark of a true church? I don't wish to put down the a good, solid biblical preaching, as I don't wish to put down the reception (if one is Lutheran or Calvinist) or the participation (if one is Baptist or something else) of baptism and the Lord's Supper. But I need to be biblical as to what defines a true church. And this brings me to Pentecost, and the Pauline letters.

We find in Acts 2, that the church is empowered by the power of the Holy Spirit. According to my reading of the text, this is what puts them apart from not only the other jews, but with the rest of humanity as well. We see later in the letters of Paul, how the Holy Spirit not only marks the members of the church as different from all other people, but also as making them the church, but also God's temple:

1 Corinthians 3:16 (New International Version)

16Don't you know that you yourselves are God's temple and that God's Spirit lives in you?

and:

1 Corinthians 12:12-13 (New International Version)

12The body is a unit, though it is made up of many parts; and though all its parts are many, they form one body. So it is with Christ. 13For we were all baptized by one Spirit into one body—whether Jews or Greeks, slave or free—and we were all given the one Spirit to drink.


In another passage, Paul refers to the fact that believers are sealed with the Holy Spirit that guarantees the promises to them:

2 Corinthians 1:22 (New International Version)

22set his seal of ownership on us, and put his Spirit in our hearts as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come.


And:

2 Corinthians 5:5 (New International Version)

5Now it is God who has made us for this very purpose and has given us the Spirit as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come.

And:

Ephesians 1:13-14 (New International Version)

13And you also were included in Christ when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. Having believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, 14who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are God's possession—to the praise of his glory.


We can see then, in this passages, we find that what Paul sees as the sign of the true church, is not what the Reformers saw, rather, is something that in the Reformation was somewhat neglected. Today, this sign of the true church would be a controversial one for many reasons, especially among those that although accepting the Holy Spirit as the third member of the Trinity, don't accept that he is active in today's age as it was in the time of the apostles. Another reason that this sign may be controversial is that is very subjective, and the evangelical fundamentalism, with its roots in the 18th century, rejects all that cannot be examined with an objective view. Nevertheless, as we can see, for Paul, it is the reception of the Holy Spirit that marks out those who are the true church.

Following Paul's argument then, what really sets the church apart is that she has received the gift of the Holy Spirit, the guarantee that all the promises made in Scripture regarding us will come true.

I think this this position does more justice to the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers, since it shows that the Holy Spirit empowers all believers to do the work, not only inside the church, but outside as well. This in turn, solves the issue of what is the real work of church, since the believer possesses, or rather, is possessed by the Holy Spirit at all times and at all places, thus, makes the believer act more ethically in the market place.

I believe that this view serves the text better, and shows how the work of the church goes well beyond the confines of the walls within a temple. I have not been meaning to be exhaustive on this issue, but to point a way forward in this continuing conversation.

Luis Alberto Jovel

Monday, August 16, 2010

Freedom in Christ (Sunday 15-8-2010 Sermon)



Freedom in Christ

The price of freedom is eternal vigilance” Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States, said that very soon after his country gained independence. For him, as for the rest of his country, independence was gained at a high price, many lives were lost, and much destruction was seen around the thirteen colonies. Nevertheless, the threat that England may want to take back the country was a clear and ever present threat (they tried to take over again in 1812). With this background, Jefferson calls his fellow Americans to be watchful, that as hard as freedom was won, it could be easily lost.

Paul warned the Galatians along similar lines, although the freedom gained at the Cross did not mainly dealt with mundane realities, but eternal ones. Nevertheless, believers enjoy freedom during their life times, and that freedom that Christ paid with his life is worth fighting for. We can’t just lie back and enjoy our freedom, as nothing will ever pose a threat to it. In Jude 3 we are called to “contend for the faith that was once for all entrusted to the saints”. We are all called to defend the freedom won by Christ.

Today we will see how this freedom can be attacked by two fronts, from those from within, and those from without. Paul deals with such issues during this ministry in Galatia, and everywhere else, and we continue facing those challenges today.

Those who oppose freedom from within

It is very easy to be deceived by others who are calling us to show more spirituality, or invite us to have a better way of achieving a victorious Christian life. Sometimes they may be very good friends of us, and may be sincere in their search for a more solid Christian life. But the problem is that they are adding to Christianity something that may at the end delude it. Putting more water to milk, may make it seem that there’s more of it, but in actual fact, it’s taking from it its pureness. The same happens when we try to add something else to the Gospel of Christ.

The “false brothers”, cf. II Cor. 11:13-15, want to make the Gentiles to practice the ritual of circumcision, in order to make them fully followers of Christ. From their point of view, they needed to fully identify with the Jewish nation in order to be in a proper relationship with God, and with the Jewish believers. Paul sees in such an act an imposition that far from helping the Gentile believers makes them conform to the version of Christianity held by the false brothers.

Anything, or anyone who says that we must do something else in order to fully live the Christian life, is just deluding the Gospel. Pauls calls us not to be slaves of men, I Cor. 7:23You were bought at a price; do not become slaves of men.”

Let’s stand firm in our freedom against those who lack better judgement, and think they can offer something better than Christ. But the problem does not stop there. There are also dangers from those outside who threaten our freedom in Christ.

Those who oppose freedom from without.

Paul’s battle for the freedom of believers did not only take place in Galatia, but in many places as well. And the battle was not only against those from the inside, but those from the outside as well. He gives this warning to believers in Romans “12:2Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.”

This is a challenge that we face as a church as much today as they did in Paul’s time. What is world telling us to do that we know Scripture does not allow us to do?? This weekend, the campaign for equality for marriage was held in Australia. All are called to accept marriage as a union of two persons who love each other. Churches are called to take up this mission, since churches are said to be places where love is preached, therefore, should be at the forefront of denouncing inequality and injustice. The argument is subtle, as in the case of the false brothers, who want to add to the gospel, but in this case, the world wants to take away from the gospel, our obedience to the Scriptures.

What should we do? We should not give into them for a moment, so that the truth of the gospel might remain in us, cf. Gal. 2:5. And this is what sets us apart from everybody else. We are not fighting for our truth, the truth of our church, or the truth of our denomination. Some denominations have fallen and changed “their truth” for something else. We are fighting to stand firm in the truth of the Gospel, which is that Jesus is Lord and that he was resurrected from the dead, cf. Romans 10:9-10, and that because of that, we are justified by faith in him, and are called to follow him, I Cor. 15:1-3. The Gospel does not change although circumstances and times change. Evangelical fads come and go, and the world always wants to influence the people of God, but we should not give into them for a moment.

Conclusion

Do you enjoy your freedom in Christ? Freedom from sin, freedom from fear of death, freedom from eternal judgment. Don’t let false brothers take away from you, won at Calvary, and ratified 3 days later in the resurrection. There’s nothing you or me can do to reassure our selves of our salvation in Christ Jesus. All it’s left is just, as the hymn says, Trust and Obey.


Luis Alberto Jovel

Thursday, January 1, 2009

N. T. Wright answers his critics, again!


For the beggining of the year, I am looking forward to read Wright's new book:

Justification: God's Plan & Paul's Vision

I. Howard Marshall makes a description of the book on Amazon.co.uk
This book is a magisterial response to the recent spate of criticism directed at Tom Wright for his theology of justification. He introduces readers to the debate and outlines his position without engaging in polemic against his opponents. 'This sprightly and gracious, yet robust, work is Tom Wright's carefully argued and scripturally based response to those who think that he has deeply misunderstood Paul's doctrine of justification… This is definitely one of the most exciting and significant books that I have read this year… Strongly commended!' Professor I. Howard Marshall, University of Aberdeen

Something to look forward in your new year reading list.

Luis A. Jovel.

Monday, August 13, 2007

What Did Paul Really Mean?


'New perspective' scholars argue that we need, well, a new perspective on justification by faith.

Pick up any recent Bible commentary or theology textbook, and you will read about something called the "new perspective on Paul." Seminaries have buzzed for decades about how they might apply to Paul the new light shed on Judaism. Some advocates of the new perspective conclude that the Reformers have led Protestants to misunderstand the all-important doctrine of justification.

As a result, the new perspective has stirred more than a little controversy. Ligon Duncan, former moderator of the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA), said new perspective theology "undercuts the certainty of believers regarding the substance of the gospel message." In June, the PCA General Assembly said advocates of the new perspective should report themselves to presbytery courts, because their teaching does not accord with the Westminster Standards.

Leading new perspective theologian N. T. Wright has repeatedly responded to his critics. Talking in 2004 with James D. G. Dunn, who named the new perspective, Wright faulted his critics for producing websites that "are extremely rude about the two people sitting on this platform tonight for having sold Paul down the river and given up the genuine Reformed doctrine of justification by faith."

So is this merely a squabble among Reformed theologians? Certainly not—some new perspective scholars also teach that Martin Luther's preoccupation with the Roman Catholic Church has led all Protestants astray. Do we now need to reframe our preaching and teaching to be truly biblical? British scholar Simon Gathercole takes on that question in this article.—CT Editors

***

For nearly 30 years, a number of theologians have argued for a "new perspective" on the apostle Paul and his doctrine of justification. Advocates of this approach believe that many cherished concerns of the Protestant Reformation were either wrong or ill-directed. Those concerns include justification, which Martin Luther described as nothing less than the "key article of Christian doctrine." Yet some evangelicals have found in the writing of new perspective theologians—particularly James D. G. Dunn and N. T. Wright—a key to unlocking Paul's original intent. So what's all the fuss about?

What's So New About Paul?

One point that needs to be clear at the outset is that the new perspective on Paul is not really what it might sound like. For one thing, no secret society meets to promote this new school of thought. Advocates do not even offer a united front: Scholars generally associated with the new perspective argue with each other just as much as traditionalists do. The new perspective is, rather, a convenient umbrella for a current trend in Pauline scholarship with quite a limited agenda.

This leads to a second point. The new perspective does not propose to reevaluate all of Paul's thought. It says nothing new, for example, about the person of Christ, the Holy Spirit, or the Christian life. It is focused narrowly on what Paul says about justification, and even more specifically on what Paul opposes when he talks about justification by faith. In particular, the new perspective investigates the problem Paul has with "works" or "works of the law."

The difference between old and new perspectives can be summed up briefly. In the old perspective, works of the law are human acts of righteousness performed in order to gain credit before God. In the new perspective, works of the law are elements of Jewish law that accentuate Jewish privilege and mark out Israel from other nations.

Two vital ingredients go into the new perspective. The first is actually more a new perspective on Judaism than on Paul. It reacts against the traditional idea that Jews in Paul's day believed they could accumulate merit before God by their deeds. In place of seeing Paul's contemporaries as legalistic, the new perspective says the concern in early Judaism was to maintain the identity of the Jewish nation, especially through observing the Sabbath, circumcising their newborns, and eating kosher. These boundary markers or badges of identity for the Jewish nation distinguished them as belonging to God's covenant people.

Second, this understanding of first-century Judaism is then applied to Paul. According to the new perspective, Paul is only focusing on these aspects of Jewish life (Sabbath, circumcision, food laws) when he mentions "works of the law." His problem isn't legalistic self-righteousness in general. Rather, for Jews these works of the law highlighted God's election of the Jewish nation, excluding Gentiles. Called by God to reach the Gentiles, Paul recognizes that Jews wrongly restricted God's covenant to themselves.

Paul extends these insights to church relations. Just as Jews wrongly restricted God's covenant, so also Jewish Christians wrongly insisted that Gentile Christians needed to observe the law to be full-fledged disciples. This led to the challenge that Paul issued to Peter at Antioch (Gal. 2:11-14). How could Peter withdraw from table fellowship with the Gentiles there? Surely such an action was inconsistent with the truth of the gospel.

These two points are the product of a flurry of literature in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The new perspective on Judaism was argued for largely by E. P. Sanders in his Paul and Palestinian Judaism (1977). Sanders was particularly concerned about anti-Jewish tendencies in the old perspective and its portrayal of Judaism as inferior to Christianity. Sanders's aim was to present a cleaned-up picture of early Judaism, untainted by Christian prejudice. He argued that both pre-Christian Judaism and its successor, rabbinic Judaism, had just as strong an emphasis on grace as Pauline Christianity did. Election was central to Judaism, as was God's redemption of his people from Egypt. Observing the law merely kept Jews in the covenant established by God.

Scholars received Sanders's work as a major contribution to Jewish studies. But it fell rather flat when applied to Pauline scholarship. So N. T. Wright and James D. G. Dunn, along with Sanders, attempted to integrate this new view of Judaism more successfully with a new view of Paul. They focused on "exclusivism," the sense of national righteousness maintained by practices such as Sabbath-observance, circumcision, and keeping kosher. Paul, the new perspective argued, dedicated himself to warning against exclusivist national righteousness. God was bringing people from all nations to believe in the Messiah.

Happy Beginning, Sad Ending

Almost all scholars, new and old, agree that Paul answers the problem of "works of the law" with "faith." But if the new perspective has shifted how we understand works of the law, then the meaning of faith—or at least the emphasis of it—needs to shift as well. In the old perspective, faith means trust in God's mercy alone, not in human acts of righteousness. In the new perspective, faith is a badge, or identity marker, which can be shared by all, Jew and Gentile.

The new perspective does not necessarily deny the traditional meaning of faith, but rather finds its focus elsewhere. Faith remains central to Paul's doctrine of justification, because it means that Gentiles do not need to become Israelites when they become Christians. According to the new perspective, Paul accentuates this point in the early chapters of his letter to the Romans.

Galatians makes the same point in a different setting. Here, Paul finds the problem inside the church. Galatians 2 breaks the rules of good storytelling with a happy beginning and a sad ending. Initially, Peter and Paul agree at their meeting in Jerusalem about law-observance not being necessary for Gentiles (Gal. 2:1-10). Later, in Antioch, Peter rebuilds the barrier between Jews and Greeks. Nervous about his reputation as a traditional Jew, he withdraws from table fellowship with the Gentiles (2:11-14). Paul considers this move a disaster. So he castigates Peter and reminds him how faith and faith alone—not works of the law—mark people out as belonging to God's covenant (2:15-16). Faith means that Jew and Gentile must eat together.

Following this pattern, justification by faith and not by works of the law focuses on God's acceptance not only of Jews but also of Gentiles. Some have argued that Paul makes this point most clearly in Romans 3:28-30: "For we maintain that a man is justified by faith apart from observing the law [literally, "apart from works of the law"]. Is God the God of Jews only? Is he not the God of Gentiles too? Yes, of Gentiles too, since there is only one God, who will justify the circumcised by faith and the uncircumcised through that same faith." Advocates of the new perspective tend to read this passage as a statement about God welcoming Gentiles, who then need not observe Jewish practices, such as Sabbath-keeping, circumcision, and a kosher diet. This interpretation would then be confirmed by what follows: a focus again on the fact that God is not the God merely of a single nation, but of Jew and Gentile alike (verses 29-30).

The New Perspective Assessed

The new perspective cannot merely be written off as a disaster from start to finish, as some critics would have us believe. One of the most important benefits of the new perspective on Paul is that it accentuates the worldwide focus of God's dealings in Christ. Paul uses justification to highlight how all Christians, Jewish and Gentile, come to God on the same basis—that of faith.

The new perspective also elevates our historical awareness of Paul's situation. There are certainly important ways in which Paul's debate with his Jewish contemporaries anticipates later controversies—between Augustine and Pelagius, for instance, and to a lesser extent between Luther and his opponents. But we must not read Paul merely with our favorite debate from church history in mind. E. P. Sanders rightly detects in much of the traditional Protestant description of Judaism an anxiety about Roman Catholic works-righteousness crouching at the door. This leads us to Sanders's concern with portraying Judaism in a fair and unprejudiced light. This is also an important contribution: There can be no place in the church for cheap caricatures of Judaism. Sanders has encouraged scholars to look seriously at Jewish sources around the time of Paul to understand what they really say.

Nevertheless, other scholars have shown that Sanders himself presents a one-sided view in his reaction against the one-sided traditional view of Judaism. So the close examination of these sources is still an important area of scholarly research. We also need to be careful in how we talk about Judaism from the pulpit and in our conversations about Scripture. Christians must avoid cheap caricatures as well as a politically correct anxiety about saying that Jews need to hear the gospel.

Similarly, when pastors preach on the Gospels and Acts, they must distinguish between criticism delivered by Jesus and Paul against their contemporaries, on the one hand, and their high regard for the law of Moses on the other. Some Jews in the first century clearly did interpret the law in a way that imposed strictures foreign to the Torah. But we must not criticize the law itself, as if it were a body of petty rules and regulations. To do so would be to criticize God himself. His law is "holy, righteous, and good" (Rom. 7:12).

Six Tendencies

On the other side, there are a few points at which the new perspective is, in my judgment, at fault.

1. We need to go back to E. P. Sanders and his insistence that Judaism in Paul's day did not think in terms of salvation as something earned or gained by obedience to the law. Now it is certainly the case that Protestant scholarship had previously exaggerated this fact, but it is not wrong either. Documents from around the time of Paul state that some Jews believed obedience to the law was rewarded on the final day with salvation: "The one who does righteousness stores up life for himself with the Lord" (Psalms of Solomon, c. 50 B.C.). "Miracles, however, will appear at their own time to those who are saved by their works" (2 Baruch, c. A.D. 100). There are a number of examples like this. Paul's understanding of justification makes sense, then, as a criticism of law observance as the means to eternal life (see Rom. 3:20). Many of Paul's contemporaries seem to have believed that obedience was possible without a radical inbreaking of God.

For Paul on the other hand, salvation was impossible without the earth-shattering events of the Cross, Resurrection, and Pentecost. I mentioned previously that for Sanders, observance of the law was merely how people stayed in the covenant that God had already established. But obedience for Paul was no mere formality. It took mighty acts of God to make it possible.

2. Does Paul think primarily of circumcision, Sabbath observance, and food laws when he uses the phrase "works of the law"? My own view, and that of a number of other scholars, is that Paul focuses on observance of the law as a whole. Works of the law simply means doing the law—the law in its entirety. So the issue at stake with works of the law is not so much Jewish identity as the ability of Israelites as human beings to obey the entire law. We shall return to this point later.

3. Criticism of "individualistic" readings of Paul can throw the baby out with the bathwater. Some new perspective scholars want to guard against individualistic understandings of justification. Seeing faith to be transcultural, available to both Jew and Gentile, these scholars shift the emphasis from personal conversion toward the larger canvas of God's dealings in salvation history. But we cannot escape the dimensions of conversion and personal faith in Paul. These are vitally important: The church is not a lump of humanity, but an assembly of individuals. Faith according to Paul is exercised by individuals (e.g. Rom. 4:5; 12:3; Gal. 2:20), and is also a feature of churches (e.g. Rom. 1:8; Col. 1:4). Individual and corporate faith are not at odds with one another.

4. A further tendency of the new perspective is to confuse the content of justification with its applications. It is true to say that justification by faith is about including Gentiles into the people of God. But it is essential to see that the core meaning of justification by faith is about how believers, despite their sin, can be reckoned as righteous before God. Then we can speak of the scope of justification, which is for all who believe, from every tongue, tribe, and nation. Unfortunately, in some hands, the emphasis on inclusion as a primary component of justification can have two further effects.

5. Seeing justification as primarily addressing how Gentiles can be incorporated into the people of God can lead to a downplaying of sin. This approach to justification can lose sight of Paul's vital concern for how sinners can be made righteous. One leading New Testament scholar has described his view of justification as God building an extra room in his house for Gentiles. But this view neglects the fact that Israelites as well as Gentiles are sinners and need to be justified.

6. Since the emphasis in some discussions of justification is on inclusion, tolerance, and ecumenism, there can be a tendency to downplay the importance of doctrinal clarity. One recent commentary on Romans emphasizes mutual acceptance as the key to the book. It is revealing that the commentator then regards Romans 16:17-20 as a later interpolation, because the passage emphasizes teaching doctrine and staying away from heretics. Paul insists, however, that unity and doctrine are not mutually exclusive. True unity comes not at the expense of doctrine, but precisely around the central truths of the gospel.

Once again, it needs to be remembered that the new perspective does not put forward a single, united front. As a result, these criticisms will not all apply to one person at the same time. They are, however, tendencies to keep an eye out for when studying the new perspective.

Hard Hearts Need Justification

It's not enough, though, to interact with scholarship about Paul. We also need to understand what the Bible teaches about justification.

"God is the justifier!" (Rom. 8:33). The triune God, out of his great love, sent his Son to die as a substitute. On this basis, he justifies believers (Rom. 5:1-11). But what happens in the event of justification? The word itself has been interpreted in a number of different ways, so it's helpful to turn to biblical passages that define it. The apostle Paul derives his definition from the Old Testament—specifically, Genesis 15:6: "What does the Scripture say? 'Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness'" (Rom. 4:3, quoting Gen. 15:6).

In the Old Testament, "righteousness" is the status that an Israelite received when he or she fully observed the requirements of the law: "And if we are careful to obey all this law before the Lord our God, as he has commanded us, that will be our righteousness" (Deut. 6:25). The tragedy of the covenant, however, is that despite God's glorious provision of redemption and of his Torah, the Israelites often behaved just like Gentiles. Stiff-necked and hard-hearted, they rebelled against God. They never attained the status of righteousness, which they would have possessed had they lived up to the ideal in Deuteronomy.

But this status of righteousness is precisely what is granted to those who have faith in Christ. Although these former idolaters traded in the glory of God and disobediently suppressed the truth, God now declares them righteous—declares them to have fulfilled everything in his presence that he has commanded. This "in his presence" (or "before the Lord our God" in Deut. 6:25) is important. Justification, in which righteousness is reckoned to us, is both a legal declaration of our status and a statement about our relationship with God. People who are sinners are declared by God to have done all that he has commanded.

This justification, made possible through the cross of Christ, means we don't need to be anxious before God. There is nothing that can come between the justified person and the everlasting blessing of life with God on the other side of Judgment Day. The phrase from Romans 8:33, "God is the justifier," is Paul's answer to the question of whether it is possible for anyone to bring a charge against God's elect. Of course not! Paul is almost certainly alluding here to Isaiah's great testimony about the Lord:

He who vindicates me is near.
Who then will bring charges against me?
Let us face each other!
Who is my accuser?
Let him confront me!
It is the Sovereign Lord who helps me.
Who is he that will condemn me?
They will all wear out like a garment;
the moths will eat them up
(Isa. 50:8-9).
Justification by Faith

Faith is another term that Paul helpfully defines. (Paul isn't always as difficult to understand as he is cracked up to be!) He returns to the Genesis narrative and Abraham's response to God's promise, offering this clear description of faith: "Against all hope, Abraham in hope believed and so became the father of many nations, just as it had been said to him, 'So shall your offspring be.' Without weakening in his faith, he faced the fact that his body was as good as dead—since he was about a hundred years old—and that Sarah's womb was also dead. Yet he did not waver through unbelief regarding the promise of God, but was strengthened in his faith and gave glory to God, being fully persuaded that God had power to do what he had promised. This is why 'it was credited to him as righteousness'" (Rom. 4:18-22).

We can see from this passage three particularly important aspects of faith (or believing—they are forms of the same word in Greek).

1. Abraham recognized the futility of his own future without God and God's help. God promised that Abraham's descendants would be as numerous as the stars, yet humanly speaking this was impossible: Abraham "faced the fact that his body was as good as dead," and when he did trust God, it was "against all hope." So trusting God is not something we simply add on to our life. Christian faith requires a complete reorientation of our whole attitude.

2. But faith is not merely an attitude—it is also the response to God's specific promises. In Abraham's case, his faith answers the divine word, "So shall your offspring be." Faith is not content-less humility that places our hope in a higher power. No, in faith we answer the divine word and its specific verbal content. God speaks, and we believe in him in response to his word. God made particular promises to Abraham, and in Romans 4, Paul goes on to say that God promises justification to those who trust in him as the one who raised Jesus from the dead (Rom. 4:23-25; see also Rom. 10:9).

3. Faith focuses not only on what God has said but also on his character. Abraham trusted that "God had power to do what he had promised." Biblical faith mirrors God, the object of that faith. In everyday life, we generally have different kinds of faith in different people, according to the nature of the relationship. We have a certain kind of faith in a spouse, another kind in a doctor, and a different sort in relation to a pastor or a friend. By telling us who God is, the Bible defines what kind of faith we must place in him: He is the God who justifies the ungodly (Rom. 4:5), who creates out of nothing (4:17), and who raised Jesus from the dead (4:24). Utterly all-powerful, he wields that power to bring righteousness where there was none, creation where there was none, and life where there was none. That's the God we believe in.

Not by Works of the Law

So what is wrong with works of the law? They are associated with the flesh, Paul answers. (The NASB helpfully preserves the old-fashioned sounding flesh, for a more literal translation of the key passages.) "Works of the law" means obedience to the law done outside of Christ, without the new-creating power of the Holy Spirit. In this condition, it is clearly impossible to observe the law, "because by the works of the law no flesh will be justified in his sight; for through the law comes the knowledge of sin" (Rom. 3:20, NASB). Paul has seen this borne out in Israel's history. Even this nation "entrusted with the very oracles of God" (Rom. 3:2), given a law that was "holy, righteous, and good" (Rom. 7:12), could not please God.

The flesh is powerless to obey. "For what the law could not do, weak as it was through the flesh, God did" (Rom. 8:3, NASB). Trying to obey the law through the flesh is like trying to climb a sheer rock face with no foothold or handhold, without equipment. It can't be done.

In fact, the problem runs deeper than the flesh's weakness. The flesh even wars with God: "Because the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to the law of God, for it is not even able to do so" (Rom. 8:7, NASB). Do revolutionaries follow the law? No—they seek to overthrow it. We sometimes present sin as people's failure in varying degrees to reach God's standards. But Romans 8:7 shows that we do not even start to please God. The problem with works of the law, according to Paul, is that stiff-necked human beings, left to their own devices, cannot get anywhere near pleasing God.

Paul makes it clear to the Romans that God reckons righteousness purely by grace. He stresses that God is the sole operator in salvation. There is no place for the program offered by the law, that "if we are careful to obey all this law before the Lord our God, as he has commanded us, that will be our righteousness" (Deut. 6:25). As we have seen, it is not that we have accomplished some successful law-observance that needs to be topped off by God to make a full quota. No, we have not left the starting blocks as far as righteousness is concerned. God acts so that it is obvious to all that he alone does the whole saving work. "And if by grace, then it is no longer by works; if it were, grace would no longer be grace" (Rom. 11:6).

At its core, the doctrine of justification says that sinners can be miraculously reckoned righteous before God. This happens for all who believe and has nothing to do with observance of the law, which for sinners is impossible. With this foundation in place, we can move on to see how Paul uses the doctrine of justification by faith. The new perspective rightly observes that Paul uses justification to argue that Gentile Christians need not take on the yoke of the law (Galatians) and that Jewish Christians and Gentile Christians should live together in harmony (Romans 14-15). While we must not neglect these demands, we should not allow the tail to wag the dog.

Simon Gathercole is senior lecturer in New Testament at the University of Aberdeen. He was recently appointed a lecturer at the University of Cambridge, starting in October.