"New perspective on Paul"?
Posted: Sat Nov 25, 2006 4:47 pm
I've been hearing this term quite a bit recently. Anyone know what it is?
Hosted by Steve Gregg
https://theos.org:443/forum/
The scholars at the forefront of the revolution -- E.P. Sanders, James D.G. Dunn, N.T. Wright, and othersWhat is this new perspective? At its core is the recognition that Judaism is not a religion of self-righteousness whereby humankind seeks to merit salvation before God. Paul's argument with the Judaizers was not about Christian grace versus Jewish legalism. His argument was rather about the status of Gentiles in the church. Paul's doctrine of justification, therefore, had far more to do with Jewish-Gentile issues than with questions of the individual's status before God.
You hear lots of people say, "I use the historical-grammatical method" but it is apparent they don't. They read the Bible through their own doctrinal lenses, so to speak. The NPP (abbreviated) challenges traditional understandings of "cardinal doctrines" by showing how we may have misunderstood Paul's real meaning.I am a little strartled that reading Paul with a Jewish backdrop is considered a 'new perspective'.
Seems to me it has been the more conservative/fundamentalists who have read Paul wrongly, ignoring Paul's actual historical context. I have been accused of being a liberal simply because I read and compare first century extra-biblical (or non-canonical) writings to the Bible: DUH. N.T. Wright, in one lecture, was comparing the thought of the first century Jew: Philo of Alexandria, Egypt, to Romans. I forgot what lecture tho.It seems a lot of liberal scholars/theologians were reading Paul in a very greek/roman way, ignoring the Jewish backdrop of the apostle. The new perspective seems to be a bunch of well regarded scholars departing from that stance and coming to a fresh understanding of what Jewish people like Paul actually believed prior to and as a result of Jesus life/death/resurrection.
Wright seems to appeal more to first century thought than I've heard Steve do. Both question the relative merits and validity of any doctrines that emerged (or developed) since the death of the last Apostle. A great thing to do, imo.I would agree that Steve Gregg and NT Wright would have quite a bit in common were they to sit down and chat, though they come at things from different angles.
As NT Wright would almost certainly say, both the fundamentalists and liberals have gotten it wrong!Seems to me it has been the more conservative/fundamentalists who have read Paul wrongly, ignoring Paul's actual historical context.
Sure, Wright is basically a historian in many ways. What I mean is, they seem to end up with the same basic doctrines. In the past year there probably aren't 2 people who I've read/listened to more than Steve Gregg and NT Wright and I find much in common doctrinally.Wright seems to appeal more to first century thought than I've heard Steve do.
That could be a quote from Karl Barth! ...who satirically took credit for "destroying liberalism." Barth also had certain strong differences with fundamentalists.....both the fundamentalists and liberals have gotten it wrong!
Yes, these two men seem real similar in their conclusions.Sure, Wright is basically a historian in many ways. What I mean is, they seem to end up with the same basic doctrines. In the past year there probably aren't 2 people who I've read/listened to more than Steve Gregg and NT Wright and I find much in common doctrinally.
I can't recall which Wright lecture; it may have been "All Israel and the Church's Task." But in it NTW elaborates on Philo, contrasting current Jewish thought (that is, Paul's and Philo's). On "comparing Scripture to Scripture" NTW and Steve Gregg are in the same camp.But they come at things from very different angles. Wright is much more institutional, in a sense, though both feel free to speak their mind!