Pauline Studies and the New Perspective (The Epistle of Colossians)

In preparation for a new series on the book of Colossians, Peter Leithart and I discuss Pauline studies more generally and the issues raised by the New Perspective on Paul and other movements in the guild over the past fifty years.

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What Spiritual Nutrients are in the Tops and Tails of Paul’s Letters?

Do you have any broader comments on the personal greetings and instructions at the end of Paul’s letters and their significance? Of course each one is unique, but I wondered if there’s anything we can draw more generally from their presence and recurring patterns.

Continue reading “What Spiritual Nutrients are in the Tops and Tails of Paul’s Letters?”

How Do We Apply Paul’s Teaching to Jews as Twenty-First Century Gentiles?

How should Gentile Christians situate themselves when listening to the New Testament’s many sections which were originally directed towards Jewish Christians, but seem now in many ways to apply to Gentiles who have been raised in the the faith?

For example, large sections of Romans are clearly directed at Jewish believers (e.g. Romans 2:17-29), with the basic thrust here and elsewhere being the dangers for those who use the law to justify themselves whilst condemning others.

However, with most churches across the world now being predominantly or wholly Gentile, there will be few, if any, converted Jews in the congregation to create this tension. These passages, then, are usually reapplied as a warning to mature Gentile believers not to look down on others.

The logic of this “re-application” is obvious, as mature Gentile believers, standing atop centuries of Christendom, do find the religious Jews addressed by Paul easier to relate to than the recently converted, formerly idolatrous Gentiles he addresses elsewhere – and yet to identify with them seems to do a violence to both the text, and the categories of Jew and Gentile which God has created. Even though the dividing wall has been torn down in Christ, both categories still exist and matter in some sense. As a Gentile Christian, though my felt experience may be as an “older brother”, the reality and categories of salvation history inescapably categorise me as a “younger brother”.

However, if one preached and taught these sections with exclusive reference to Jewish Christians in congregations where you will never actually have any Jewish Christians, I imagine the result would be a lot of sermons directed at people who aren’t there!

How then should we Gentiles situate ourselves when applying these texts?”

Continue reading “How Do We Apply Paul’s Teaching to Jews as Twenty-First Century Gentiles?”