Title: The New Perspective on Paul: Evaluation and Critique
1The New Perspective on Paul Evaluation and
Critique
2- What is the New Perspective?
- History of the NPP the writers and their
writings - Beliefs of the NPP
- What is the Old Perspective?
- Essential beliefs
- Responses of the Old Perspective to the NPP
- What can we learn from this discussion?
3What is the New Perspective?
- What Paul finds wrong with Judaism
- For Sanders, Judaism was wrong because
Christianity was right. - PPJ, 552 This is what Paul finds wrong in
Judaism it is not Christianity. - Law, 47 What is wrong with the law, and thus
with Judaism, is that it does not provide for
Gods ultimate purpose, that of saving the entire
world through faith in Christ.
4What is the New Perspective?
- What Paul finds wrong with Judaism
- For Dunn and Wright, Judaism was wrong because it
demonstrated nationalistic pride, ethnocentrism,
and racism in regard to the inclusion of
Gentiles.
5What is the New Perspective?
- What Paul finds wrong with Judaism
- Wright, History, 65 If we ask how it is that
Israel has missed her vocation, Pauls answer is
that she is guilty not of legalism or
works-righteousness but of what I call
national righteousness, the belief that fleshly
Jewish descent guarantees membership of Gods
true covenant people.
6What is the New Perspective?
- What Paul finds wrong with Judaism
- Dunn, Justice, 14 The classic Protestant
understanding of justification . . . has missed
or downplayed what was probably the most
important aspect of the doctrine for Paul himself
. . ., the fundamental critique of Israels
tendency to nationalist presumption, not to say
racial pride.
7What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- The maintenance of ones covenantal status before
God, i.e., staying in right relationship with
God declaring someone to be a part of the
covenant people. - Dunn, New Perspective, 190 Gods
justification is . . . Gods acknowledgement that
someone is in the covenant.
8What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- Wright, Justification, 96 For Paul,
justification . . . always had in mind Gods
declaration of membership, and that this always
referred specifically to the coming together of
Jews and Gentiles in faithful membership of the
Christian family. - Wright, Justification, 100 Justification
denotes a status. . . . It means membership in
Gods true family.
9What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- Donaldson, Paul, 171 Righteousness . . . is a
covenant term to say that one is righteous is
not, in the first instance, to say that the
person conforms with some absolute standard of
moral perfection, but that the person is a member
in good standing of the covenant community.
10What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- Since N. T. Wright has written the most detailed
description of justification among the NPP
advocates, we need to delineate the significant
points of his understanding of justification - 1. The righteousness of God is Gods
faithfulness to his covenant it speaks about
what God does, i.e., an effect of his
righteousness, rather than who God is, i.e.,
possessing the attribute of righteousness.
11What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- Thus, Wright treats the righteousness of God
merely in terms of the actions of the Judge
rather than in terms of his attribute of
righteousness. - For a reader of the Septuagint . . . the
righteousness of God would have one obvious
meaning Gods own faithfulness to his promises,
to the covenant. (What Paul Said, 96)
12What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- Gods righteousness is his faithfulness to his
covenant promises to Abraham (Climax of the
Covenant, 36). - Gods righteousness connotes the notion of
Gods covenant faithfulness because of which he
saves (Justification, 52).
13What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- 2. The justification of the sinner is the status
that someone has when the court has found in
their favor (Justification, 69). And what is
that status? This justification is the
declaration that someone is in the covenant.
Justification, as seen in 324-26, means that
those who believe in Jesus Christ are declared to
be members of the true covenant family (What
Saint Paul Really Said, 129).
14What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- 2a. The basis of this declaration is the
persons faith on the basis of faith we . . .
receive the verdict member of the family
(Justification, 112). - 2b. The reason people are declared to be members
of the covenant family is the faithful death of
the Messiah. This is why the faith of Jesus
Christ is understood as a subjective genitive,
i.e., faithfulness of Jesus Christ, rather than
as an objective genitive, i.e., faith in Jesus
Christ.
15What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- God always intended that his purposes would be
accomplished through faithful Israel note
Wrights understanding of the meaning of
covenant as Gods single plan through Israel
for the world. That has now happened . . . in
the single person of Israels faithful
representative (Justification, 114).
16What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- 3. Because justification is the declaration that
a Christian is in the covenant family, the
concept of receiving Christs righteousness as a
result of that declaration is a category
mistake. In other words, Wright has no room in
his explanation of justification for the concept
of imputed righteousness.
17What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- If we use the language of the law-court, it
makes no sense whatever to say that the judge
imputes, imparts, bequeaths, conveys or otherwise
transfers his righteousness to either the
plaintiff or the defendant. Righteousness is not
an object, a substance or a gas which can be
passed across the courtroom. For the Judge to be
righteous
18What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- does not mean that the court has found in his
favour. For the plaintiff or defendant to be
righteous does not mean that he or she has tried
the case properly or impartially. To imagine the
defendant somehow receiving the judges
righteousness is simply a category mistake. That
is not how the language works. . . . If and when
God
19What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- does act to vindicate his people, his people will
then, metaphorically speaking, have the status of
righteousness. . . . But the righteousness they
have will not be Gods own righteousness. That
makes no sense at all (What Saint Paul Really
Said, 98-99). And in case Wright might have
wanted to adjust this statement at all, he states
in his most
20What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- recent book (Justification, 133-34), It is quite
illegitimate to seize on Pauls in Christ
language and say that therefore Christians
have something called the righteousness of
Christ imputed to them.
21What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- Wright is much happier to see the benefits of
Christ coming to believers by virtue of their
union with Christ. The people over whom that
verdict (righteous, members of Gods family)
is issued are those who are in the Messiah
(Justification, 101).
22What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- 4. The law-court scene during which believers
are declared to be in the covenant is the final
judgment. And the basis of that final judgment is
the death of Christ and the life lived by the
Christian.
23What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- Paul has . . . spoken in Romans 2 about the
final justification of Gods people on the basis
of their whole life (Fresh Perspective, 121). - Present justification declares, on the basis of
faith, what future justification will affirm
publicly (according to Rom 214-16 and 89-11)
on the basis of the entire life (What Paul Said,
129).
24What is the New Perspective?
- Justification
- This declaration, this vindication, occurs
twice. It occurs in the future . . . on the basis
of the entire life a person has led in the power
of the Spirit that is, it occurs on the basis
of works in Pauls redefined sense. And near
the heart of Pauls theology, it occurs in the
present as an anticipation of that future
verdict, when someone responding in believing
obedience to the call of the gospel, believes
that Jesus is Lord and that God raised him from
the dead (New Perspectives, 260).
25What is the New Perspective?
- Works of the Law
- Covenant works, i.e., Jewish identity markers
works done in obedience to the law of the
covenant, particularly observances of the law
that were characteristically and distinctively
Jewish such as circumcision, observance of Jewish
calendar days and food laws. Works of the law are
bad, not because they show the desire to gain
favor with
26What is the New Perspective?
- Works of the Law
- God by doing good works but because they are
Jewish and do not include Gentiles. - Sanders, Law, 20 The question is not about how
many good deeds an individual must present before
God to be declared righteous at the judgment,
but, to repeat, whether or not Pauls Gentile
converts must accept the Jewish law in order to
enter the people of God or to be counted truly
members.
27What is the New Perspective?
- Works of the Law
- Wright, What Paul Said, 130 Israel was
determined to have her covenant membership
demarcated by works of Torah, that is, by the
things that kept that membership confined to Jews
and Jews only. - Dunn, Works of the Law, 109 Works of the
law do not denote any attempt to earn favour
with God. . . . What we do see, and see in
plenty, is a Jewish assumption of favoured
nation status, and the corollary
28What is the New Perspective?
- Works of the Law
- assumption that even when Jews sin it is not so
serious as Gentile sin. It is this attitude and
misapprehension which Paul sums up in the
confidence of justification by works of the law.
The clear implication being that it is his works
of the law (since they maintain his covenant
status and document his distinctiveness from
Gentile sinners)
29What is the New Perspective?
- Works of the Law
- which give the Jew his false confidence and
which cloak the seriousness of his sin. - Dunn, Theology, 363-64 Works of the law are
what distinguish Jew from Gentile. To affirm
justification by works of the law is to affirm
that justification is for Jews only, is to
require that Gentile believers take on the
persona and practices of the Jewish people.
30What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Gospel?
- NPP advocates tend to emphasize a big Gospel in
one sense while at the same time minimizing the
essence of what the Gospel message should be. - N. T. Wright offers the following cryptic
statements about the definition of the Gospel - The announcement of the gospel results in people
being saved. . . . But the Gospel
31What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Gospel?
- itself, strictly speaking, is the narrative
proclamation of King Jesus (Wright, What Paul
Said, 45). - The crucified Jesus of Nazareth has been
raised from the dead that he was thereby proved
to be Israels Messiah that he was thereby
installed as Lord of the world (Wright, What
Paul Said, 46).
32What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Gospel?
- The Gospel is a message primarily about Jesus,
and about what the one true God has done and is
doing through him (Wright, Justification, 156). - Wright notes four aspects about the Gospel as he
articulates it (Wright What Paul Said, 60) - 1. In Jesus . . . the decisive victory has been
won over all the powers of evil.
33What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Gospel?
- 2. In Jesus resurrection the New Age has
dawned. - 3. The crucified and risen Jesus was, all along,
Israels Messiah, her representative king. - 4. Jesus was therefore also the Lord, the true
king of the world, the one at whose name every
knee would bow.
34What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Gospel?
- The Gospel is not just for the individual, in
fact for the NPP it is much more corporate and
wide-sweeping - The gospel is not . . . a set of techniques for
making people Christians. Nor is it a set of
systematic theological reflections, however
important. The gospel is the announcement that
Jesus is Lord Lord of the world, Lord of the
cosmos, Lord of the earth, of the ozone layer, of
whales and waterfalls, or trees and tortoises
(Wright, What Paul Said, 153-54).
35What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Gospel?
- The doctrine of justification by faith is not
what Paul means by the gospel (Wright, What
Paul Said, 132). - The gospel is not an account of how people get
saved (Wright, What Paul Said, 133). - Pauls gospel to the pagans was not a philosophy
of life. Nor was it, even, a doctrine about how
to get saved (Wright, What Paul Said, 90).
36What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Gospel?
- The gospel is not . . . a set of techniques for
making people Christians (Wright, What Paul
Said, 60).
37What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - The key question facing Judaism as a whole was
not about individual salvation, but about Gods
purposes for Israel and the world (Wright,
Justification, 56-57).
38What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - There was indeed one divine purpose, from
creation through Abraham and Moses to the
monarchy and the prophets, and on into the long
exile from which Gods people had now emerged
(Wright, Justification, 58).
39What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - Pauls view of Gods purpose is that God, the
creator, called Abraham so that through his
family he, God, could rescue the world from its
plight (Wright, Justification, 73).
40What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - This single purpose, this plan-through-Israel-for
-the-world, this reason-God-called-Abraham (you
can see why I prefer the shorthand covenant . .
.) finally came to fruition with Jesus Christ
(Wright, Justification, 74).
41What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - The covenant . . . is not something other than
Gods determination to deal with evil once and
for all and so put the whole creation (and
humankind with it) right at last (Wright,
Justification, 74).
42What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - For Wright (Justification, 74-75) the covenant
(which is Gods purpose for the world) can be
described in four steps - 1. The Israelites of the OT and the 2nd temple
period saw themselves as the people of the
creator God whose purposes stretched beyond them
and out into the wider world.
43What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - 2. The particular focus of this purpose is
centered on the story of Abraham with whom God
established a covenant (Gen 15 and 17) this
covenants promises and warnings are delineated
in Deuteronomy 27-30.
44What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - 3. There was a sense in 2nd temple Judaism that
this single story of God with his people Israel
was continuing to move forwards towards whatever
fulfillment God might eventually have in mind.
45What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - 4. Paul holds onto this story and rethinks it in
the light of Jesus through whom at last the one
God would fulfill the one plan to accomplish the
one purpose, to rid the world of sin and
establish his new creation and in the light of
the holy spirit, the operating power of the
covenant.
46What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - One particularly unique element emphasized by
Wright in this storyline is the idea of the
covenantal curse of the ongoing exile that Israel
was experiencing as she awaited Gods release
from exile Many first-century Jews thought of
the period they were living in
47What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - as the continuation of a great scriptural
narrative, and of the moment they themselves were
in as late on within the continuing exile of
Daniel 9 (Wright, Justification, 42). - Jesus is the one who will help to bring this
exile to an end.
48What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - To summarize this storyline God had a single
plan all along through which he intended to
rescue the world and the human race, and that
this single plan was centered upon the call of
Israel, a call which Paul saw coming to fruition
in Israels representative, the Messiah (Wright,
Justification, 18-19).
49What is the New Perspective?
- What is the Bibles Big Idea/Storyline in
relation to Soteriology? - In order to be included in this storyline, people
need to receive justification, the status of
being in the covenant family.