Paul and the Law: The New Perspective

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    M. CHRISTOPHER WHITE SCHOOL OF DIVINITY

    PAUL AND THE LAW: THE NEW PERSPECTIVE

    SUBMITTED TO DR. RON WILLIAMS

    IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF

    RELI625 NEW TESTAMENT SEMINAR

    BY

    THOMAS J. WHITLEY

    21 APRIL 2009

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    In 1963 Krister Stendahl, Swedish theologian and New Testament scholar, published a

    paper that argued that the dominant Lutheran view on Paul and his theology was actually not

    consistent with Pauls own writings.1

    Rather, Stendahl argued, the prevailing interpretations

    were based more on mistaken assumptions about Pauls beliefs than actual careful reading and

    interpretation of his writings. As incendiary as this may seem, the so-called New Perspective

    on Paul did not take off after this work. The work, instead, that is usually considered the

    impetus of the new perspective is E. P. Sanders 1977 work, Paul and Palestinian Judaism.

    Critiques have been issued and rejoinders made, but these will be discussed in more detail

    below. The important point now is that for over four decades now, there has been a slow, but

    steady change in Pauline studies.

    Since James D. G. Dunn is credited for coining the term new perspective on Paul, it

    should suffice for his definition to guide us in our discussion of this new trend in Pauline

    studies. Dunn, in his recently revised The New Perspective on Paul, lays out very clearly what he

    means when he uses the terminology, the new perspective on Paul:

    1. It builds on Sanders new perspective on Second Temple Judaism, and Sandersreassertion of the basic graciousness expressed in Judaisms understanding and practice

    of covenantal nomism.

    2. It observes that a social function of the law was an integral aspect of Israels covenantalnomism, where separateness to God (holiness) was understood to require separateness

    from the (other) nations as two sides of one coin, and that the law was understood as

    the means to maintaining both.3. It notes that Pauls own teaching on justification focuses largely if not principally on the

    need to overcome the barrier which the law was seen to interpose between Jew and

    1Krister Stendahl, The Apostle Paul and the Introspective Conscience of the West, in The Harvard

    Theological Review56 no. 3 (July 1963): 199-215. Republished in Paul Among Jews and Gentiles, (Augsburg

    Fortress Publishers) 1976.

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    Gentile, so that the all of to all who believe (Rom. 1.17) signifies, in the first place,

    Gentile as well as Jew.

    4. It suggests that works of the law became a key slogan in Pauls exposition of hisjustification gospel because so many of Pauls fellow Jewish believers were insisting on

    certain works as indispensible to salvation.5. It protests that failure to recognise this major dimension of Pauls doctrine of

    justification by faith may have ignored or excluded a vital factor in combating the

    nationalism and racialism which has so distorted and diminished Christianity past and

    present.2

    While Dunns definition is thorough and helpful, it nonetheless requires further explanation.

    This paper, then will deal with each point in Dunns definition in depth.

    As was previously mentioned, Sanders Paul and Palestinian Judaism is considered the

    work that really started it all, as it were. The book, however, is mostly about Judaism. How,

    then, does a book that is mostly about Judaism spark the fire that has become the new

    perspective on Paul? The answer lies in what Sanders says and shows to be true about Judaism;

    namely, that it was not and is not a legalistic, works righteousness religion as it has been so

    disparagingly cast by much of Christianity. Many, if not most, Christians read Paul and his

    critique of the law as an unambiguous critique of Judaisms legalistic efforts to gain Gods favor.

    Christianity, in large part, has survived and succeeded as it has by casting it as the antithesis of

    Judaism. Judaism is earthly, carnal, proud; Christianity is heavenly, spiritual, humble.3

    It is

    certainly not uncommon to portray ones enemy as all that is bad in your sight. I echo Mark

    2James D. G. Dunn, The New Perspective on Paul, rev. ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2005), 16.

    3Mark Mattison, A Summary on the New Perspective on Paul. Mark Mattison.

    http://www.thepaulpage.com/Summary.html (accessed 16 April 2009).

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    Mattison at this point, though, that it is a tragic irony that all of Judaism has come to be

    viewed in terms of the worst vices of the sixteenth-century institutionalized church.4

    Sanders worked to let Judaism speak for itself, on its own terms; something that had

    rarely been done to that point, especially by Christians. As Dunn correctly points out, what

    Sanders initially brought to the table was a new perspective on Second Temple Judaism.5

    Dunn describes, in lively fashion, Sanders approach:

    He objected in forthright polemical fashion that the traditional perspective on Judaism

    from the side of Christian scholarship was simply wrong. He pointed out that Jewish

    scholars had long been puzzled at what seemed to them a caricature of the Judaism

    they were familiar with; how could Paul the Pharisee characterise the Judaism of his day

    so misleadingly (they were, it should be said, reading Paul in the traditional terms of

    Christian scholarship)?6

    Sanders pointed out that Judaism was not fixated on works righteousness as a way to secure

    divine favour previously unknown.7Rather, Judaisms theology of salvation began with God.

    8

    For indeed, God has chosen Israel to be his people and had made his covenant with them.9

    Members of the covenant were not worried about getting in, as is often the case in

    Christianity, or gaining the favor of God, instead they were already members of the covenant;

    4Ibid.

    5Dunn, The New Perspective on Paul, 16.

    6Ibid., 5.

    7Ibid., 6.

    8Let it be noted that I understand that it is not at all accurate to use the singular Judaism here as if

    there were only one Judaism during the Second Temple Period. However, speaking of Israels theology also

    presents problems of its own. Thus, using the plural Judaisms is probably most accurate, but for the sake of

    simplicity the singular will be used with the understanding that it does not imply one universal Judaism, as it were.

    9Dunn, The New Perspective on Paul, 6.

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    they were already counted acceptable to God. Sanders puts it this way: obedience maintains

    ones position in the covenant, but it does not earn Gods grace as such.10

    It is at this point, that our discussions moves into what Sanders termed covenantal

    nomism. Very succinctly, it is just what was said above: obedience is about staying in, not

    getting in. Mark Mattison has a decent description of covenantal nomism in his essay, A

    Summary of the New Perspective on Paul:

    The meaning of "covenantal nomism" is that human obedience is not construed as the

    means of entering into God's covenant. That cannot be earned; inclusion within the

    covenant body is by the grace of God. Rather, obedience is the means of maintaining

    one's status within the covenant. And with its emphasis on divine grace and forgiveness,

    Judaism was never a religion of legalism.11

    Sanders definition, however, is better still, even if a bit more technical, than Mattisons:

    Covenantal nomism is the view that ones place in Gods plan is established on the basis of the

    covenant and that the covenant requires as the proper response of man his obedience to its

    commandments, while providing means of atonement for transgression.12

    Sanders definition

    is more adequate for a few reasons. First, it rightly recognizes that obedience is more than the

    means of maintaining ones status within the covenant, as Mattison says. It is that, to be sure,

    but it is also, and primarily, the proper response of man. The second reason that Sanders

    definition is superior is that it notes that the covenant provided means of atonement for

    transgression. Mattison never mentions this important aspect of covenantal nomism.

    10E. P. Sanders, Paul and Palestinian Judaism (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1977), 420.

    11Mark Mattison, A Summary on the New Perspective on Paul, n.p.

    12Sanders, Paul and Palestinian Judaism, 75.

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    A common facet of Christianitys caricature of Judaism is that, one the one hand, it

    requires everyone to be perfect (understood from a Western worldview of being entirely

    without fault or defect and not from a Hebrew, or Greek, worldview of being complete) and,

    that on the other hand, the law is too difficult to be carried out anyway. In his appropriately

    titled chapter, The Law is Not an Entrance Requirement, in his 1983 work, Paul, the Law and

    the Jewish People, Sanders remarks just how un-Jewish it is to think that the law is too difficult

    to be fulfilled.13

    He quotes Philo, the Hellenistic Jewish philosopher who was a contemporary

    of Jesus and Paul, as saying, the commandments are not too huge and heavy for the strength

    of those to whom they will apply14

    In the same vein, Paul says of himself that according to

    righteousness under the law he was blameless (Phil. 3:6).

    Sanders continues: The common Jewishview on the matters under discussion here

    would be this: the law is not too difficult to be satisfactorily fulfilled; nevertheless more or less

    everybody sins at some time or other; but God has appointed means of atonement which are

    available to all.15

    Sanders is unmistakable on this point. Contrary to the common Christian

    distortion of Judaism, the law is not impossible to fulfill and on top of that, God has provided

    the means to deal with the sin that will likely happen. Understanding this aspect of covenantal

    nomism is essential if one is to have an accurate understanding of Second Temple Judaism as it

    13E. P. Sanders, Paul, the Law and the Jewish People, (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1983), 28.

    14Philo, De Praemiis et Poenis, 80 as quoted in E. P. Sanders, Paul, the Law and the Jewish People,

    (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1983), 28.

    15Sanders, Paul, the Law and the Jewish People, 28.

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    is at the heart of the basic graciousness expressed in Judaisms understanding and practice of

    covenantal nomism.16

    Sanders uses the clash in Galatians as an example of how covenantal nomism can be

    understood within the context of Second Temple Judaism:

    The dispute in Galatians is not about doing as such. Neither of the opposing factions

    saw the requirement of doing to be a denial of faith. When Paul makes requirements

    of his converts, he does not think that he has denied faith, and there is no reason to

    think that Jewish Christians who specified different requirements denied faith. The

    supposed conflict between doing as such and faith as such is simply not present in

    Galatians. What was at stake was not a way of life summarized by the word trustversus a mode of life summarized by requirements, but whether or not the

    requirement for membership in the Israel of God would result in there being neither

    Jew nor GreekThere was no dispute over the necessity of trust God and have faith in

    Christ. The dispute was about whether or not one had to be Jewish.17

    Sanders clearly recognizes the dispute in Galatians, but also recognizes that the dichotomy has

    incorrectly been labeled as works and faith. This dichotomy is typically associated with the

    old perspective or with Lutheranism. While this is mostly true, it should also be noted that

    the dichotomy in question should hold Lutheranism and old perspective as synonymous.18

    Nevertheless, the traditional view that works and faith are mutually exclusive is directly

    challenged by Sanders new perspective on Second Temple Judaism and, as such, by the new

    perspective on Paul. After analyzing Sanders understanding of covenantal nomism and

    Sanders reading of Paul, Mattison concludes that

    16Dunn, The New Perspective on Paul, 16.

    17Sanders, Paul, the Law and the Jewish People, 159.

    18See Dunns discussion in The New Perspective on Paul, 95.

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    in Sanders' view Paul's letters do not provide a consistent view of the law. Paul's central

    conviction -- the universal aspects of christology and soteriology, and Christian behavior

    -- led Paul to give different answers about the law, depending on the question. When

    the topic changes, what he says about the law also changes. When the topic is

    entrance requirements, the law is excluded. When the topic is behavior, the law is to befulfilled.

    19

    While this quote reaches a bit beyond simple covenantal nomism it offers further insight into

    the mind of Paul and why the traditional dichotomy of law and faith is erroneous and, in

    truth, detrimental to understanding Paul.

    This fresh understanding of covenantal nomism is helpful when subsequently looking at

    the law and its role within Judaism. The second aspect of Dunns definition of the new

    perspective on Paul observes that a social function of the law was an integral aspect of

    Israels covenantal nomism, where separateness to God (holiness) was understood to require

    separatenessfrom the (other) nations as two sides of one coin, and that the law was

    understood as the means to maintaining both.20

    This aspect of the new perspective allows the

    student of Paul to broaden her understanding of the role of the law. A new understanding is

    important, because the old perspective saw the law as simply a list of rules and regulations

    that one was required to meet to gain favor with God, yet was unable to meet by their very

    nature. Instead, Dunn recognizes that the law had a social, as well as religious, function.

    To make this point, Dunn leans on anthropology and sociology, nothing that the two

    disciplines have made us aware of the fact that any social grouping will inevitably have various

    features and characteristics which provide the groups self-definition (consciously or

    19Mark Mattison, A Summary on the New Perspective on Paul, n.p.

    20Dunn, The New Perspective on Paul, 16.

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    unconsciously) and mark it off from other groups.21

    The group, consequently, begins to be

    thought of in terms of these features and characteristics by its members. The features and

    characteristics then aid in the creation and preservation of identity and boundary.22

    Dunn

    quotes Hans Mol as saying that it is precisely the boundary which provides the identity.23

    The members of the group, naturally, desire to protect their identity and thus, the more a

    group or society feels itself under threat, the more it will tend to emphasize its boundaries.24

    Judaism has a history of emphasizing its boundaries when their national and religious

    identity was being threatened. First Maccabees recounts one famous example of this:

    According to the decree, they put to death the women who had their children

    circumcised,61

    and their families and those who circumcised them; and they hung the

    infants from their mothers' necks.62

    But many in Israel stood firm and were resolved in

    their hearts not to eat unclean food.63

    They chose to die rather than to be defiled by

    food or to profane the holy covenant; and they did die. (1 Macc. 1:60-63)

    The two main issues for the Jews described in this passage were circumcision and food laws.

    Interestingly, though not surprisingly, these two issues are the two main ones Paul deals with in

    Galatians (Gal. 2:1-14). These two issues became fundamental to the devout Jews identity as a

    Jew.25

    As important as these two rituals became, though, they were not the only identifying

    markers nor were they the boundary makers. According to Dunn, the law itself fulfills the

    21Ibid., 122.

    22Ibid.

    23Hans Mol in Dunn, The New Perspective on Paul, 122.

    24Dunn, The New Perspective on Paul, 122.

    25Ibid., 123.

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    identityaffirming boundary-marking function.26

    After all, says Dunn, had not the law been

    given to Israel as Israels special prerogative, given to the chosen people as a mark of Gods

    favour and thus to distinguish them from the other nations?27

    This perspective can be seen very clearly in Baruch and Aristeas, both sources quoted by

    Dunn. The Aristeas passage, however, is a much clearer proponent of this perspective than is

    Baruch, so it has been quoted below:

    [Moses] fenced us round with impregnable ramparts and walls of iron, that we might

    not mingle at all with any of the other nations, but remain pure in body and soul he

    hedged us round on all sides by rules of purity, affecting alike what we eat, or drink, or

    touch, or hear, or see.28

    What serves as the ramparts and the walls of iron are the rules of purity. The connection to the

    law is obvious. Thus, it is sensible and right when Dunn speaks of the Jewish understanding of

    the law acting as the identity-maker and boundary-marker. So, while some particular

    regulations were often placed in the foreground when identity and boundaries were

    concerned, they were not important in and of themselves, but rather because theyfocused

    Israels distinctiveness, made visible Israels claims to be a people set apart, and were the

    clearest points which differentiated the Jews from the nations.29

    The law, then, provided rules and regulations about how to be in covenant with God,

    but also served to fulfill their command to be holy, where holiness (separateness to God) was

    26Ibid., 124.

    27Ibid.

    28Aristeas 139, 142 as quoted in Dunn, The New Perspective, 125.

    29Dunn, The New Perspective, 125.

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    understood to require separatenessfrom the (other) nations.30

    The issue was immensely

    important to the Jews of Pauls day. The law was a given for the Jews of Pauls day. Judaism and

    the law were inseparable. Further, the law served to maintain the religious, social, national and

    racial boundaries; boundaries that to most Jews were right and represented to the will of God,

    yet also boundaries that Paul was attempting to tear down. Pauls message was resisted by

    many Jews with good (apparently) reason. Understanding this tension is imperative if one is to

    achieve an exegesis of Pauls treatment of the law which pays proper respect to historical

    context.31

    So, the law served as identity and boundary for the Jewish people, yet Paul wanted to

    tear down some of these boundaries. The gospel that Paul preached did threaten the 'peculiar

    identity' of Israel.32

    The new perspective on Paul notes that Pauls own teaching on

    justification focuses largely if not principally on the need to overcome the barrier which the law

    was seen to interpose between Jew and Gentile, so that the all of to all who believe (Rom.

    1.17) signifies, in the first place, Gentile as well as Jew.33

    This aspect of Paul has already been

    touched on briefly with the quote from Sanders about the dispute in Galatians, specifically

    when he said that what was at stake in Galatians was whether or not the requirement for

    membership in the Israel of God would result in there being neither Jew nor Greek.34

    The

    30Ibid., 16.

    31Ibid., 125.

    32Wan Chee Kong, Not Either/Or but Both/And. Mark Mattison.

    http://www.thepaulpage.com/Keong.html (accessed 16 April 2009).

    33Ibid., 16.

    34Sanders, Paul, the Law and the Jewish People, 159.

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    insistence that the all of to all who believe (Rom. 1.17) signifies, in the first place, Gentile as

    well as Jew was centralto Paul. Dunn even says that the issue of whether and how Gentiles

    can be accepted by God is at the heart of Pauls theology.35

    This belief, I am convinced,

    influenced Pauls views, opinions, actions, etc. more than any other single belief. It was not an

    easy position to hold as the previous discussion on the role of the law made clear. Jews were

    supposed to be set apart from other nations, the Gentiles, yet Paul was calling them to accept

    Gentiles not only in the sense that they would no longer separate themselves from the

    Gentiles, but also in the sense that the Gentiles could now become acceptable to God.

    Moreover, as if this was not offensive enough, Paul insisted that Gentiles could be acceptable

    to God by faith alone, hence justification by faith. Gentiles, in Pauls view, were righteoused

    apart from fulfilling the law. Paul addressed this misunderstanding that the works, which could

    quite properly be expected of Jews as such, should be demanded of Gentiles as well, as a

    condition of their being reckoned acceptable to God thus exposing the basic mistake of

    requiring anything in addition to faith.36

    This view of justification by faith is difficult for many modern readers of Paul to grasp,

    but when Sanders new perspective of Second Temple Judaism with its covenantal nomism are

    considered, it should become much easier to understand. Nevertheless, I offer Edward

    Hamiltons explanation ofjustification through faith:

    Justification is through faith alone, in the sense that additional customs and rituals are

    not necessary to delineate the boundaries of the new Christ-centered body of believers.

    But salvation (the process by which we are saved) should not be reduced to justification

    35Dunn, The New Perspective, 30. Emphasis mine.

    36Ibid., 32.

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    (the declaration that we have been saved) -- and thus the rejection of specific works

    (in the narrow sense of ritualistic observances) as mandatory, in the context of the

    justification debate, should not be taken as a blanket rejection of any positive

    relationship between faith and works (in the broad sense of applied ethics and

    obedience to God), as if they were mutually exclusive polar opposites.

    37

    Sanders description of covenantal nomism not being about getting in, but about staying in

    should come to mind when Hamiltons definition of justification by faith is read.

    While Hamiltons description of justification by faith adequately addresses the non-

    necessary nature of works, it majorly lacks in that it does not speak to the breaking down of

    barriers. Pauline scholarship must not diminish the importance for Paul of the gospel as the

    power of God in breaking down barriers (not least of the law) between Jew and Gentile.38

    To

    Paul, justification by faith meant barriers were torn down and that acceptance was extended to

    those of different races, nations, etc. At the least, this meant accepting believers who are

    different from you and may even disagree with you.39

    In Pauls gospel message the two

    dimensions are inextricably interlocked the vertical and the horizontal, acceptance by God

    with acceptance of others.40

    It is at this point that Dunn slides out of his normal historical-critical approach to speak

    to contemporary application; clueing the reader in to just how seriously he takes this aspect of

    Pauls theology. In this vein, he says:

    37Edward L. Hamilton, What is the New Perspective on Paul? Mark Mattison.

    http://www.thepaulpage.com/What.html (accessed 16 April 2009).

    38Dunn, The New Perspective, 32.

    39Ibid.

    40Ibid., 33.

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    Such attitudes, and misunderstandings, which maintain barriers between peoples and

    races, which demean others and treat them as of lesser importance before God, which

    refuse respect for others who see things differently, would not only have undermined

    the teaching of justification by faith, but would have crippled, indeed destroyed

    Christianity if they had not been challenged.

    41

    Dunns acceptance of this viewpoint is even clearer just beyond the previous quote:

    to insist that others can be respected and accepted only if they share the same tribal

    loyalty, only if they formulate their faith in the words that we recognise, only if they act

    in ways that we approve, narrows the grace of God and the truth of the gospel in ways

    that would cause Paul the same anguish and anger as he experienced in Antioch.42

    I quote Dunn on this point because, though he is speaking of current application, his passion for

    justification by faith and his insistence that justification by faith must work to break down

    barriers is an appropriate echo of Paul. Paul felt just as strongly about this topic, if not more so.

    There was no question for Paul, justification must be by faith alone and must include Jews and

    Gentiles. Showing even more that he views this issue as central to Paul, Dunn identifies

    slogans which we should use to summarise Pauls gospel to all who believe, Jew first but

    also Greek, no distinction between Jew and Greek to all who call upon him (Rom. 1.16;

    10.12).43

    I would add to that list there is neither Jew nor Greek (Gal. 3:28).

    Mark Mattison speaks well to the aspect of justification by faith that breaks down

    barriers. He says that Paul affirms that all cultural and ethnic groups stand before God on an

    equal footing and that we are not justified on the basis of peripheral issues. In this light, the

    Pauline doctrine of justification has less to do with the individual quest for righteousness and

    41Ibid., 34.

    42Ibid.

    43Ibid., 36.

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    more to do with the sociological makeup of the community of faith.44

    Mattison is on to

    something by asserting that the Pauline doctrine of justification has less to do with the

    individual quest for righteousness and more to do with the sociological makeup of the

    community of faith.45

    For, the Jewish understanding of justification was a communal one.

    Indeed, Pauls argument was that Gentiles were being included in a community - Israel, albeit

    with a modified understanding of Israel. N. T. Wright also seems to support this non-

    individualized understanding of justification:

    Jews like Saul of Tarsus were not interested in an abstract, ahistorical system of

    salvation. They were not even primarily interested in, as we say, 'going to heaven when

    they died'. (They believed in the resurrection, in which God would raise them all to

    share in the life of the promised renewed Israel and renewed world; but that is very

    different from the normal Western vision of 'heaven'.) They were interested in the

    salvation which, they believed, the one true God had promised to his people Israel.46

    God had made a promise to thepeople of Israel, not to individuals. This remained true even

    once Gentiles were included.

    As has been made clear already, the inclusion of Gentiles was a difficult issue. Thus, Paul

    was insistent that justification by faith meant that nothing could be added to faith. This view

    naturally played out in Pauls writings as works of the law became a key slogan in Pauls

    exposition of his justification gospel because so many of Pauls fellow Jewish believers were

    44Mark Mattison, A Summary on the New Perspective on Paul.Mark Mattison.

    http://www.thepaulpage.com/Summary.html (accessed 16 April 2009).

    45Ibid.

    46N. T. Wright, What St. Paul Really Said: Was Paul of Tarsus the Real Founder of Christianity (Grand

    Rapids: Eerdmans, 1997), 32-33.

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    insisting on certain works as indispensible to salvation.47

    This aspect of Dunns definition has

    received quite a bit of criticism, mostly in the form of dismissal. It should, however, be

    eschewed without further consideration. Dunns point is simply that while works of the law

    surely referred to what the law required, the conduct prescribed by theTorah,48

    it also came

    to refer to more, for Paul at least. For Dunn, the phrase works of the law is a way of

    describing the law observance required of all covenant members, and could be regarded as an

    appropriate way of filling out the second half of the Sanders formula covenantal nomism.49

    When the first instance of Paul using works of the law is explored, the picture

    becomes even clearer. Galatians 2:1-16 offers its reader with the understanding that there

    were some Jews who were insisting that circumcision was compulsory for those who believed

    in Jesus. Further, it seems that many of the Jews also believed that it was still necessary to Jews

    to separate themselves from Gentiles, especially during meal times. Thus, they were continuing

    to uphold the laws of clean and unclean. In so doing, they were adding to justification by faith,

    or faith alone. This was no small breach in Pauls view. Nils Dahl puts it thus: For Paul, the

    behaviour of Peter and Barnabas constitutes their rejection of the doctrine of justification by

    faith.50

    Peter, Barnabas and the others likely did not see their actions with such implications.

    More likely, they were still faithful to their conviction that certain rules were still binding on all

    47Dunn, The New Perspective, 16.

    48Ibid., 23.

    49Ibid.

    50Nils Dahl, Doctrine of Justification, 109 as quoted in Dunn, The New Perspective, 27.

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    Jews, as they had always been, and that they were remaining faithful to God by remaining

    faithful to the covenant, which included the laws of clean and unclean.51

    The illustration easily carries on into what Paul calls living like a Jew/judaizing. In

    Pauls view, Peter and other Jews were insisting not only should Jews keep certain

    requirements, but that Gentiles should as well. Hence Dunns equation: observ*ing+ food laws

    = judaize = do works of the law.52

    Works of the law, then, no longer refers just to what

    members of the covenant are obligated to do by virtue of their covenant membership

    (covenantal nomism).53

    Rather, works of the law has also begun to stand for the Jewish way

    of life (living like a Jew/judaizing) in general.

    It is also necessary when discussing this almost technical terminology by Paul, the it is

    reiterated that works of the law were not seen by Paul or by his opponents as actions that

    earned Gods favor or merit. Rather, they were merely what those who were members of the

    covenant did to mark their status as Jews, or, more specifically, as Gods chosen people.

    Another common misconception when works of the law are being discussed is to equate

    works of the law with good works in general.54

    Following in the vein of this misconception,

    many under the old perspective assert that no works should be done (though they clearly do

    not adhere to this themselves, for they simply replace the old works with new ones). Thus,

    Pauls opposition to works of the law became, by many, especially by those who followed

    51Dunn, The New Perspective, 27.

    52Ibid.

    53Ibid.

    54Ibid., 111.

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    Luther, opposition to any works that contained even the appearance of being works in the

    sense of self-achievement.55

    This implementation misconstrues the specific and technical use

    of works of the law by Paul. Understanding how Paul used works of the law is indispensible

    to understanding Paul as a whole from the new perspective.

    The phrase works of the law in Gal. 2.16 is, in fact, a fairly restricted one: it refers

    precisely to these same identity markers described above, covenantworks those

    regulations prescribed by the law which any good Jew would simply take for granted to

    describe what a good Jew did. To be a Jew, was to be a member of the covenant, was to

    observe circumcision, food laws and Sabbath. In short, once again Paul seems much less

    a man of 16th

    century Europe and much more firmly in touch with the reality of first-

    century Judaism than many have thought.56

    To see Paul in a fully first-century Jewish context if difficult for many because of our own

    removal from that time period and world view, but also because of the grip that Lutheranism

    has had on the understanding of Paul for five centuries now.

    Essential to understanding Paul apart from the classically Lutheran dichotomy between

    outward ritual done in the flesh and inward grace operative in the spirit is the specific context

    that pushed Paul to making his assertion of justification by faith in the first place.57

    Paul is

    preaching a message that God accepts allwho believe. This, however, is an ineffectual message

    if, in Pauls understanding, if there is anything that could stand in the way of a believer coming

    in to the fold. Paul encountered a situation that did just that at Antioch, namely, Jewish

    believers in Jesus were not eating with Gentile believers in Jesus and were also declaring that

    they too must be circumcised to be acceptable to God. Additional requirements were being

    55Ibid.

    56Ibid.

    57Ibid., 117.

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    added to faith and that was at odds with the essence of the message that Paul was preaching. It

    becomes obvious, then, why Paul must confront rules and regulations which uphold barriers on

    any lines, but especially on racial and nationalistic lines.

    One last point that should be noted, lest one still think that Paul was simply speaking

    against the law as a whole and Judaism as a whole, is the evidence that Paul was actually

    engaging in intra-Jewish polemic. The Qumran writings contain an almost identical phrase

    deeds of the law (hrwtyXcm). In 4QFlor. 1:1-17 this phrase refers to what marked out the

    Qumran community in its distinctiveness from outsiders and enemies.

    58

    The understanding is

    very similar to what Paul seems to have in mind when he uses the phrase works of the law.

    For, both phrases refer to obligations put on the members of the covenant community.59

    The

    point is that it was not uncommon for groups of Jews to have interpretations of the law that

    required certain actions for their adherents. Many times these actions were based on specific

    nuanced interpretations that differed from other groups interpretations of similar subjects of

    passages.60

    Thus, other groups would write or speak polemically against the interpretations

    that did not line up with theirs. Of this potentially polemical nature of Pauls writings, Dunn

    notes that it remains significant that in just such a context of dispute over the extent and

    detail of Torah obligation binding on Christian Jews, Paul uses a phrase which was used

    elsewhere in the Judaism of the time in similar intra-Jewish factional dispute over points of

    58Ibid., 204.

    59Ibid., 235.

    60Ibid.

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    halakhah.61

    The point is that Paul was likely engaged in a common sectarian dispute; he was

    not breaking from the law and Judaism on the whole, as many would like to believe.

    Illuminating the finer points of Pauls doctrine of justification by faith and works of the

    law leads nicely into the final facet of the new perspective on Paul as outlined by Dunn: It

    protests that failure to recognise this major dimension of Pauls doctrine of justification by faith

    may have ignored or excluded a vital factor in combating the nationalism and racialism which

    has so distorted and diminished Christianity past and present.62

    Dunns personal application of

    the doctrine of justification by faith was mentioned earlier, but there is more to this final point.

    This doctrine had very practical applications for Paul and it should for the modern reader and

    follower of Paul as well.

    The necessary implications of justification by faith, those of accepting fellow believers

    regardless of their adherence to other certain rules and regulations, are not seen or

    implemented by many Christians. Some of this results in minor grievances, such as not taking

    communion with other Christians because they have some different views and beliefs, not

    allowing someone to be a member of a church because they have been baptized by a different

    means (or have not been baptized at all), and labeling some Christians as non-Christians

    because they take different stances on social issues than some Christians think they should.

    While these are minor grievances, they still work to break down Christianity and distort and

    diminish it.

    61Ibid.

    62Ibid., 16.

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    There are, however, other types of grievances that can be called major. These

    grievances are much graver and include large-scale discrimination. Examples ofmajor

    grievances include the apartheid of South Africa and slavery and subsequent racial segregation

    in the southern states of the USA. In these instances, inequality was supported and condoned

    by the church. Barriers were not only allowed to remain standing, but were, sadly, buttressed

    by the churchs teaching and action. The genocide of the Tutsis in Rwanda also involved

    Christians, and was supported by many of them. The gravest offence, however, in my opinion,

    has to be what Dunn calls the turning of the tables when Christianity turned full scale against

    Judaism with its supersessionism and anti-semitism which resulted in the Holocaust (Shoah).63

    German Christians supported the Reich and built barriers so that Jews could not be brought

    into their fold as many Jews had tried to do to Gentiles almost 2,000 years prior. This time,

    however, the result was much more than ostracization. Jews were murdered by the train load,

    with an estimated 6 million Jews being killed by the Nazis, many of whom were Christians.

    Paul challenged those who wanted to maintain boundaries and if contemporary

    Christianity desires to combat the nationalism and racialism which has so distorted and

    diminished Christianity past and present,64

    this doctrine must be seen how Paul intended it to

    be seen and it must be implemented as such. This means that Christians accept who God

    accepts, namely, allwho believe, and on no other condition not ethnicity, not colour, not

    race, not class, not creed, not denomination.65 Many biblical studies students may think that

    63Ibid., 35.

    64Ibid., 16.

    65Ibid., 36.

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    this sort of practical application has no place in the academic setting. Dunn, however, rejects

    this and makes clear that it is fundamental to the new perspective on Paul for him.

    This I say once again is what the new perspective is all about for me. It does notset thisunderstanding of justification by faith in antithesis to the justification of the individual

    by faith. It is notopposed to the classic Reformed doctrine of justification. It simply

    observes that a social and ethical dimension was part of the doctrine from its first

    formulation, was indeed integral to the first recorded exposition and defence of the

    doctrineJew first but also Greek.66

    The new perspective on Paul is concerned with recovering an accurate historical picture of

    Second Temple Judaism and of Paul, but it is also concerned with how Paul implemented his

    views. As a result, the new perspective finds value in the last few chapters of Galatians as

    speaking to the social and ethical dimension, whereas the old perspective dismissed them

    because they could not see how they fit if justification was by faith alone.

    It is my hope that at this point the whole picture is becoming clear as regards the new

    perspective on Paul. For, building upon Sanders new perspective on Second Temple Judaism

    brings to light the covenantal nomism aspect of the Judaism of Pauls day and works to place

    Paul in his original context and not the context of 16th

    century reformation Europe.

    Understanding covenantal nomism, then, makes it much easier, if not simply possible, to

    understand the social and ethical dimension of Pauls message. To be sure, one could only be

    justified by faith, but that was not the whole picture. There were still requirements of being a

    part of the covenant, much like covenantal nomism is not about getting in but staying in.

    Paul, in essence, sets up his own covenantal nomism by asserting his doctrine of justification by

    66Ibid.

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    faith and by also asserting that there are necessary social and ethical implications to being

    justified by those means and of being a member of the covenant group.

    The new perspective on Paul wants to be able to apply Pauls teachings and views to the

    modern situation, but it understands what Mark Mattison calls a hermeneutical truism,

    namely, that a New Testament text must be understood and appreciated in its context before

    it can be applied to that of the interpreter.67

    For this reason, the new perspective on Paul

    spends the bulk of its efforts and resources on the first four points in Dunns definition rather

    than on the final point.

    This paper began by mentioning the paper by Krister Stendahl in 1963, which contended

    that the dominant Lutheran view on Paul and his theology was actually not consistent with

    Pauls own writings. While this may be true to some degree, the new perspective on Paul, for

    the most part, has actually been quite careful to not build the dichotomy as being between

    Lutheranism and the new perspective. In fact, Dunn even speaks a few times of how the

    Lutheran understanding of a certain topic has been sent to the trash, so to speak, simply

    because it was a Lutheran view, yet it needs to be recovered, for it correctly read and

    interpreted Pauls writings.

    Further, this paper has shown a bit of the history of the beginnings of the new

    perspective on Paul and has laid out the main concerns that the new perspective on Paul deals

    with, as espoused by James Dunn, the father of the new perspective. The new perspective is

    determined to understand the context and worldview of Paul, one in which covenantal nomism

    67Mark Mattison, A Summary on the New Perspective on Paul, n.p.

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    was a given, so as to better understand Paul and his writings. The new perspective also

    attempts to approach the role of the law from the perspective of Second Temple Judaism,

    asserting that the law is not all bad and impossible to follow, but served as a means of identity

    and boundary for the members of the covenant. These barriers then, that the law helped

    uphold, were challenged by Pauls teaching that justification is through faith alone, with no

    additional requirements whatsoever. The additional requirements that many Jewish Christians

    were still holding on to, the new perspective holds, were referred to by Pauls technical use of

    works of the law. Finally, then, the new perspective on Paul recognizes the social and ethical

    dimension to Pauls message for his context and attempts to apply that message non-

    anachronistically to the modern context.

    The new perspective on Paul offers the reader and follower of Paul a fresh look at Paul

    and his context. It is not without fault, nor is it understood uniformly by new perspective

    scholars. This paper chose to go with James Dunns description of the new perspective since he

    is the leading scholar in this area and, indeed, is the father of the new perspective. Though the

    new perspective is not the antithesis to the Lutheran perspective, there are many differences,

    which will excite some and frustrate many. Nevertheless, as Pauline scholarship moves forward

    in whichever direction it will, it has been and will continue to be, well served by the so-called

    new perspective on Paul.

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    Kong, Wan Chee. Not Either/Or but Both/And. Mark Mattison.

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