Category: New Perspective on Paul
The Apostle Paul and variegated nomism.
Andrew Wilson wrote a helpful short article yesterday titled “The New Perspective: A Duffer’s Guide” wherein he examines four major “new perspectives” on Second Temple Judaism as well as the corresponding “new perspectives” on the Apostle Paul. I recommend you read it, though I want to summarize it here.
First, he presents the “old perspective” where the Jews sought to relate to God through rules and regulations. Judaism was a proto-Pelagianism or something like the Roman Catholicism that Martin Luther protested. While there are very few scholars who affirm this view it remains popular. Paul is understood as someone who proposed “grace” against the moralism of Judaism. He preached “faith” against Judaism’s “works.” Again, while this is popular from pulpits it is rejected by most of academia.
Second, there is the view popularized by E.P. Sanders known as “covenantal nomism” which is the view that God elected Israel in his mercy, and that the Law is a response to the grace of God, not an attempt to earn it. Many who affirm this view seem to think that Paul misunderstood Judaism (quite odd for a Pharisee) or he intentionally misrepresented it to his audiences.
Third, there is a similar view that says Paul understood and correctly represented Judaism, but he had contention with particular “works of the Law” such as circumcision, Sabbath observation, dietary laws, and so forth. These “works” were not moralistic, but identity forming. These “works” prevented Gentile inclusion into the Kingdom of God making the early church ethnocentric rather that welcoming to everyone. In this view Paul attacked those who sought to make Gentiles into Jews rather than allowing them to enter on their own terms.
Fourth, there is a group that acknowledges that covenantal nomism existed, but that there were other understandings of how Law observance impacted one’s eschatological standing before God. This particular view argues for a “variegated nomism” (see David Stark’s helpful review of Justification and Variegated Nomism) or a diverse understanding of the function of Law obedience among Jews. This view seems to explain why in Paul’s writings there are places where he seems to address what we’d call “covenantal nomism” while there are others where he does seem to “principalize” things a bit bringing Paul’s language closer to the older view when Paul addresses views of Law observance that seem to place final justification before God on the shoulders of the Law observer, rather than the crucified and risen Messiah.
I admit that I tend to fluctuate between points three and four in Wilson’s article, which I guess makes me more like four though not quite willing to allow for a full-blown Lutheranism. Oddly enough, I do wrestle with this through the lens of my own religious history. As a child and a teen I was in Oneness Pentecostal circles. They had very strict “holiness standards” like not wearing a beard (because of the hippies in the 60′s), not wearing shorts, not going to the movie theater or watching television (this was before iTunes, Netflix, and Hulu threw a wrench in their legalism), and then there were various degrees of strictness about other things like sleeve length and whether one could watch VHS at home.
For women it was much worse. They were not allowed to wear pants, they couldn’t cut their hair or wear make-up and jewelry, their skirts had to be below the knee, and so forth and so on.
Luther would call this legalism. I agree. Is this what Second Temple Jews did though?
Well, when Oneness Pentecostal pastors preach these “holiness standards” they are cautious about calling them “salvific” (usually). Often I heard the line, “You can’t earn your salvation but you can lose it.” Likewise, they saw themselves as receiving “revelation” that other misguided Christian groups had not received (which sounds a bit gnostic) and this seemed to me like “election” of sorts. So it wasn’t that you saved yourself, but rather that you were brought into the Kingdom by the grace of God, but then it was your responsibility to be obedient in order to maintain your standing. You could repent, of course, but you couldn’t live in “rebellion” lest you be removed or shunned from the community which essentially equates with being “lost” of “backslidden.”
I wonder what it was like for some Jews who lived in these communities. When I read 1Q, The Community Rule Scroll from Qumran I see something not quite Pelagian, but something that makes me lean toward variegated nomism. If Qumran is a remnant, and they are true the people of God, and someone does one of the things that expels them from the community, do we have room to speak of this as “losing their salvation” or not? If so, then their deeds revoked them from the remnant and they will be judged.
Of course, one could argue that the same is true of the Pauline churches, like Corinth where the man having sex with his father’s wife is excommunicated. Yet there is a major difference in the type of offenses allowed at Qumran and in the Pauline churches. In other words, the Pauline churches seem more graceful to me (e.g. see my “Ways to be Expelled from the Qumran Community”). Again, I read my own religious experience side-by-side with this discussion. As an evangelical I do see principles in Scripture that argue that there are things that seem to disqualify the claim that one is a Christian. Whether one is lost or not is hard to know, but if a church excommunicated someone who was sleeping with his father’s wife I would find it justifiable. Most people would see this as a moral offense of some sort. Yet I find it disturbing that a woman could be removed from her church for cutting her hair. Did Paul feel this way about Qumran? Did Jesus feel this way about the Pharisees refusal to engage in table fellowship with “sinners”? I don’t know, but it is something worth pondering. If Paul did feel this way about how his fellow Jews interpreted Law observance then there is a “variegated nomism” of sorts and it is hard to accept E.P. Sanders somewhat black-and-white “Paul misrepresented” position. I know Oneness Pentecostals who would think I misrepresent their “holiness standards” when I call it “legalism”, but that is subjective, no? If Paul disagreed with his fellow Jews on what allows for fellowship it could be similar.
Reviewing the new perspective(s) on the Apostle Paul.
Another one of the subjects to be discussed at my oral defense is the so-called New Perspective on Paul (hereafter NPP). Of course, it is better understood as “perspectives” since there is not one, singular new approach. This is quite a massive topic to have to discuss. I am doing my best to familiarize with many of the various ideas and personalities, but it seems like a never ending task!
About two years ago M.M. Mattison wrote a helpful introductory article on the NPP titled, “A Summary of the New Perspective on Paul” which list four major contributors and their key ideas. There is Krister Stendahl‘s observation that Paul had a “robust conscience” so that unlike Luther he was not a man haunted by moral failings. This idea arose as scholars began to revisit what Second Temple Judaism reveals about itself, especially in works like the Dead Sea Scroll collection. It did not seem that Jews in this period did good deeds to “earn” God’s favor, but as a response to their election as the people of God. In other words, the Jews were already the people of God. One could exit the covenant by doing deeds that disassociated with the people of God thereby enacting one’s departure from the covenant, but one does not earn their way into the covenant. For Stendahl the idea that Paul was a proto-Luther was absurd. He may have forsaken his Jewish identity markers in favor of being identified with Christ, but he did not show himself to be a man buried in doubts and regrets.
E.P. Sanders is the second person mentioned. Of course, he did one of the most thorough studies of Second Temple Judaism and he concluded that the concept of “covenantal nomism” made better since of how the Jews related to the Law. As I explained above it wasn’t “legalism” as much as it was response to election. One could disassociate themselves from Israel by breaking the law, but this wasn’t as much about “morality” as it was “identity”, though the lines are sometimes blurry here.
James D.G. Dunn moved things along by observing (contra Sanders) that Paul had not misunderstood his fellow Jews framing them as legalist, but rather when he accused them of being tied to close to “work of the Law” it had nothing to do with morality. In other words, Paul was not an anti-nomian. It did have to do with those particular demarcators of Jewish identity: circumcision, Sabbath, holy days and festivals, dietary laws, and the like.
N.T. Wright is the final major personality. He challenged the idea that the “righteousness of God” had to do with some moral quality of God that he “imparts” or gives to sinner to make them holy. Rather, he saw the righteousness of God as being something like the vindication of God. He uses the phrase “covenantal faithfulness” quite often. So, for example, in Romans 9-11 the major concerns is how can God be considered just if he is rejecting ethnic Israel to whom he has made so many promises simply because they didn’t recognize Jesus as Messiah. Well, for Paul God is justified or vindicated in his end of the covenant in that he has maintained a remnant saving them as he has always saved the people of God, by faith. I recommend watching the below video to get an idea of what Dunn and Wright argue.
Another debate that matters to those who discuss the NPP is whether or not Paul’s phrase πίστεως Χριστοῦ should be understood as referring to “faith in Christ”, an objective genitive, or “faith(fulness) of Christ”, a subjective genitive. What we have here is a difference in placement: Does salvation come by our faith in Christ or by Christ’s faithfulness? Of course we can argue “both” from other passages of Scripture, but that is the unique contribution of this phrase to the debate.
Another useful article of this topic is Preston Sprinkle’s very recent “What is the New Perspective on Paul?”
Of course, “The Paul Page” from where the first article came has many resources as well.
What do you think are the most important things to know about the NPP? Would you add any other major contributors? Would you add any other important subjects?
If I were to summarize the overall contribution of the NPP(s) it would be that we have been forced to reevaluate how we read Paul in relation to the Judaism of his day. This has impacted how we understand Pauline soteriology which is where most of the battled have arisen (e.g. the impact this has had on the doctrine of justification by faith, especially as it relates to how people like John Piper understand it). What do you think is the most important contribution of the NPP(s)?
Sunday Quote: Fisher on Holiness in Paul
Holiness cannot be created or achieved by not doing something. For Paul holiness cannot be defined by what a person does not do. For Paul the believer’s holiness can be endangered and diminished by committing various transgressions and offense, but it cannot be increased or established by not committing those transgressions and offenses. For Paul, the believer’s relationship with Christ is active not passive. It is what a person does, not what they do not do that establishes them in a state of righteousness before God.1
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1. Roy A. Fisher, “Paul and the Faith of Jesus: Justification by Faith in Eschatological Participatory Soteriology” (paper for requirements in the PhD in Near Eastern Religions, University of California Berkeley, in an email to author, April 24, 2008), 12. Here, Fisher apparently is following Sanders’s view of participatory soteriology in Paul.[Back]
Introduction to the New Perspective
I received in the mail yesterday a letter from Wipf and Stock regarding its latest offerings. As I perused the list, I noticed The New Perspective on Paul: An Introduction by Kent L. Yinger, Ph.D, New Testament professor at George Fox Evangelical Seminary. Here is the book description, taken from its page on Wipf and Stock:
Can someone please explain this “New Perspective on Paul”? Where did it come from and will it help or hinder Christian interpreters to grasp the apostle’s writings more clearly? In The New Perspective on Paul: An Introduction, Kent Yinger provides concise, readable, and authoritative answers to these and other questions currently exercising students of Paul.
The book has received endorsements from scholars internationally, quite possibly the most significant is the one coming from J.D.G. Dunn who has written extensively on the New Perspective.
Having taken a full year of New Testament under Dr. Yinger, I have found the New Perspective on Paul more convincing that I once thought. As numerous endorses have stated on the one hand, this book is an introduction and is not out to criticize or defend the New Perspective. On the other hand, based on what I have learned in the classroom from Yinger himself (where he simply presents the New Perspective), I am sure some who read The New Perspective will at least rethink it as something feasible for reading Paul.
Rome, Geneva, and Everywhere Inbetween!
A lot has been said regarding the Vatican’s attempt to welcome disgruntled Anglicans back into communion (see here). But I thought that I’d toss out a few links for those who are not yet bored with this subject.
First, N.T. Wright, via Trevin Wax’s blog, has responded to those who see the “New Perspective on Paul” as being a step back toward Roman Catholic theology here.
Second, Michael Bird defends N.T. Wright’s place within Protestantism, along with some other comments about Catholic-Protestant relations, here.
Third, Jim West ponders why Rome will welcome Anglicans back but will not allow their own priest to get married here.
Finally, Halden has some final comments on Anglo-Catholicism here.
N.T. Wright and J.D.G. Dunn on the "New Perspective on Paul"
HT: Euangelion
Did the Apostle Paul Misrepresent Second Temple Judaism?
Both E.P. Sanders and H. Raisaner criticized the Apostle Paul saying that he misrepresented Second Temple (esp. Palestinian)Judaism (STJ) when he depicted it as a merit-based, legalistic religion. It is argued that STJ was a religion of “covenantal nomism”. This is to say that the Jews did not see works as means of earning God’s favor since God had already elected Israel. Rather, it was by works that one showed that one was in the covenant or one maintained right-standing in the covenant. The Jews obeyed the law because of election.
J.D.G. Dunn, N.T. Wright, M. Hooker and others have previously argued that Sanders did not give Paul a fair hearing. These scholars have suggested that the traditional Reformed (esp. Lutheran) reading of Paul was incorrect and that we must reinterpret terminology such as “the works of the law”, “the righteousness of God”, “faith in/faithfulness of Jesus Christ” and so forth. This is to say that Sanders is correct in his assessment of STJ, but not Paul.
Douglas Moo offers yet another possibility. He argues along with M. Seifrid, T. Schreiner, P. O’Brien, S. Gathercole, and others that STJ is much more diverse that Sanders allowed. Therefore, it is possible that Paul was in fact challenging some sort of “legalistic” or “merit-based” Judaism. Paul was not challenging STJ as a whole (because it was not uniform) but rather a particular element of STJ that was represented by his opponents. Even if we cannot find STJ literature that sounds exactly like the opponents of Paul it is suggested by Moo that,
Even if the position of Paul’s opponents could not be traced to any Jewish view discernible in the literature, it would still be preferable to admit our ignorance of much of first century theology and let them remain unidentified than accuse Paul of misrepresentations or force the texts to say something that they do not appear to be saying (Moo, Douglas. “Paul and the Law in the Last Ten Years.” Scot. Journ. of Theol. 40: 287-307.).
Of course, there are some scholars who believe that there is as much in STJ literature to suggest merit-based religion as there is “covenantal nomism”. But even if there wasn’t one should assume that Paul knew what he was talking about and that he knew what he was criticizing. Especially since for all the STJ literature we have we do not have enough to know all the aspects involved.
The Book of James and the New Perspective on Paul
Some critics of N.T. Wright, such as Mark Seifrid, have suggested that Wright’s understanding of the doctrine of justification is too much like Roman Catholicism (see this video). Yet I find that there is a lot of similarities between Wright’s understanding of Pauline thought and the Reformed understanding of the canonical role of the Book of James. Where Paul states that we are justified by faith, apart from works of the law, the Book of James (2:14-24)says this:
What use is it, my brethren, if someone says he has faith but he has no works? Can that faith save him? If a brother or sister is without clothing and in need of daily food, and one of you says to them, “Go in peace, be warmed and be filled,” and yet you do not give them what is necessary for their body, what use is that? Even so faith, if it has no works, is dead, being by itself.But someone may well say, “You have faith and I have works; show me your faith without the works, and I will show you my faith by my works.” You believe that God is one You do well; the demons also believe, and shudder. But are you willing to recognize, you foolish fellow, that faith without works is useless? Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up Isaac his son on the altar? You see that faith was working with his works, and as a result of the works, faith was perfected; and the Scripture was fulfilled which says, “AND ABRAHAM BELIEVED GOD, AND IT WAS RECKONED TO HIM AS RIGHTEOUSNESS,” and he was called the friend of God. You see that a man is justified by works and not by faith alone.
To synchronize Paul and James I have heard over and over again that Paul speaks of initial justification and James the outworking of justification (via the life of Abraham). Or Paul is referring to the works of the Law of Moses while James is referring to good deeds that are the natural result of faith. In other words James view of works is similar to the “fruit of the Spirit” in Galatians!
Is this not exactly what Wright has been saying? Wright sees justification as one part of salvation, the declarative part on behalf of the cosmic judge, in favor of the believer. Furthermore, in order to inherit the new heaven, new earth God must recreate us via the Spirit (part of the message of all of Romans 8). Other traditions such as Pentecostalism and the Methodist have called this “sanctification” or “regeneration”. The Orthodox have a cousin view call theosis where we become like God. The idea is that it takes more than merely being declared right but God actually makes us right by the work of the Spirit.
Interestingly enough while some Reformed are afraid to acknowledge that Paul sees the Holy Spirit as actually working through Christians to fulfill the Law there is still room for them to say that James said this very thing, but in reference to faith! I find it odd that the work of the Holy Spirit is intimidating, but works via faith in James is not. Am I missing something here?
N.T. Wright: Fully Augustinian, Not Reformational
During the SBTS panel discussion on N.T. Wright’s Justification: God’s Plan, Paul’s Vision professor Mark A. Seifrid states that it is true that Wright is not Pelagian. He affirms that Wright is “fully Augustinian” because Wright sees salvation as being the work of the Holy Spirit, but Wright “is not Reformational” (begin at 31:50).
OK, church historians and historical theology students, what does this mean?
Pastors: Weight in on the New Perspective(s) in the Church
I am wondering if there are any pastors out there who would weigh in regarding the impact of New Perspective thinking on the level of church practicum. In a July, 2009, Christianity Today article by Trevin Wax the views of Piper and Wright on justification are juxtaposed. Then the article asks various pastors whether Wright’s or Piper’s view have impacted their pastoral ministries. I think this is an important topic. All dogma has practical implications. How does the doctrine of justification mold and shape the congregation you lead?
SBTS Panel on ‘N.T. Wright and the Doctrine of Justification by Faith’
Since I have been writing on the NPP so much I thought this video would be a fitting addition.
Works of Law/Torah
I have been reading a bit of J.D.G. Dunn and N.T. Wright lately. While doing so I have been paying attention to their reading of the Pauline phrase ‘works of the law’ or ἔργων νόμου. Here is what I have concluded:
James D.G. Dunn see ‘works of the law’ as “covenant works, works related to the covenant, works done in obedience to the covenant” and more narrowly “particular observances of the law like circumcision and food laws” (see Dunn, James D. G. “The New Perspective on Paul.” BJRUL (Manchester, 1983). Pp. 95-122). Meanwhile, N.T. Wright sees works of the Law as meaning “‘works of Torah’, that is, those practices which mark Israel out from among the nations” (see Wright, N. T. “Romans and the Theology of Paul.” In Pauline Theology, vol. 3, pp. 30-67.).
Dunn and Wright do not see works = good deeds for merit as Luther did. Nevertheless, there appears to be some continuation. Dunn and Wright do seem to indicate that ‘works of the law’ are those actions–circumcision, food laws, Sabbath–that gave Jews the confidence that they were remaining in the covenant. These actions were ‘badges’ of the covenant. Would it be much of a leap to say that the Jews of Paul’s day felt confident that they were safe from God’s judgment not merely because of election, but because of actions that proved election? Therefore the confidence was not in election, per se, but in those “badges”?
James D.G. Dunn Critiquing the ‘Lutheran’ Paul and the E.P. Sanders’ Paul
In an article titled ‘The New Perspective on Paul’ (1983) [1] James D.G. Dunn addressed E.P. Sanders’ ground breaking work Paul and Palestinian Judaism. After complementing Sander’s work for giving “us an unrivalled opportunity to look at Paul afresh, to shift our perspective back from the 16th century to the first century, to do what all true exegetes want to do–that is, to see Paul properly within his own context, to hear Paul in terms of his own time, to let Paul be himself”, Dunn states, “The most surprising feature of Sanders’ writing, however, is that he himself has failed to take the opportunity his own mouldbreaking work offered.” (100)
Dunn was not satisfied with Sanders’ assumption that Paul must have characterized Second Temple Judaism (hereafter STJ) as legalistic when in fact STJ was not a legalistic religion. In fact, according to Sanders STJ was a election and grace based religion. Paul’s defaced STJ because it was not Christianity; Paul was against STJ because it did not acknowledge Jesus as Messiah.
Dunn sees this as wrongheaded. Although Dunn was not willing to go back toward Luther he was not willing to allow Paul to appear to be either ignorant of the Judaism of his own day or deceptive of it in his criticism. Dunn writes this,
The Lutheran Paul has been replaced by an idiosyncratic Paul who in arbitrary and irrational manner turns his face against the glory and greatness of Judaism’s covenant theology and abandons Judaism simply because it is not Christianity.
Hence, we see the starting point of Dunn’s own perspective within the New Perspective(s) on Paul. Dunn, unlike some, bought into Sanders’ Judaism but not Sanders Paul. Those like Heikki Raisanen bought into Sanders’ Judaism and therefore rejected Pauline thought.
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[1] Dunn, James D. G. “The New Perspective on Paul.” BJRUL (Manchester, 1983). Pp. 95-122.
‘Justification and the New Perspectives on Paul’ by Guy Prentiss Waters

I am reading ‘Justification and the New Perspectives on Paul: A Review and Response’ by G.P. Waters. Previously I mentioned that this book was one of the required reading textbooks for a class I am taking that is covering the New Perspective on Paul (NPP). Someone named ‘Steve’ commented saying,
I am surprised anyone who is qualified to teach any NT class would recommend (let alone REQUIRE) Waters book. It is widely regarded as one of the worst pieces of engagement with the NPP (and I’m saying that as one who is NOT in agreement with Dunn, Wright, Watson, etc!)…
Is this a common response to this book from those who have read it? My professor liked it. The author did study under E.P. Sanders and R. Hays at Duke, so you’d think he knows a bit about what he is talking about. Let me know your thoughts.
The ‘Works of the Law’ (ἔργων νόμου)
For my ThM class dealing with the New Perspective on Paul we have begun by discussing the term “works of the Law” (ἔργων νόμου) in Paul, especially Galatians 3:10. Is there anyone out there who would like to recommend some reading resources? Books and/or journal articles would be welcomed.


