| Covenant and Justification #3 (N.T.Wright) |
|
|
|
| Written by Dr Rowland S. Ward |
| Wednesday, 12 December 2007 00:04 |
|
SOME THOUGHTS ON COVENANT THEOLOGY & JUSTIFICATION #3 N.T.Wright and the 'new perspective' on Paul One of our younger adult members/readers asked for something on a matter of current discussion in Anglican circles in Sydney and which will have its impact on everyone in due time. Here's my effort to explain the issues in brief. 'Justification is an act of God's free grace in which he pardons all our sins THE ISSUES The term 'new perspective' was coined by J.D.G.Dunn in 1982 to What is the new perspective? Paul's problem with Judaism was not works-righteousness in the sense understood by the Protestant Reformers, but the insistence on a covenant status for Jews and Jews alone. This insistence effectively denied that Jesus was the promised Messiah who fulfilled the Old Testament promise of salvation for Jew and Gentile. It was illustrated by Jewish insistence on the symbols of ethnic privilege, which the new perspective regards as Paul's 'works of the law', namely, circumcision, the sabbath and the Mosaic code. Hence Paul's affirms the full status in the church of the Gentile believers in Galatia apart from such requirements. Wright: What Paul really said God's grace operates by the powerful working of God's Spirit through the preaching of the gospel, transforming hearts and minds and producing faith in Christ as the risen Lord. The difference between a first century Jew and a first century Christian was not so much their attitude to salvation. Both held that salvation is through God's gracious covenant, and that good works are the result of faith working through love. Both aim to serve God with a clear conscience and look for ultimate acquittal at God's bar of justice following God's review of the deeds of this life. The difference lies in their attitude to Jesus. The Jew rejects him as the Messiah and insists on covenant status for the Jew only, complete with its badges of circumcision, the sabbath and the food laws, 'the works of the law' in Paul's phrase. The Christian believes Jesus is the Messiah who brings the promised vindication of God's people, establishing his church among all nations, and rendering the distinctive old covenant requirements superfluous. Faith in Jesus is enough. Justification is not the exercise of mercy, a description of how one is saved, but a declaration about someone who has already received mercy, who is already a member of the renewed- covenant community
ASSESSMENT We may find value in aspects of the new perspective, particularly in its reminder we should consider Paul's letters in the first -century setting and not simply read them through Luther's or Calvin's 16th century eyes. The Jew-Gentile conflict was a very relevant issue. However, significant problems exist for the new perspective. 1. First-century Judaism However, the question is, 'Was this non-meritorious law keeping in the context of a gracious covenant, really the dominant form of Judaism in Paul's day?' Significant academic contributions I from a variety of viewpoints are critical [eg D. A. Carson, Peter T. O'Brien & Mark Seifrid (eds), Justification and Variegated Nomism, v. 1: The Complexities of Second Temple Judaism]. Indeed, we might assume that as common experience shows an inveterate tendency in religious people of whatever persuasion to look to who they are or what they do as the basis on which they expect God to deal kindly with them, that this was so in first-century Judaism too. But don't assume: let's go no further than the Bible itself. First, the ordinary reader of the Bible sees that the majority of Jews rejected Jesus as 'the messenger of the covenant' (Mal 3 :1), its very substance (Is 42:6), which thus meant a repudiation of that covenant. Second, he sees that the majority of Jews did have an emphasis on works-righteousness however disguised by assertions of God's mercy. 'We are God's children through his gracious covenant with our father Abraham', might be and was the claim, and in the next breath it might be negatived by conduct and shown never to have been properly understood. The Old Testament prophets had a fair bit to say on this, and the New Testament likewise. The very privileges of the Jewish people became the stumbling block. The real problem was the self -sufficiency in their hearts behind such confidence in the badges of racial descent or other distinction. It was not enough to claim Abraham as one's father (Lk 3 :7ff). Indeed, OT and NT alike distinguish between spiritual Israelites and physical Israelites. 'They are not all Israel who are of Israel.' In the same way as much of Judaism, Roman Catholicism was and is a religion emphasising salvation by grace through faith. But closer examination shows that human merit is not excluded. Traditions God never gave us to keep, and practices inconsistent with a gracious salvation, are required and regarded as instrumental causes of salvation along with faith in Christ. That's even written into the theory since the Council of Trent (1545-63), and it is certainly intertwined in popular grass-roots Catholicism, even today. 2. Justification It is our own Scottish Presbyterian 'Rabbi' Dr John Duncan (1796-1870) The traditional Protestant law/gospel contrast is to the point, even if Paul's immediate concern in some contexts relates to how the gospel creates the one people of God rather than to how an individual is saved. Justification is the status of everyone who trusts in Jesus. Membership in God's family flows from justification but is not its meaning. 3. Faith and works Thus, the meritorious ground of justification, of which the resurrection of Christ is declarative, is Christ's death, the instrumental cause of justification is faith, and good works justify evidentially, as the proof and demonstration of God's saving act. Rewards are not due as wages earned, but through the grace of God in Christ crowning not our merits but his freely given gifts. These are important distinctions. As Edward Mote put it: When he shall come with trumpet sound, *** The new perspective offers some good insights but seems to introduce its own distortions. Of course all our traditions must be judged by Scripture, and we are all creatures of our own age. The new perspective seems to react to the excessive individualism among many Protestants. It has reflected with some sense of guilt, and rightly, on Christian complicity in the Holocaust, and it recognises the importance of Christian unity, bewailing, again rightly, the Protestant/Roman Catholic divide in a spiritually needy world. Its interpretations seems more influenced by such factors at crucial points than by what Scripture actually says. The Presbyterian Banner, May 2002 |
| Last Updated on Wednesday, 25 June 2008 22:33 |