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God and the Faithfulness of Paul

af Christoph Heilig (Redaktør), Michael F. Bird (Redaktør), J. Thomas Hewitt (Redaktør)

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"N.T. Wright's magnum opus on Paul and the Faithfulness of God is a landmark study on the history and thought of the Apostle Paul. This volume brings together a group of international scholars to critically weigh and assess an array of issues in Wright's work." -- From back cover.
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Summary: A collection of papers assessing N. T. Wright's Paul and the Faithfulness of God by scholars from a number of fields of theological study, with a concluding response from N. T. Wright.

In 2013, N. T. Wright published his 1700 page masterwork on Pauline theology, Paul and the Faithfulness of God (hereafter PFG). Since this time, the work has spawned numerous reviews, other scholarly works, and an extended response from N. T. Wright, Paul and His Recent Interpreters, (reviewed here). What distinguishes this work, which comes to half the length of Wright's, is that it represents assessments of scholars who are specialists in a number of the fields upon which Wright draws in his work, from Jewish studies, to exegesis, to biblical and systematic theology. Furthermore, noting that gap between English and German scholarship on Paul, this work brings together scholars from both.

The work is broken into five parts with a concluding epilogue in which Wright responds (in a mere 57 pages!) to the contributors. An online version of the Table of Contents may be found here. I will not try to discuss all thirty essays as well as Wright's response but rather what were for me some of the most salient essays, realizing this does not do justice to the high quality of others.

Part One consists of a single chapter by Benjamin Schliesser that situates PFG in the scholarly landscape, noting it as a negative reaction to the work of Rudolf Bultmann, and setting it alongside the works of Dunn, Schreiner, Wolter, and Schnelle. Part Two consider a number of methodological issues from hermeneutics to history in six chapters. I found the discussion of Wright's "critical realism" and its particular association with Ian Barbour of interest, as well as the critique in a couple of the essays of Wright's exclusive focus on Pauline material on Paul to the exclusion of Lukan material.

Part Three focuses on contextual issues ranging from the Jewish context which plays such an important part in Wright's work, particularly in a somewhat biting essay by James Charlesworth to a more irenic discussion of Wright's lack of engagement with middle Platonism by Gregory Sterling. Wright conceded this latter critique in his response. Two other essays concern the cultic context and a significant essay by Seyoon Kim on Paul and the Roman empire.

Part Four is the longest section of the book, comprising twelve essays, on exegetical issues. I thought Gregory Tatum got Wright wrong in his chapter on law and covenant, attributing a forensic perspective to Wright more characteristic of his opponents. James D. G. Dunn takes Wright to task for how little he addresses the New Perspective. Peter Stuhlmacher's chapter on Wright's understanding of justification and redemption is particularly outstanding for its discussion and critique of the ideas of exile and the role of Abraham in PFG. There is also an essay on apocalyptic by Jorg Frey, highly critical of Wright's account of apocalyptic in Paul, the one essay to which Wright responds at length in the epilogue.

Part Five concerns implications. Sven Ensminger's work on Barth and Wright seemed to be mostly about his hero, Barth, with little engagement with Wright or Paul. More positively, Frank Macchia's essay (and several others in this volume including Levison's in Part Four) drew attention to Paul's Pneumatology in Wright. Edith Humphrey extends Wright's ideas about sacramentality and the sacraments. The final essay by Schnabel concerns both mission and the discussion of whether Paul's experience on the Damascus road was one of conversion or call.

The concluding epilogue (Part Six) is devoted to Wright's responses to the various essays in twelve sections. For the most part, the responses are gracious, acknowledging where the writer has challenged his thought helpfully, and sometimes, where the writer has misunderstood him, notably Frey, who gets ten pages of response. Often Wright's response is to cite the length of his work and to go into matters further as some would have him would have resulted in a much longer, and perhaps more tedious work.

There are several strengths to this work, particularly the assessments from specialists of a number of claims Wright makes in his broad sweeping work. Also, one who has been around academics in scholarly conference will recognize the cut and thrust of serious scholarly work, where the function of critique is to refine and sharpen thinking.

The work demands close reading and one benefits greatly by having a copy of PFG at hand and having read it. I have to confess that I have only read summaries and reviews and so I honestly felt I was, for the most part, listening to one side of a nuanced conversation. What this collection underscored for me was what a singular work PFG is to evoke so much rigorous discussion from so many perspectives. Now to figure out when I can give a few months of careful attention to this work!

____________________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from the publisher through Edelweiss. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. ( )
  BobonBooks | Jul 19, 2017 |
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Heilig, ChristophRedaktørprimær forfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Bird, Michael F.Redaktørhovedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Hewitt, J. ThomasRedaktørhovedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
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"N.T. Wright's magnum opus on Paul and the Faithfulness of God is a landmark study on the history and thought of the Apostle Paul. This volume brings together a group of international scholars to critically weigh and assess an array of issues in Wright's work." -- From back cover.

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