For those whom he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, in order that he might be the firstborn among many brothers. And those whom he predestined he also called, and those whom he called he also justified, and those whom he justified he also glorified.
Showing posts with label The New Perspective On Paul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The New Perspective On Paul. Show all posts
Friday, November 8, 2013
NT Wright: Paul and the Faithfulness of God
NT Wright is definitely a smart guy and that can't be denied. Having said that I think i'm over him telling us we don't know how to read Paul. We get it NT, only you understand Paul and the rest of us are missing the boat. I probably will not rush right out and get his new one Paul and the Faithfulness of God.
Monday, August 12, 2013
Gerald Bray on NT Wright's Justification
Here is something to look at. Gerald Bray wrote an editorial on NT Wright's book on justification. I think it was pretty well written. Tell me your thoughts on it:
The Wrighteousness Of God
The Wrighteousness Of God
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Peter Lombard And The New Perspective On Paul
If you are not yet familiar with "The New Perspective On Paul" here is a good round table discussion moderated by Al Mohler that will help.
"That the observances of the old law are better called signs than sacraments. For those things which were instituted only for the sake of signifying are merely signs, and not sacraments; such were the carnal sacrifices and the ceremonial observances of the Old Law, which could never justify those who offered them. As the Apostle says, “the blood of goats and of oxen, and the ashes of an heifer being sprinkled, sanctified such as are defiled, for the cleansing of the flesh,” [Heb 9:13] ‘not of the soul’ [Glossa Ordinaria] because the defilement arose from contact with the dead.—Augustine. Hence Augustine: ‘By that defilement which the Law cleanses, I understand noting other than contact with a dead person; anyone who touched such a person was unclean for seven days; but according to the Law he was purified on the third and seventh day, and was cleansed,’ so that he might enter the Temple. At times, those legal observances also cleansed ‘from bodily leprosy’; but as the Apostle says, no one was ever justified by the words of the Law, even if they were done in faith and charity. Why? —Ambrose, On the Letter to the Hebrews: ‘Because God imposed them for servitude, not for justification, and that they should be a figure of the future, willing them to be offered to himself rather than to idols.’ —And so they were sings; and Scriptures, because they were signs of a sacred thing, which they certainly did not confer.
4. Which things are called works of the Law. The Apostle calls those things the works of the Law which were instituted only for the sake of signifying, or as a burden."
—Peter Lombard, Sentences, Book 4, dist. 1, ch. 4, §§ 3-4.
"That the observances of the old law are better called signs than sacraments. For those things which were instituted only for the sake of signifying are merely signs, and not sacraments; such were the carnal sacrifices and the ceremonial observances of the Old Law, which could never justify those who offered them. As the Apostle says, “the blood of goats and of oxen, and the ashes of an heifer being sprinkled, sanctified such as are defiled, for the cleansing of the flesh,” [Heb 9:13] ‘not of the soul’ [Glossa Ordinaria] because the defilement arose from contact with the dead.—Augustine. Hence Augustine: ‘By that defilement which the Law cleanses, I understand noting other than contact with a dead person; anyone who touched such a person was unclean for seven days; but according to the Law he was purified on the third and seventh day, and was cleansed,’ so that he might enter the Temple. At times, those legal observances also cleansed ‘from bodily leprosy’; but as the Apostle says, no one was ever justified by the words of the Law, even if they were done in faith and charity. Why? —Ambrose, On the Letter to the Hebrews: ‘Because God imposed them for servitude, not for justification, and that they should be a figure of the future, willing them to be offered to himself rather than to idols.’ —And so they were sings; and Scriptures, because they were signs of a sacred thing, which they certainly did not confer.
4. Which things are called works of the Law. The Apostle calls those things the works of the Law which were instituted only for the sake of signifying, or as a burden."
—Peter Lombard, Sentences, Book 4, dist. 1, ch. 4, §§ 3-4.
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