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Paul: In Fresh Perspective by N. T. Wright
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Paul: In Fresh Perspective

by N. T. Wright

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"Paul: In Fresh Perspective" is a great supplement to Wright's earlier work, "What Saint Paul Really Said." Both books look at various aspects of Paul ministry and theology. "Paul: In Fresh Perspective" is broken into two parts. The first part looks at various themes that run through Paul and other second temple writers, the second part examines how these themes play out in Paul's own writing and thinking. I highly recommend this book for anyone who needs to look at the New Testament in a refreshing way. However, be aware of the controversy of "justification by faith." N.T. Wright discusses, but not in detail, his perspective on the issue. I personally do not understand the whole debate, but I am reading more on it. ( )
  erikssonfamily | Aug 29, 2009 |
In this relatively brief volume Wright seeks to present a synthesis of his ideas about St Paul. After an introduction he goes on to arge that Paul's contribution was to rethink his Judaism in the light of his belief that Jesus was the Messiah.

To do this Wright first sketches a worldview shared by Paul based on three related sets of pairs. The first is creation & covenant - the God who calls Israel is the Creator God, and for Paul, as for some strands of Judaism, the purpose of Israel's call and covenant was ultimately to bring everbody into God's kingdom. In the next chapter on Messaih and Apocalyptic Wright argues that, given the plan of creation and covenant have not gone to plan because of Sin, God needs to act in some way to restore things. This was a widespread Jewish belief, even if there was dispute over the modality of that intervention. For paul, of course, Jesus is that messiah (Wright argues against those who suggest that Paul mostly uses 'Christ' as a kind of surname for Jesus) and so God is intervening. The particular evidence of this is the gift of the spirit (hence there is at least an implicit trinitarian dimension to Paul's viusion). The third pair is Gospel and Empire. Although Paul famously urges obedience to wordly authorities, this does not represent an aproval of the idolatrous dimensions of Roman civic life, and Paul in various places shows that the only tru Lord is Jesus Christ., occasionaly with clear anti-imperial flourishes.

In the secon half of the book Wright goes on to outline how thinking about God, God's people, and Eschatology are transformed in the light of Jesus and the spirit, thus providing an alternative and (Wright would argue) better framework for Pauline theology.

I found the book engaging and interesting, though I found the frequent repetition of "I've dealt with that in greater detail elsewhere" a bit iritating. The coloquial style betrays its origins as a series of lectures (at Cambridge) which Wright deliberately retains. Wright in several places appeals to Colossians for support, which will undermine his case for some (though not me). Less useful was his occasional appeals to Ephesians and even Acts. Overall a good book if you want a sketch which you can read and digest in a day, but less helphull if yopu want the detail of the argument. For that you will have to, as Wright says, go to his other books ( )
  TonyMilner | Jun 25, 2009 |
Historically, the Apostle Paul found himself at the crossroads of Greek, Roman, and Jewish perspectives. While his writings clearly interact with each of these traditions, Paul must be seen primarily as reworking historical Jewish theology (esp. creation, covenant, messiah, apocalyptic). Wright argues that Paul’s theology, ecclesiology, and eschatology are drawn directly from the Old Testament, but are redefined along Trinitarian lines (i.e. how the Messiah and the Spirit reshaped our understanding of each). What is more, Wright argues, all the while Paul must be seen as contrasting Jesus to the rampant paganism of Greco-Roman culture (e.g. emperor worship). While his conclusions have upset many, who claim that he has devalued Paul’s emphasis on salvation by faith, Wright’s scholarship remains solid throughout the book (although Wright will find little support from church history). In all, Wright offers an engaging read with much fodder for further thought and conversation. A ( )
1 vote bsanner | Dec 10, 2007 |
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Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0800637666, Hardcover)

"For me," says N.T.Wright, "there has been no more stimulating exercise, for the mind, the heart, the imagination and the spirit, than trying to think Paul's thoughts after him and constantly to be stirred up to fresh glimpses of God's ways and purposes with the world and with us strange human creatures." Wright's accessible new volume, built on his Cambridge University Hulsean Lectures of 2004, takes a fresh look at Paul in light of recent understandings of his Jewish roots, his attitude toward the Roman Empire, and his unique reframing of Jewish symbols in relation to his experience of the risen Christ. Then Wright attempts a short systematic account of the main theological contours of Paul's thought and its pertinence for the church today.

Part One Themes 1. Paul's World, Paul's Legacy 2. Creation and Covenant 3.Messiah and Apocalyptic 4. Gospel and Empire

Part Two Structures 5. Rethinking God 6. Reworking God's People 7. Reimagining God's Future 8. Paul, Jesus, and the Task of the Church

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:04 -0400)

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