I'm presenting this table to my students in New Testament Theology and Ethics this fall. Old news to Paul scholars, of course, but radical stuff for the uninitiated. I'm painfully aware of my over-simplification on almost every level. Corrections and suggestions for improvement welcome.
Lutheran / Traditional Perspective
versus
The “New Perspective”
Central Concern
Justification: how can sinners be made right before God?
Gentile inclusion: on what terms may Gentiles join God’s people?
State of 1st c. Judaism
Burdened by the Law; dead in sin; marked by hypocrisy and legalism; bound up with sin, death & law (in contrast to grace, life & faith).
Vibrant, dynamic, diverse; a religion of grace; pattern of religion: “covenantal nomism*” (Sanders); in (spiritual) exile (Wright)
*"Covenantal Nomism” (according to Sanders): the notion that the Israelite’s place in God’s plan is determined by the covenant which God established with Israel, and that obedience to the law is Israel’s proper response to God’s initial act of grace.
The Law in Judaism
Paul’s problem with Judaism
Legalism: it promotes legalistic works righteousness; merit theology; pride in accomplishments; faulty view of grace and works
Nationalism / racism / exclusivism / particularism: the role of the Law in establishing boundary markers, Jewish privilege (Dunn); “It is not Christianity” (Sanders)
Paul’s condition prior to conversion
A frustrated, guilt-ridden sinner who valued works over faith, and who struggled unsuccessfully to measure up to the Law’s demands (Rom 7:14-24).
Paul’s conversion
Paul leaves his now-dead ancestral religion and its Law to trust and follow Christ. Paul rejects Law-keeping as impossible and/or pride-producing.
Justification by faith
The center / organizing principle of Paul’s Gospel: God’s gracious declaration that a sinner is right before God through his faith in Christ’s work. God’s response to human failure / pride.
Paul’s Gospel
Jesus is the anointed, risen and exalted Lord over all nations (Wright; Rom 1:1-5). Salvation comes by transfer to the realm of his lordship, by union with / participation in Christ (Sanders; 2 Cor 5:17; Rom 6:3-7).
Paul’s reasoning
Forward: from plight to solution: Law-sin-guilt à faith in Christ à justification apart from Law
Backward: from solution to plight (Sanders): Christ à various (unsystematic, inconsistent, incompatible) assessments of sin & Law (Gal 2:21; 3:19, 24-25; Rom 3:20; 4:15; 10:4)
Or: From plight to solution to plight (Wright): exile à Christ à sin / law
Theme of Romans
A “compendium of Christian doctrine” (Melancthon).
A theological treatise on justification by grace through faith.
Romans 9-11 are a parenthesis.
Works of the Law (erga nomou, e.g. Rom.3:28)
Striving to do good; good works performed for salvation
Pistis Christou (e.g., Ga.2:16)
Faith in Christ (objective genitive; anthropological reading) (Dunn)