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From Galatia To Rome. Reading Paul as Paul would be read January 5, 2014. The Adult Forum. Reminder Evaluation forms for the Fall series This series Building on the work done in Bible Boot Camp Using my work in earning a PhD in Biblical Studies
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From Galatia To Rome Reading Paul as Paul would be read January 5, 2014
The Adult Forum • Reminder Evaluation forms for the Fall series • This series • Building on the work done in Bible Boot Camp • Using my work in earning a PhD in Biblical Studies • Looking at Paul, one of the most influential characters in the history of Christianity
What do we make of Paul? • Common descriptions • Complicated the simple message of Jesus • Really invented Christianity • Led to repression of women • Wrote in long, complicated sentences
What do we make of Paul? • Commonly • Ruined Jesus’ message • Invented Christianity • Repressed women • Wrote unintelligibly • My take • A mystic • Saw himself as a prophet to the nations • Expected the end to come soon • Empowered women in ministry • Victim of forgeries
Important Principles 1. Use only Paul’s undisputed letters • Seven undisputed letters: Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Phillipians, 1 Thessalonians, and Philemon • Others disputed authorship because of: • Style • Vocabulary • Teachings
Important Principles • Use only Paul’s undisputed letters • Paul “called” rather than “converted’ Galatians compared with Acts Called to be apostle to Gentiles
Important Principles • Use only Paul’s undisputed letters • Paul “called” rather than “converted’ • Pam’s Rules on “How to read Paul” Based on understanding of ancient Judaism Paul does not condemn Jewish Law per se Paul’s apocalyptic orientation: “The end is near!”
Paul’s Letters to the Galatians and to the Romans • Romans read this year throughout the summer • Both on “Justification by Faith” • Both discuss Law, Abraham, Gentiles, and relationship to Jesus • Galatians written between 50 and 55; Romans (Paul’s last letter) 57-59
Paul’s Letter to the Galatians • The Community: • Founded by Paul (Gal 1:6) • Community tended to Paul in illness (4:13-14) • Converts from traditional polytheism (4:9)
Paul’s Letter to the Galatians • The Community: • Founded by Paul (Gal 1:6) • Community tended to Paul in illness (4:13-14) • Converts from traditional polytheism (4:9) • The Occasion: • Christian competitors to Paul – the “Teachers” • Teachers: to be saved, must be Jewish; men must be circumcised like Abraham • Jesus was Jewish; to be like Jesus, be Jewish!
Paul’s Letter to the Galatians Paul’s Response to the Teachers • “I Paul am the apostle to you Gentiles!” • My Gospel is different from the Gospel to the Jews • Peter is the apostle to the Jews • Jesus following Gentiles free-born descendants of Abraham, Sarah, and Isaac; Jews slave-born from Abraham, Hagar, and Ishmael • If you circumcise, must take on the whole law
Paul’s Letter to the Galatians Paul’s Response (Continued) • As Abraham was saved through “faith” . . . • Abraham called and blessed with offspring (Gen 12, 15) before his circumcision (Gen 17) • . . . so you are saved by “faith.” • Typically understood: the Galatians’ faith in Jesus • Questions to ask Paul: • What is faith? • Whose faith saves us? • Is this the Gospel for Jews as well as Gentiles?
An Excursion into Greek • Paul uses the root pist- pist- in noun (“faith”) and verb (“to believe”) forms • Greek/English lexicons: to believe, to trust, to comply; fidelity, a pledge of good faith, etc. • Is Paul talking about Abraham’s faithfulness in following God’s directives? • Romans 3:3 talks of “the faith/fulness of God” • Could Paul mean “the faith/fulnessof Christ” rather than “faith in Christ”?
A Further Excursion into Greek • Cases in Greek • English uses word order to convey the structure of a sentence and the relationship among words • Greek uses endings on the words to describe their relationship • English example: “who,” “whose,” and “whom” • Genitive case in Greek • Typically denotes ownership, possession: “whose” • May denote other relationships
The Point: Subjective and Objective Genitives • Paul writes pistisChristou • Christou is in genitive case; how translate? • Does phrase mean “faith /fulness of Christ” – the genitive is the subject or owner of the faith, a subjective genitive . . . • or does it mean “faith in Christ,” Christ is the object of the faith, an objective genitive? • Who cares? Consider Galatians 2:16
Galatians 2:16 in NRSV . . . yet we know that a person is justified not by the works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ. And we have come to believe in Christ Jesus, so that we might be justified by faith in Christ, and not by doing the works of the law, because no one will be justified by the works of the law. Or does it say . . .
Alternative Galatians 2:16 “. . . yet we know that a person is justified not by the works of the law but through the faith/fulness of Jesus Christ. And we have come to trustin Christ Jesus, so that we might be justified by the faith/fulnessof Christ, and not by doing the works of the law, because no one will be justified by the works of the law.” What difference do the translations make today?
What difference does it make today? • Is “belief in” Jesus a form of works’ righteousness? • If Jesus did the work for salvation, does it apply to everyone including “non-believers”?