Abstract:
New Perspective scholars challenge Protestant interpretations of Paul. It used to be the case,
they state, that Protestants assumed that Paul was to Judaism as Luther was to Medieval
Catholicism. Both men supposedly reacted against legalistic religions and championed gracebased
faiths. However, in 1977, E.P. Sanders wrote Paul and Palestinian Judaism, arguing that
Judaism is not a legalistic but a grace-based faith. Assuming that Sanders is correct, New
Perspectivists claim that Paul’s and Luther’s theologies and experiences were thus not parallel.
Hence, Luther misunderstood Paul. Additionally, New Perspectivists challenge Protestant
understandings of ‘justification’. In New Perspective thought, Paul uses the term ‘justification’
primarily to describe how people, particularly Gentiles, join the church Christians without
following Jewish ritual laws. ‘Justification’, then, does not describe how people ‘stay in’ the
covenant and receive salvation, as Protestants think. However, this article maintains that while
New Perspectivists have some knowledge of Paul and Judaism, they are much less knowledgeable
regarding Luther, Medieval Catholicism and Luther’s reaction to it. Greater scrutiny of these
latter areas reveals large difficulties with New Perspective arguments. In addition, a review of
relevant passages from Paul’s letters demonstrates that Protestants have not misunderstood
Paul’s use of the term ‘justification’. Many Pauline passages show that when Paul discusses
justification he is also thinking about ‘staying in’, not just ‘getting in’ the covenant.
Description:
HTS 75th Anniversary Maake Masango Dedication.
Dr Eriksson is participating in
the research project
‘Hermeneutics and Exegesis’
directed by Prof. Dr Ernest
van Eck, Department of New
Testament and Related
Literature, Faculty of
Theology and Religion,
University of Pretoria,
South Africa.
This article represents a reworked version of aspects from the PhD-thesis of Bart Eriksson, titled ‘The new Perspective critique of Luther:
A response’, in the Department of New Testament and Related Literature, Faculty of Theology and Religion, University of Pretoria, with
Prof. Dr. Ernest van Eck as supervisor. (http://hdl.handle.net/2263/71769)