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November 22, 2009
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Home > 2007 > August (Web-only)Christianity Today, August (Web-only), 2007  |   |  
Theology in the News
From the Seminaries to the Pews
The 'new perspective on Paul' gets the popular treatment.



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Seminary is not reality. That much became obvious to me the moment I met my classmates and began looking over syllabi for classes on Greek, Hebrew, missions, and biblical theology. No congregational ministry can replicate the time seminary affords for intense focus on technical but important matters of theology. Professors toss around fascinating innovations and insights. Students, though often downtrodden by the gravity and complexity of their tasks, suddenly shine as they behold great truths about God.

The average churchgoer will never have the time or inclination to focus on theology. Even in our most rigorous churches, the cares of this world interfere. Perhaps an encounter with a seminary graduate has convinced them that theology belongs to arrogant eggheads. As a result, what seems so important in seminary produces blank stares in the pews.

For evangelicals—Christians committed to a high view of Scripture—this is a discouraging scenario. More than that, it's dangerous. Christian colleges and seminaries can grow detached from the churches they serve. Hazardous ideas can percolate for decades without so much as a nod from most churchgoers. And parents wonder why their undergraduate daughter or seminary son graduates with odd ideas about everything. So they blame the theologians and the cycle continues.

But what if they knew more about current debates? What if someone could direct them toward resources that would help them think theologically about current events? I hope that in some small way, this column might help those of you who want to care about theology but lack the time to skim blogs. Maybe you'd consider attending a conference if you only knew when or where to go. You might even read the occasional book if someone explained why it's important. As I draw on the help of scholars and friends, I hope this column will become a destination for you to catch what you might have missed in the last two weeks and discern what you otherwise might not have foreseen.

Not-So-New Perspective

The "new perspective on Paul" is nothing new. But it has the feel of a hot topic these days. That should be no surprise, as the new perspective touches on justification, the crux of the Reformation and a key to the Protestant view of salvation. New Testament scholar Simon Gathercole introduced and critiqued the new perspective in a recent cover story for Christianity Today. He offers this brief definition: "In particular, the new perspective investigates the problem Paul has with 'works' or 'works of the law.'" If by "works" the apostle Paul meant something other than moral behavior, then have Protestants promoted a false dichotomy between faith and works? Could Martin Luther's critique of the Roman Catholic Church have clouded and confused how Protestants read the New Testament?

Gathercole's list of recommended resources will help you decide for yourself if this new perspective deserves such attention. If the books intimidate you, prolific blogger and New Testament scholar Scot McKnight will take you on a whirlwind tour. As always, McKnight's Jesus Creed site includes vigorous debate in the comments section. A study committee for the Presbyterian Church in American recently investigated the new perspective and found it to be inconsistent with the Reformed creeds. The study group had its share of critics, who considered its outcome predetermined due to the committee selection process.

As if the great justification debate hasn't attracted enough attention, expect John Piper's critique of N.T. Wright to cover new ground. Scheduled for release in late October, The Future of Justification: A Response to N.T. Wright should be most beneficial because Wright read the manuscript and responded to Piper. According to Piper, the interaction with Wright doubled the book's length.

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[Reader Reviews]
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 9 comments.See all comments
kc   Posted: September 05, 2007 5:33 AM
I am not sure who to 'blame' (seminaries or the flock) but it seems many in the flock are choking on milk - not meat. Our small church (125-150) is being torn by dissension over a disciplinary matter that is caused by a division within the pastor's family. Rather than the obeying the milk of 'going', forgiving and restoration, both sides have hunkered down, sad to be splitting the church, but feeling defending their 'rights' is worth the fallout. Would a new perspective on Paul help here? Bill Gaither sings a song that says "I don't want to spend my life writing songs that answer questions that no one's asking anyhow." I'm not opposed to the seminary's responsibility to wrestle with the larger issues but how do those issues benefit the seeker in the pew? Maybe seminaries are wrestling with the bigness of Paul and the Reformation rather than wrestling with the bigness of God. Maybe they are answering questions that only serve the publishing houses - not the person in the pew.

Gene   Posted: September 02, 2007 4:47 PM
From my experience the average church goers has been nurtured on milk and they choke on meat. At Christmas, someone read a peace of emotional pap (really, no Biblical substance whatsoever) and it made one woman in my congregation weep, she was so moved by it. Yet this same woman will sit hollow-eyed at in-depth Bible teaching - and most likely go home believing she has not been fed because her emotions have not been stirred. I'm with the person who made the comment to the effect that the church is more to blame than the seminary - and I say that never having attended seminary. //// Another comment was made to the effect that we 2000 years later are arrogant to think we see what billions of others have missed. I am finding that the modern church is, in at least some areas, very much in the dark with truths the early church took for granted. For example, the "New Exodus" motif of the synoptics. We may simply be rediscovering what has been lost to generations of Christians.

R. Scott Clark   Posted: September 02, 2007 10:18 AM
There is a volume that addresses all three audiences, profs, pulpit, and pew on the NPP and its step-child, the Federal Vision: Covenant, Justification, and Pastoral Ministry (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2007). http://www.wscal.edu/bookstore/store/details.php?id=917 This volume contains essays by Michael Horton, Iain Duguid, and Steven Baugh that address the NPP directly and essays by David VanDrunen and R. Scott Clark on where we (the evangelical and Reformed worlds) are and how we got there and historical and theological essays by W. Robert Godfrey and Clark. It includes essays on the pastoral practice of the Reformation solas in preaching (Hywel Jones) and counseling (Dennis Johnson). Guy Prentiss Waters, who did his doctoral work at Duke with Richard Hays has also published two volumes on these same questions: http://www.wscal.edu/bookstore/store/details.php?id=359 http://www.wscal.edu/bookstore/store/details.php?id=890 More stuff here: http://www.wscal.edu/clark/fvnpp.p

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