The New Perspective on
Paul.
Article Three
Cornelis P. Venema
I
took the trouble in a previous article to consider briefly several forerunners
of the new perspective on Paul, since they pioneered emphases in New Testament
and Pauline studies that form the background to the work of E. P. Sanders and
other advocates of the new view. Though Sanders is undoubtedly the leading
figure in the formation of a new perspective on Paul, he has acknowledged his
indebtedness to the pioneering work of others. In that respect, Sanders' own
argument against the older view of Judaism, together with its implications for
an interpretation of Paul's understanding of the gospel, builds upon what might
be regarded as a significantly new tradition of Pauline studies.
Sanders, who is a professor of religion at Duke
University, published a book in 1977, Paul and Palestnian Judaism, that is
now generally regarded as a classic presentation of the new perspective.1 Despite its title, the primary focus of this
highly influential study is the "pattern" of religion, to use
Sanders' term, that characterized Palestinian Judaism (often termed "Second
Temple Judaism"). Following the lead of Montefiore and Moore, Sanders' aim
in this volume was to describe Palestinian Judaism in its own terms rather than
in terms of the interests of the Christian faith. Unlike Montefiore and Moore,
however, Sanders writes as a Christian theologian who is interested in the
implications of a new understanding of Palestinian Judaism for a proper
interpretation of the apostle Paul's understanding of the gospel.
Sanders' stated purpose in his classic study was
to compare the pattern of religion evident in Paul's writings with the pattern
of religion in Jewish literature during the period between 200 B.C. and A.D.
200. By a "pattern of religion" Sanders means the way a religion
understands the way a person "gets in" and "stays in" the
community of God's people.2
Traditional accounts of the differences between religions, particularly
the differences between Judaism and Christianity, have focused upon the
distinctive essence or core belief of these religions. In doing so, Judaism has
often been, simplistically described as a "legalistic" religion, one
that emphasizes obedience to the law as the basis for inclusion among God's
people, and Christianity has been described as a "gracious" religion,
one that emphasizes God's free initiative in calling his people into communion
with himself. Similarly, descriptive accounts of different religions that focus
upon their distinctive "motifs" or "themes" often distort
them by taking one religion's ideas as normative and applying them to the
other. The best way, according to Sanders, to get an accurate picture of
Judaism or Christianity is to compare their account of the way people enter
into and remain within the community of faith.
The first part of Sanders' study involves a
comprehensive study of Jewish literature during the two centuries before and
after the coming of Christ. Based upon this study, Sanders concludes that
Judaism exhibits a pattern of religion best described as "covenantal
nomism.” Sanders defines the meaning of
this language as follows:
The
"pattern"or"structure" of covenantal nomism is this: (1)
God has chosen Israel and (2) given the law. The law implies both (3) God's
promise to maintain the election and (4) the requirement to obey. (5) God
rewards obedience and punishes transgression. (6) The law provides for means of
atonement, and atonement results in (7) maintenance or reestablishment of the
covenantal relationship. (8) All those who are maintained in the covenant by
obedience, atonement and God's mercy belong to the group which will be saved.
An important interpretation of the first and last points is that election and
ultimately salvation are considered to be by God's mercy rather than human
achievement.3
Contrary to the typical Protestant assumption
that Palestinian Judaism was legalistic, Sanders appeals to evidence in Jewish
writings to support the view that it was a religion of grace in its
understanding of how God entered into covenant with Israel. In the literature
of Judaism, the theme of God's gracious election is consistently sounded. God
graciously elects Israel to be his people, and mercifully provides a means of
atonement and opportunity for repentance in order to deal with their sins. So
far as Israel's "getting in" the covenant is concerned, this was not
by human achievement but by God's gracious initiative. Obedience to the law,
however, was required as a means of maintaining or "staying in" the
covenant. The people of Israel were obliged to obey the law in order to
maintain the covenant relationship and secure their inheritance at the final
judgment. In this sense, getting in the covenant is by grace, staying in the
covenant is by works with a view to the final judgment at the end of the age.
On the basis of his argument for understanding
Palestinian Judaism as a form of covenantal nomism, Sanders endorses the basic
claim of Montefiore and Foot that traditional Christian thought has badly
misrepresented Judaism as a graceless religion. An independent and unbiased
account of Palestinian Judaism clearly shows that it was a pattern of religion
that emphasized the initiative of God's grace and mercy in establishing his
covenant with his people. Judaism's emphasis upon obedience to the law was not
aimed to compromise the priority of God's grace in the covenant relationship,
but to require obedience from those with whom God graciously covenanted as a
means of staying in the covenant and being vindicated at the final judgment.
One of the obvious problems that surfaces, as a
result of Sanders' argument for a new view of Judaism, is what to do with the
apostle Paul and his polemics against Judaism. If Judaism was not a legalistic
religion, but one that emphasized God's grace and election so far as
"getting in" the covenant is concerned, then what are we to make of
Paul's vigorous arguments against claims to find favor with God on the basis of
works or human achievement? Is Paul combating a kind of "straw man"
in his letters (especially in Romans and Galatians), when he combats a
righteousness that is by the works of the law? Sanders, both in his Paul and
Palestinian Judaism and in a sequel, Paul, the Law, and the Jewish
People,4 answers this question by suggesting that Paul's view of
the human plight was a kind of byproduct of his view of salvation. Paul started
with Christ as the "solution" to the human predicament, and then
worked backward to explain the "plight" to which his saving work
corresponds. Though Paul has traditionally been interpreted to teach that the problem
of human sinfulness, which is made known and aggravated through the law's
demand for perfect obedience, calls for a solution in Christ's person and work,
we should recognize that his description of the problem of sin derives from his
convictions about Christ. Paul, in effect, starts from the basic conviction
that Christ is the only Savior of Jews and Gen- tiles. On the basis of this
conviction, he then develops a doctrine of the law and human sinfulness that
corresponds to it.
Sanders claims, therefore, that the apostle Paul
rejected the law as a means of salvation for two principal reasons: first, this
conflicts with his conviction that salvation only comes through faith in the
cross of Christ; and second, the requirement of obedience to the law as a means
of salvation would exclude the Gentiles. According to Sanders, Paul did not
oppose the law because he found himself unable to keep its demands. Paul was
not a prototype of the sinner (compare Luther) who, burdened by his inability
to do what the law required, could only find comfort in Christ's righteousness.
Passages like Philippians 3:6- 9 do not offer a critique of the law as a means
of salvation, but of the law as an alternative to faith in Christ. The apostle
Paul actually expresses in this passage a considerable confidence regarding a
righteousness that is according to law. What he opposes, however, is clinging
to a righteousness (however real) that is an alternative to faith in Christ.
Paul's opposition to the law expresses his prior conviction that faith in
Christ is the only way to salvation and inclusion among the people of God. Any
insistence upon the law as a means of salvation would undermine the exclusive
claim of salvation through faith in Christ, and prevent Gentiles from being
included among the true people of God.
Thus, the great problem with Judaism, so far as
the apostle Paul was concerned, was not that it was legalistic. Paul did not
contest, ac- cording to Sanders, Palestinian Judaism's insistence upon zeal for
the law. Nor did he object to Judaism on the basis of a conviction that no
amount of effort to obey the law could ever make a person accept- able to God.
His real (and only) objection to Judaism was that it denied the new reality of
God's saving work through Christ. In words that have often been quoted, Sanders
concludes: "In short, this is what Paul finds wrong in Judaism: it is
not Christianity."5
The Doctrine Of Justification
Though Sanders does not give a great deal of attention to
the doctrine of justification in his studies of Paul and Palestinian Judaism,
it is evident that his position has implications for how this doctine is to be
understood.
Unlike the older Protestant formulation, Sanders does not
believe justification addresses the problem of how a sinner (whether Jew or
Gentile) can find acceptance with God.
Consistent with his view of how Paul moves from solution to plight,
Sanders takes Paul’s doctrine of justification to be addressed to the question
of who belongs to the covenant community.
Justification is not so much an individual question (how can I, a
sinner, find a righteous God?), as it is an ecclesiological question (who are
numbered among the people of God?). Paul's main argument with Judaism was not
that it taught a doctrine of justification by works. After all, Judaism was a
form of covenantal nomism that also emphasized God's gracious initiative in
salvation, while requiring obedience to the law as a means of maintaining the
covenant relationship. In these respects, Paul's pattern of religion does not
differ significantly from Judaism. The problem with Judaism, as we have noted,
is that it fails to recognize the new way of entrance into the number of God's
covenant people, a way open to Jews and Gentiles who put their faith in Jesus Christ.
Sanders' positive statement of the doctrine of
justification, accordingly, focuses upon the way in which Jews and Gentiles
alike are incorporated into the people of God. Paul developed his doctrine of
justification in order to support his conviction that all who believe in Christ
are members of the new covenant community. Paul's problem with Judaism was not
that it confused grace and works, or taught that we become members of the
covenant community by human achievement. The problem with Judaism was that it
misunderstood God's righteousness, as though it referred to the way members of
the covenant community maintain their status rather than to the way God places
one within: the covenant community. In a complicated but revealing statement of
his position, Sanders declares:
To be righteous in Jewish literature means to
obey the Torah and to repent of transgression, but in Paul it means to be saved
by Christ. Most succinctly, righteousness in Judaism is a term which implies
the maintenance of status among the group of the elect; in Paul it is a
transfer term. In Judaism, that is, commitment to the covenant puts one
"in", while obedience (righteousness) subsequently keeps one in. In Paul's usage, "be made
righteous" ("be justified") is a term indicating getting in, not
staying in the body of the saved. Thus when Paul says one cannot be righteous
by works of law, he means that one cannot, by works of law, "transfer to
the body of the saved." When Judaism said that one is righteous who obeys
the law, the meaning is that one thereby stays in the covenant. The debate
about righteousness by faith or by works of law thus turns out to result from
different usage of the "righteous" word group.6
This view of the difference between Judaism's
understanding of God's righteousness and Paul's provides a fairly comprehensive
statement of Sanders' view of justification. Sanders interprets Paul's doctrine
of justification to be his way of explaining how God embraces Gentiles and Jews
as members of his new covenant community. Justification refers to one's status
as a member of the community, and that status is obtained by Jews and Gentiles
alike through faith in Christ. Because membership in the new covenant community
is through faith in Christ, it cannot be based upon the law or obedience to the
law. If membership in the body of Christ is open to Gentiles as well as Jews,
through faith in the crucified and risen Christ, then it may not be restricted
to those to whom the law was previously given (the Jews) or to those who come
"under the law" as the Judaizers were insisting. The righteousness of
God, furthermore, is God's active fulfillment of his covenant promise to
embrace Gentiles together with Jews in the number of his people.
What is remarkable about Sanders' view of Paul's
doctrine of justification is that it looks and sounds rather similar to the
traditional Protestant view. Sanders acknowledges that justification is by
grace through faith in Christ. He also acknowledges that it is a judicial act,
which declares Jews and Gentiles alike to be in the status of belonging to the
covenant people of God. As he puts it, it is an act of "transfer" in
which God reveals his righteousness, or his covenant faithfulness by fulfilling
the promise of incorporating Gentiles as well as Jews into the covenant
community. However, it should also be
noted that his understanding of Paul's doctrine has several features that
substantially differ from the view of the Protestant Reformation. According to
Sanders, justification is not central to Paul's understanding of the gospel.
What is central is the claim that faith in Christ is the only way of salvation
for Jew and Gentile alike.
Justification is a subordinate teaching of the apostle Paul, which
explains why, if faith in Christ is the one way of salvation for all, the
righteousness of the law may not be regarded as a requirement for entrance into
the covenant community. Paul does not base his argument for the doctrine of
justification upon the conviction that the law can only condemn and aggravate
the problem of human sinfulness. Justification is not a doctrine formed against
the background of legalism, or the teaching that obedience to the law is the
way to find favor with God. No such legalism was present in the Palestinian
Judaism of Paul's day, nor was it something from which Paul claims to be
delivered with his Christian conversion. The doctrine of justification, simply
put, is Paul's conclusion from his basic conviction that the way of salvation
is through faith in Christ.
Within the framework of this kind of
interpretation of Paul's doctrine of justification, Sanders takes quite a
different view of the righteousness of God that is the basis for the
justification of Jews and Gentiles. This righteousness is God's covenant faithfulness
in Christ, fulfilling his promise to include Gentiles among his people. Missing
from Sanders' interpretation of Paul's teaching is an emphasis upon the
righteousness of God as his free gift to his people. In the traditional
Protestant view, the righteousness of God, which is revealed in Christ's
perfect obedience to the law and substitutionary enduring of the curse of the
law, is said to be granted and imputed to those who believe in Christ (compare
the Heidelberg Catechism, Lord's Day 23). On the older view, Christ's
righteousness, namely, his perfect obedience and sacrifice upon the cross for
the sins of his people, is freely given by God to all who receive Christ by
faith alone, trusting in his saving work on their behalf. By fulfilling the law
and suffering its curse, Christ obtains righteousness and eternal life as a
free gift for his people. Salvation, therefore, is all about how sinners, who
are unable to keep God's law perfectly so as to find favor with him, find
salvation through the righteousness of Christ. Or, to state it a little
differently, the older view regards Paul's doctrine of justification to be the
answer to the basic problem of (Jewish and Gentile) sinners, namely, their
liability to God's judgment and wrath on account of their failure to obey his
law.
We shall see in forthcoming articles that many
of the features of Sanders' interpretation of Palestinian Judaism and of Paul's
understanding of the gospel are common to advocates of the new perspective on
Paul.7 Though the new perspective is complicated and represented in
a widely divergent and complex body of literature, some of the main themes
emerge rather distinctly in Sanders' work. These themes include the following:
1. The traditional Protestant view of
(Palestinian) Judaism seriously distorts its true character. Judaism, at the
time of the writing of the New Testament and of Paul's letters, did not teach
that a person is saved through works or human achievement. Rather, Judaism
taught that God saved his people Israel on the basis of his gracious election
and mercy.
2. The traditional Protestant claim that
the teaching of Roman Catholicism was a new version of the old error of
Pharisaism (which teaches salvation through works) is, therefore, incorrect.
3. Palestinian Judaism exhibited a
pattern of religion that is best termed "covenantal nomism" (E. P.
Sanders). In this pattern of religion, one becomes a member of God's covenant
community by grace, and one remains a member by works performed
in obedience to the law. "Getting in" the covenant is by grace;
"staying in" (and being vindicated at the last judgment) is by works.
4. The apostle Paul's argument with
Judaism (and therefore the Judaizers) was not aimed at its legalism. Nor was
Paul's argument with Judaism based upon the assumption that the law can only
condemn Jews and Gentiles alike as sinners. The starting point for
Paul's quarrel with Judaism was that it was not Christianity. Since salvation
comes to all (for Jews and Gentiles) who believe in the crucified Christ, the
great problem of Judaism is its exclusivism, not its legalism. The problem
with Judaism was not so much its insistence upon the necessity of obedience to
the law, but its insistence that Gentiles must become (through obedience to the
law) Jews in order to be saved.
5. The apostle Paul developed his
doctrine of the human plight (of sin) from his doctrine of salvation through
faith in Christ. Because faith in Christ is the only basis for salvation,
obedience to the (Jewish) law may not be imposed upon anyone as the basis for
inclusion among God's people.
6. Paul's doctrine of justification is
not the principal focus or emphasis in his writings. Justification by grace
through faith in Christ was Paul's explanation of how God is fulfilling his promise
to embrace Gentiles as well as Jews among his people. God's righteousness,
which is the basis for the believer's justification, is his gracious act of
including Gentiles among the number of his people. Justification is about who
belongs to God's covenant people, not how a sinner can find favor with God
through the perfect obedience and substitutionary sacrifice of Christ.
7. Justification, though it has to do
with our standing before God or being numbered among his covenant people, does
not require that God graciously grant and impute the perfect righteous- ness of
Christ to believers.
1. Paul and Palestinian Judaism: A Comparison
of Patterns of Religion (London: SCM, 1977).
2. Paul and Palestinian Judaism, p. 17.
3. Paul and Palestinian Judaism, p. 422.
4. London:SCM, 1985
5. Paul and Palestinian Judaism, p. 552.
cf: Sanders' comment on p. 497: "It is the Gentile question and the
exc1usivism of Paul's soteriology which dethrone the law, not a
misunderstanding of it or a view predetermined by his background."
6. Paul and Palestinian Judaism; p. 544.
7. I am well aware that some readers of The
Outlook (in the case of this article, perhaps most!) will find it difficult
to grasp what the new perspective on Paul is saying. I offer the following
points of summary, therefore, in the hope that it might at least clarify what
are some of the differences between the new perspective and more traditional
Protestant views.
Dr. Cornel
Venema is the President of Mid-America Reformed Seminary where he also teaches
Doctrinal Studies. Dr. Venema is a
contributing editor to The Outlook.