The New Perspective on
Paul.
Article Ten
Dr. Cornel Venema
Is there a distinction between Old
Testament and Second Temple Judaism?
A final question that needs to be addressed to
the new perspective's treatment of Second Temple Judaism relates to the
distinction between Old Testament and Second Temple Judaism. Does the new
perspective adequately take into account the difference between the teaching of
the Old Testament and the kind of religious practice that characterized the
Judaism of the first century AD?
One of the claims of writers
of the new perspective is that the Reformational reading of the apostle Paul
fails to recognize the important continuities between Paul's understanding of
the gospel and Judaism. According to the new perspective, Paul did not
repudiate Judaism when he became an apostle of Christ. Rather, Paul's teaching and understanding of
the gospel are in significant continuity with his Jewish background. By drawing a sharp contrast between the
"law" and the "gospel," the Reformation (especially Luther)
failed to appreciate the extent to which Paul viewed the gospel of Christ as
the "end" or "fulfillment" of the law.1 The Reformation
interpreted Paul's doctrine of justification by faith apart from works as
though it were a "new" teaching that was unknown to Judaism. However,
the new perspective argues that Paul's teaching was in more substantial
continuity with Judaism than the Reformation perspective allows. By drawing a
sharp contrast between law and gospel, the Reformation failed to recognize the
important similarities between Judaism and Paul's understanding of the gospel.
Whereas the apostle Paul viewed the gospel of Christ as a fulfillment of the
law and Judaism, the Reformational understanding of justification encourages a
reading of Scripture that does not do justice to the Old Testament background
of Paul's writings.
Though this is a complicated subject that we
will take up again in our consideration of Paul's teaching on the doctrine of
justification, one of the weaknesses of the new perspective at this point is
its failure at times to bear in mind that there are at least two distinct
ways in which we may speak of Judaism. When the apostle Paul's relationship
to Judaism is considered, it is important to remember that
his opposition to a particular form of Judaism in the first century is not
tantamount to an opposition to Judaism as such. Nor does it require the
conclusion that Paul taught a conflict between the gospel of Christ and the
teaching of the Old Testament (Judaism). 2 The Reformational view
that Paul opposed a form of Jewish-Christian legalism does not mean that his
teaching was somehow at odds with the teaching of the Old Testament. In the Reformational understanding, the
apostle Paul was combating a distortion of the Old Testament's teaching,
when he confronted those who insisted upon obedience to certain
requirements of the law as a basis for acceptance with God. Paul's
opposition to the Judaizers, in other words, was an opposition against a contemporary
distortion of the teaching of the Old Testament. not to Judaism as such.
If this distinction between
Old Testament and Second Temple Judaism is borne in mind, the new perspective's
claim that the Reformation failed to consider fully the continuity between
Paul's gospel and the teaching of Judaism is placed in a different light. The
problem with Judaism, so far as the Reformational view of justification is
concerned, was not with Judaism itself (and certainly not with the Old
Testament). Rather, the problem with the Judaizers whom the apostle Paul resisted was that they
had perverted the grace of God into a means of self-justification. Or,
to put the matter in the language of Paul's epistle to the Galatians, the
Judaizers had failed to reckon with the truth that the promise of the gospel
predated the giving of the (Mosaic) law by some 430 years (compare Gal. 3:17-18).
By raising these questions regarding the new
perspective's under- standing of Second Temple Judaism, I do not mean to
suggest that we can adequately evaluate the new perspective without also
considering the writings of the apostle Paul. The most important measure, as we
have noted previously, of the new perspective is the teaching of the apostle
Paul himself, as this is set forth in his New Testament epistles. Consequently,
the remainder of our evaluation of the new perspective in subsequent articles
will be occupied with a direct treatment of the apostle Paul's writings and
understanding of the doctrine of justification. However, these questions do
raise serious doubts regarding the bold claims of writers of the new
perspective. Whether we need a revolution in our understanding of the apostle
Paul's doctrine of justification remains to be seen. Nothing in the new
perspective's interpretation of Second Temple Judaism, however, seems in itself
sufficient to establish this need. For that to be the case, the new perspective
would not only have to show that Second Temple Judaism was devoid of any
"legalistic" emphasis upon salvation by works. It would also have to
show why its entanglements with contemporary cultural and social interests do
not warrant the observation that the new perspective is as much a product of
the present theological climate as was the Reformational perspective.
Notes
1. Cf. Dunn, The Theology of Paul the
Apostle, pp. 368-71.
2. A key to understanding Paul's contrast
between the "law" and the "gospel," as we shall see in a
subsequent article, lies in the recognition that he sometimes uses the language
of law" to refer to the Old Testament Scriptures or the Mosaic
administration of the covenant as whole, and sometimes to refer more narrowly to
the commandments and obligations of the law.
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.
This
article is very slightly edited by the edition of captions and used with the
gracious permission of Dr. Cornel Venema.and The Outlook.