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Book
James D. G. Dunn · 1998
A comprehensive theological study of Paul the Apostle's thought, examining his understanding of God, humanity, salvation, Christology, the church, and Christian ethics through detailed exegesis of the Pauline epistles, particularly Romans.
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What this book knows
Paul's theology holds together justification by faith, the Spirit's transforming power, and ethics as the lived outworking of grace.
faith-and-doubt
The God who justifies by faith is God of Gentile as well as Jew — faith the means by which Gentiles have attained righteousness.
TPA-RC-422It is the naked faith of Abraham which both receives the promise and sustains the daily outworking of self-disinterested love.
TPA-RC-712self-and-identity
The power of the resurrection is always experienced in the weakness of the flesh; the life-giving Spirit bears the mark of the cross.
TPA-RC-551Paul's sudden descent to existential angst over his kinsmen in the flesh follows his most triumphant climax of Christian assurance.
TPA-RC-557belonging
Charis comes to fuller expression in charisma as gift to the community; the recipient becomes a vehicle of that same grace to others.
TPA-RC-369Paul was inevitably concerned with how believers should live — the outworking of the gospel in communal worship, ministry, and ethics.
TPA-RC-6946 published passages · book excerpt · research analysis
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