New Perspective on Paul

  • The article clarifies that Gentile inclusion in God’s plan is not a fallback due to Israel’s failure but an integral part of God’s covenant since the beginning. It emphasizes that through the Messiah, Israel’s mission extends to all nations, illustrating a unified community of faith that fulfills original biblical promises.

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  • Romans 12:9–21 is not a moral checklist but a portrait of a community shaped by God’s covenant mercy. Paul describes how love, humility, generosity, endurance, and non-retaliation emerge when the church learns to live inside mercy without turning it into pride. Christian ethics here is not pressure-driven but mercy-formed.

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  • Romans 10 warns that zeal, Scripture, and moral passion can still miss the story of God when righteousness becomes something we defend rather than something God reveals. Paul’s diagnosis of Israel becomes a mirror for modern Christian legalism and identity politics. The question is not our sincerity but our willingness to submit to God’s righteousness.

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  • Hearing Paul Again

    Many evangelicals have inherited a view of Paul shaped more by post-Reformation debates than by Paul’s own Jewish context. The New Perspective challenges us to recover the apostle’s original concern: not private salvation alone, but the radical redefinition of God’s people in Christ. This post explores how justification by faith reshapes belonging, table fellowship, and…

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