Paul and the Wrath
Divine Judgment and Mercy for Israel in Romans 9-11
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To help clear the fog, Paul and the Wrath replaces the simplistic wrath-mercy binary with a thicker, overlooked, and distinctly Jewish lens of remedial wrath, clarifying Paul's argument that God judges Israel in order to save Israel. To configure this lens properly, Thomas Dixon outlines a taxonomy of views on divine wrath and mercy around four ancient, representative interpreters, then surveys philosophies of wrath in Greco-Roman literature before examining a swathe of images in biblical and extrabiblical Jewish texts in which judgment advances mercy. The frequency of such imagery in these Jewish sources establishes a plausibility structure for finding similar theology in Paul, which leads Dixon to a new evaluation of Paul's argumentative logic in Romans 9–11 and elsewhere.
This Jewish theology of judgment provides a wider window that can shed light on—and help resolve—a persistent division in Pauline scholarship over the apostle's understanding of mercy, works, and atonement. Paul and the Wrath offers clarity in a clouded arena of Pauline theology in order to foster more faithful reading of both Paul and Scripture as a whole.
- Introduction: Perfections of Judgment?
- 1 God's Wrath and Mercy in the History of Interpretation: A Taxonomy
- 2 Provisional Wrath: An Overlooked Feature in Israel's Scriptures
- 3 Wrath and Mercy for Israel: Romans 9-11
- 4 Wrath Elsewhere in Paul: Widening the Scope
- Conclusion: Judgment, Mercy, and Pauline Theology