We normally focus on Jesus scholarship and
the Louisville Cardinals here at the Jesus Blog, but last Friday requires a
quick diversion. On that evening, Prof.
John Barclay of Durham University (Doktorvater of our own Dr. Anthony Le
Donne), launched the Centre
for the Social-Scientific Study of the Bible (CSSSB) at St Mary’s
University College in Twickenham with a lecture entitled “Paul and the Gift:
Gift-Theory, Grace and Critical Issues in the Interpretation of Paul.” As many will know, the Greek word for “gift,”
charis, is the exact same word that
translators often render “grace.” This
lecture, therefore, went right to the heart of hot issues in Pauline
scholarship since it concerned Paul’s concept of grace.
Barclay’s presentation is part of a bigger
two-volume work forthcoming from Eerdmans.
In it (the lecture), he did nothing less than send a submarine missile
into the New Perspective on Paul, as well as traditional Protestant
understandings of grace. He started off
detailing at length the gift-giving and gift-receiving cultures of the ancient
Mediterranean and, especially, Second Temple Judaism. His main points regarding Paul and gift/grace
were that (1) gift-giving in Paul’s culture was not necessarily “free” but
rather occurred in a context of reciprocity (i.e., the concept of “free grace”
misses a bit here) and (2) contrary to covenantal nomism and its ken, Paul was not just like all other Jews. Barclay demonstrates that, for Paul, Christ
is the perfect charis/gift, but that
our understanding of the “perfect” nature of that gift is less than clear, with
different Pauline interpreters throughout the ages giving significantly
different nuances to that perfection. Instead
of giving you his take on how Christ is the perfect gift, I’ll here just note
that we will soon have the video of it up on the CSSSB website.
Paul was NOT just like all other Jews? How typically Jewish of him.
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