Paul and the Salvation of the Individual
This
book proposes that there was a lively sense of the individual self in
persons in the Hellenistic world of the urban centres in which Paul
lived and ministered, whereby individualistic behaviour was not unknown
and where individuals were not simply determined by their culture and
the group of which they were a part. This is in contrast to many recent
sociological approaches to the New Testament which emphasise the
collective over the individual. Hence it is argued that the individual
is a central feature of Paul's letter to the Romans. Three texts in the
first eight chapters of Romans are examined to indicate Paul's concern
with the salvation of the individual, and not just with questions of a
more collective nature to do with the identity of the people of God.
This book challenges the very strong emphasis put upon the collective in
recent approaches to Paul's letter to the Romans, especially by
sociologically based NT research, but also within the wider body of
Romans research. It suggests that it is possible to maintain that Paul
was vitally interested in the salvation of the individual, without
having to revert to traditional Lutheran interpretations of the text.
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