Both judge and justifier: biblical legal language and the act of justifying in Paul
1. Statements of Non-Justification2. The Plight and Promise of Contending with God; 3. Confession and Doxologies of Judgment; C. Conclusion; Chapter 4: Theological Contexts of Justifying: Trilateral Contentions; A. God's Judgment for his People against Opponents; B. Δικαιόω in Israel's Con...
Summary: | 1. Statements of Non-Justification2. The Plight and Promise of Contending with God; 3. Confession and Doxologies of Judgment; C. Conclusion; Chapter 4: Theological Contexts of Justifying: Trilateral Contentions; A. God's Judgment for his People against Opponents; B. Δικαιόω in Israel's Contentions against Foes; 1. Israel's Vindication after Judgment; 2. Isaiah's Justified Servant; C. Conclusion; Chapter 5: Approaching Paul; A. Summary: "Justifying" in Contention-Scenarios; 1. Theological Bilateral Contentions; 2. Theological Trilateral Contentions; 3. Interrelated Contentions. 2.2. Analyzing the Language: Focus on the Verb2.3. Limitations and Relevance; C. The Plan of the Coming Chapters; Chapter 2: Quotidian Contexts of Justifying; A. Bilateral Contentions; 1. Dynamics and Vocabulary; 2. Δικαιόω in Bilateral Contentions; 2.1. Jacob vs. his Brothers (Gen 44.16); 2.2. Tamar vs. Judah (Gen 38.26); B. Trilateral Contentions; 1. Dynamics and Vocabulary; 2. Δικαιόω in Trilateral Contentions; C. Conclusion; Chapter 3: Theological Contexts of Justifying: Bilateral Contentions; A. God's Contentions with his People; B. Δικαιόω in God's Contentions. 2. Evidence from the Rest of Galatians2.1. Justification Redefined?; C. Conclusion; Chapter 8: Justifying in Romans; A. Justification and God's Charge against Sin (Rom 1.18-3.20); 1. The Divine Contention; 1.1. God's Judgment and God's Wrath: The Bilateral Contention; 1.2. Paul's Prophetic Charge on God's Behalf; 2. Justification to the Doers (Rom 2.13); 3. Paul's Doxology of Judgment (Rom 3.4); 4. The Cosmos Under God's Judgment (Rom 3.20); B. Justification for the Ungodly (Rom 3.21-5.11); 1. Justification and Forgiveness (Rom 3.21-4.25); 1.1. Justification and Christ's Death. B. Traditio-Historical Observations: Judaism and Early ChristianityC. Conclusion; Chapter 6: Justifying in 1 Corinthians; A. Justification and Final Judgment (1 Cor 4.4); B. Justification and Baptism (1 Cor 6.11); C. Conclusion; Chapter 7: Justifying in Galatians; A. Justification as an Assumption in Galatians; 1. Justification and Antioch; 1.1. Paul's Antiochene "We"; 1.2. What "We" Knew; 2. Justification's Continued Assumption in Galatians; B. Determining Justifying in Galatians; 1. Sketching the Assumed Content of "Justifying" in 2.16; 1.1. Justification a Covenantal Declaration? Cover; Preface; Table of Content; Notes and Abbreviations; Chapter 1: Introduction: What is "Justifying"?; A. Basic Data and Their Interpretations; 1. Justification as Biblical Legal Language; 2. Interpretive Disagreements about the Language of "Justifying"; 2.1. Acquitting the Guilty; 2.2. Acquittal, Qualified; 2.3. Covenantal Declaration unto Vindication; 2.4. God's Case and God's Vindication; 2.5. Legal Redefined; B. Seeking an Answer: The Present Study; 1. "Justifying" as a Conceptualization of Divine Activity; 2. Approaching Justification in Paul; 2.1. On Sources. James B. Prothro untersucht biblische Rechtskonflikte und die Terminologie von »Rechtfertigung« in den paulinischen Briefen, beginnend mit der Verwendung dieser Sprache im Judentum und frühen Christentum, um zu ermitteln, was es für Paulus bedeutet, wenn er sagt, dass Gott als Richter auch der »Rechtfertiger« derer ist, die an Jesus glauben |
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Item Description: | 1.2. Justification and the "Non-Reckoning" of Sin |