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of baptism, I stand shoulder to shoulder with them on most doctrines.

      In this short work, I attempt not only to offer a refutation of Wright’s new perspective on Paul but also exhort Christians to, in the words of Jude, “contend for the faith that was once and for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3).

      06/20/2018.

Part One

      Methodology

      Although in part one I will confine myself to describing the views of NPP proponents, when examining Wright’s position, I will interject criticism, explaining to the reader why I disagree with some of his conclusions. Further criticism will be provided in part two where I shall examine certain passages of Scripture.

      Because I am approaching this from a Reformed Baptist covenantal position, it will be necessary to explain its understanding of the covenant of works that God made with the first Adam, along with subsequent covenants, namely, those made with Abraham, Moses, and the new covenant in Christ. In the second part of this work, while I concentrate on texts drawn from Paul’s letters to the Romans and Galatians, I will, however, also seek to address some other texts employed by Wright, for example, 1 Corinthians 1:30 and 2 Corinthians 5:21.

      It will also be necessary to examine other motifs in Wright’s new perspective, for example, the idea that being saved is not about going to heaven when we die, that Israel at the time of Christ was still in exile etc. Finally, I will, contrary to what Wright claims, seek to show that penal substitution lies at the very heart of Christ’s victory over sin and that the Christus Victor model should be understood within the context of Christ’s propitiatory offering.

      Hermeneutic Principle.

      It is essential to understand the nature of the various covenants because a misunderstanding here will affect other areas of theology. For example, the Reformed paedobaptist belief that the old and new covenants are of the same substance causes them to conclude that water baptism has replaced circumcision, and, of course, if the latter included children then so too must the former, and this significantly changes the way one views the makeup of the church.

      God always deals with his people through covenant, and when interpreting a given text or passage one should consider which of God’s covenants the person(s) alluded to are under, for example, are they under the covenant of works or the covenant of grace? The old or the new covenant?

      There is only one covenant of grace and this is the new covenant. There is no other covenant, for example, the old covenant, for which Christ is the mediator, hence, to benefit from his mediatorial work one must belong to this covenant. All of God’s people, whenever and wherever they may have lived, be it before or after Christ’s redemptive work, have been the recipients of new covenant blessings. Therefore, central to my understanding of Scripture is the belief that there is no salvation outside of the new covenant, as John Frame succinctly states:

      Or as Woolsey puts it:

      One objection frequently raised when one speaks of new covenant blessings being available before the covenant’s ratification concerns the words uttered by Jeremiah when he alludes to the covenant that will be made in the future, being “after those days” (Isa 31:31; Heb 8:10). Clearly, if it was futuristic and “after those days” how could the fruits thereof be available to those who lived before “those days”? Understanding the answer to this question is vital for understanding the unity that exists in Scripture concerning the way of salvation. John Owen, who was arguably the greatest theologian the English speaking world has ever produced, anticipated this, explaining it in the form of a question and answer:

      First, ‘This covenant is promised as that which is future, to be brought in at a certain time, “after those days,” as has been declared. But it is certain that the things here mentioned, the grace and mercy expressed, were really communicated unto many both before and after the giving of the law, long ere this covenant was made; for all who truly believed and feared God had these things affected in them by grace: wherefore their effectual communication cannot be esteemed a property of this covenant which was to be afterwards made.

      Before

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