Скачать книгу

with Sanders that the apostle’s reference to the “works of the law”, did not mean works of the legalistic righteousness one associates with the Reformers, he, unlike Sanders, concludes that the apostle in referring to “the works of the law” had in mind a kind of boundary marker; one that served to distinguish between who was in God’s community and those who were not. Apart from the moral law, Dunn tells us that there were “other works of the law which from early times particularly marked out Israel’s set-apartness to God and separation from the nations.”51 In this regard, he alludes especially to circumcision, Sabbath keeping, and food laws. To back up his understanding he makes reference to extra-biblical sources, for example, the Dead Sea Scrolls. So whilst he acknowledges that the works of the law “does, of course, refer to whatever the law requires,” however, when comparisons are made between Israel and the nations, “certain laws would naturally come more into focus than others”, in particular, “circumcision and food laws.”52 Elsewhere he states that the works of the law “functioned as identity markers . . . to identify their practitioners as Jewish in the eyes of the wider public.”53 We will see more of this when we examine Wright’s understanding of particular texts.

      Again, like Sanders, Dunn has a very different understanding of Justification from that of the Protestant Reformers. In the words of Venema:

      N. T. Wright

      Wright puts his points across with a marked degree of rhetorical flourish that encourages the unwary and unsuspecting reader to accept what he says. Again, many find themselves agreeing with Wright because they have been swayed by his academic credentials. They assume that he must, because of these, have researched all there is to research, and that such a man’s approach is candor personified. Such a person, however, does not exist, not only in the field of theology but in any discipline. We also need to bear in mind that there is nothing new under the sun. So-called new theologies are usually, on closer examination, reworked versions of what has gone before. The Christian needs to realize that the truth of God’s word is revealed not to the clever or the wise but to the foolish and that God uses the foolish to confound the wisdom of the wise (1 Cor 1:18–24).