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Israel and the Nations: Paul's Gospel in the Context of Jewish Expectation

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Israel and the Nations: Paul's Gospel in the Context of Jewish Expectation provides various perspectives of leading contemporary scholars concerning Paul’s message, particularly his expressed expectation of the end-time redemption of Israel and its relation to the Gentiles, the non-Jewish nations, in the context of Jewish eschatological expectation. The contributors engage the increasingly contentious enigmas relating to Paul’s Jewishness: had his perception of living in a new era in Christ and anticipating an imminent final consummation moved him beyond the bounds of what his contemporaries would have considered Judaism, or did Paul continue to think and act “within Judaism”?

Part 1: Paul the Apostle in the Context of Jewish Eschatological Apocalyptical Notions

Chapter One The Making and Unmaking of Jews in Second Century BCE Literature and the Implication for Interpreting Paul Genevive Dibley

Chapter Two Paul and the Joining of the Ways: Ordering the Eschaton, Preparing for Judgment

Anders Runesson

Chapter Three From Aristeas to the Apocalypse of Abraham: A Survey of Some Hellenistic Jewish Texts Relating to the Issue of Israel and its Relationship to the Other Nations

Eric Noffke

Chapter Four What Eschatological Pilgrimage of the Gentiles? Matthew V. Novenson

Chapter Five Eschatological Universalism, the Nations, and the Jewish Apocalyptic Paul

Loren T. Stuckenbruck

Chapter Six Did the LXX of the Twelve Prophets Contribute to the Eschatological Opening to the Nations? Patrick Pouchelle

Chapter Seven Paul Between Judaism and Hellenism Imre Peres

Part 2: The Specifics of Paul’s Message Concerning End-Time Redemption of Israel and Its Role

Towards the Nations (ethnē)

Chapter Eight Israēl (and Israēlitēs) in Paul, Particularly in Galatians Michael Bachmann

Chapter Nine Bending Knees and Acknowledging Tongues (Phil 2:9–11) – The Nations’ Loyalty to the God of Israel in the Shadow of the Empire Kathy Ehrensperger

Chapter Ten ‘“But It Is Not as Though the Word of God Had Failed’: Israel as a Sub-Text in Romans?” William S. Campbell

Chapter Eleven The Ins and Outs of Paul’s Israelite Remnant Joshua Garroway

Chapter Twelve The Gentile as Insider and Outsider in Paul’s Letter to the Romans

Kenneth Atkinson

Chapter Thirteen “If you are called a Judean ….” (Rom 2:17): Paul and his Interlocutor

Markus Öhler

Chapter Fourteen “All Israel Will Be Saved” or “Kept Safe”? (Rom 11:26): Israel’s Conversion or Irrevocable Calling to Gospel the Nations? Mark D. Nanos

Chapter Fifteen Paul, the Israelite, on Israel and the Gentiles at the End of Time: Reflections on Rom 9–11 Karl-Wilhelm Niebuhr

Chapter Sixteen Pesher Concerning Righteousness (Romans 10:5–13) in Relation to the Response of Jews and Gentiles to the Gospel František Ábel

The great merit of this volume is the range and diversity of the Jewish material it brings into conversation with Paul. This kind of engagement between New Testament and Second Temple Studies is long overdue.

This fine collection of essays, the second to emerge from an international collaboration of scholars that took place in Bratislava, both broadens the geographical scope of the discussion concerning “Paul within Judaism” and serves to move it forward in significant ways. This volume will be particularly significant for the ongoing discussion of the relationship between Paul’s conception of a mission to the gentiles and Jewish expectations about the place of the nations in the end-time redemption of Israel.

The book is to be welcomed for its energetic engagement with the questions raised by the recent ambition to view Paul “within Judaism,” in particular as it regards the central theme of the relationship of Jews and non-Jews. Scrutinizing anew main Pauline texts and comparing them with early Jewish documents, the various papers confront Paul’s ideas on this relationship with the variety of ancient views. Pauline theology and Jewish history are brought into dialogue, and it is fascinating to see this happening at a conference in Bratislava.

This extraordinary rich collection of essays deals with an issue that is at the heart of Paul’s theological thinking. It gathers an international group of scholars who are well renowned for their historical and exegetical expertise. The variety of the contributions demonstrates convincingly that it is only a multi-perspective approach like this one that can be regarded as a suitable way to properly treat the issue that is in the focus of this volume. No one who wants to deal with this book’s subject can do without this book.

František Ábel is professor of New Testament at the Evangelical Lutheran Theological Faculty of Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia.

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