Go home!



NOTE: This is a fan page.
Dr. Leithart does not have a Facebook account.

RECENT ENTRIES
-Israel, Idolatry, and Separated Brothers
-In defense of Nevin
-Too catholic to be Catholic
-Sermon notes
-Structure in Isaiah 37
-Coat of Plants
-Wedding charge
-Bodies and Christ’s Body
-Triumph of the Performative
-Divine excess
-Bodies transformed
-Naos
-What’s the Bible For?
-Power of Sacraments
-Mystical Presence
-Converts
-Pastoral loneliness
-Overcoming Epistemology
-Hezekiah in Isaiah
-Sermon notes
CATEGORY ARCHIVES
  • LINKS
    - Biblical Horizons
    - Covenant Worldview Institute
    - Theologia
    FEED

    CONTACT

    Comments:
    leithart@leithart.com

    Problems:
    webmaster@leithart.com





    | Next Entries in Category »

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Chiasm upon Chiasm in Galatians 5-6

    [Print] | [Email]

     

    Galatians 5-6 is organized as a chiasm, with the exhortation to bear one another’s burdens, and fulfill the law of Christ, at the center.  The structure suggests that that the freedom that the Spirit grants is precisely freedom to bear the burdens of others as Christ as done for us.

    A. 5:1-15: focus on issues of freedom, circumcision, and the law

    B. 5:16-26: flesh and Spirit; circumcision isn’t mentioned

    C. 6:1-5: bearing burdens and fulfilling law of Christ

    B’. 6:6-10: sowing and reaping, with emphasis on flesh-Spirit contrast

    A’. 6:11-18: circumcision and law; circumcision mentioned for the first time since beginning of ch 5

    The A section is also chiastically arranged:

    Continue reading…

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 24, 2009 at 5:21 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Weak elements

    [Print] | [Email]

    Paul expresses amazement that the Galatians could return to the “weak and poor elements” after being liberated by Christ (Galatians 4:9).

    But were the elements always so weak and beggarly?  It seems not.  They were powerful enough to enslave (4:3).  To be sure, they enslaved children, but that does take some power.  Further, Paul describes the former life of the Galatians as a life under (hupo) the stoicheia, an expression that parallels Paul’s talk of enslavement under the law (3:23) and under guardians and managers (4:2).  Again, this suggests that the stoicheia have some power.

    Or, they did.  God sent His Son and then His Spirit to redeem from the stoicheia and elevate us to sons (4:4-6).  Paul is drawing on the exodus story, placing the stoicheia and the law in the position of defeated Pharaoh.  Once Pharaoh was powerful; but after the plagues and the exodus he was “weak and beggarly.”  So too the “elements.”

    But this means, of course, that the elements exercised some genuine power prior to the missions of the Son and Spirit.  Plutarch was right: Once the oracles spoke, but now, mysteriously, they’ve gone silent.

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 17, 2009 at 9:07 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Paul and Moses

    [Print] | [Email]

    Galatians 3-4 is constructed with a fairly neat chiasm:

    A. Abraham, Spirit, faith, 3:1-14

     

    B. The Law is not mediator of one, 3:15-22

    C. We were under tutors, 3:23-26

    D. Baptism, 3:27-29

    C’. Under stoicheia, 4:1-11

    B’. Personal appeal, 4:12-20

    A’. Abraham’s two sons, one by the Spirit, 4:21-31

    The B sections don’t seem to fit.  But they do:

    Continue reading…

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 17, 2009 at 8:19 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Christ-shaped ministry

    [Print] | [Email]

    Paul begs the Galatians to become as he is (Galatians 4:12).  In context, this means, “Give up circumcision, the Jewish food laws, observance of days, months and seasons.”  Why should they?

    The basis for Paul’s exhortation is the fact that he has become as they are: “Become as I, because I also as you.”  He became as a Gentile among the Gentiles, as weak among the weak.  

    Behind this is Paul’s consciousness that his ministry must be conformed to Christ’s.  Christ above all says to us: “Become as I, because I also [became] as you.”

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 17, 2009 at 8:00 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Adam in Galatians 4

    [Print] | [Email]

    Galatians 4 is clearly about the law’s role as guardian and steward in charge of Israel during her minority.  But Paul’s description of Israel applies just as well to Adam.  Adam was created a minor son, an infant, but was promised an inheritance.  Paul hints at the Adamic dimensions of Israel’s history under the law by saying that the minor child is treated like a slave thought he is “lord of all” (4:1).  That’s Adam: under command, though created to have dominion over all other creatures.

    The law, then, is in this sense a perpetuation of the Adamic “covenant of works”: The law is a continuation of the minority covenant for a son who has proved rebellious.

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 17, 2009 at 7:54 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Spirit and righteousness

    [Print] | [Email]

    Following up an earlier post: How are we to understand the connection of the reception of the Spirit and being counted as righteous in Galatians 3:5-6?  Some alternatives suggest themselves:

    1) Righteousness is a status and the Spirit is the gift that God gives to those whom He counts righteous.

    2) Righteousness is a status and the Spirit grants faith that is the instrument by which we accept that status.  Or, following Wright, the Spirit grants the faith that marks us as those whom God will regard as righteous (regeneration before justification).

    Continue reading…

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 10, 2009 at 8:49 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Out of faith

    [Print] | [Email]

    Faith in Protestant theology is instrumental, the passive human means by which we appropriate the righteousness of Christ, by which we stand righteous before God.

    In Galatians at least, Paul’s characteristic construction doesn’t use the usual prepositions of instrumentality – en and dia.  Rather, he uses ek, which has the basic connotation of exit from, separation from, or source.  ek can have an instrumental sense, and even seems to be used in place of en at times.  So, “by faith” is not necessarily wrong.  

    But have we spend enough time considering the alternatives?  Might ek pisteos mean source, origin, or cause in some contexts?  And, might pistis here be shorthand for pistis Christou, perhaps understood in Hays’s sense of “the faith(fulness) of Christ?

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 10, 2009 at 8:40 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Abrahamic promise

    [Print] | [Email]

    What did God promise Abraham?  Paul says that Abraham and his seed were promised an inheritance (Galatians 3:18, 29), and that inheritance includes the blessing of the nations (Galatians 3:8), the gift of the Spirit (Galatians 3:14), and righteousness (Galatians 3:6).

    These are not discrete gifts in Paul’s mind.  The transition from Galatians 3:5 to 3:6 makes this clear.  3:5 says that the Galatians received the Spirit by hearing with faith, and Paul compares this (kathos, “just as”) to Abram being reckoned righteous by faith.  The analogy is: Galatians:Abraham; faith:faith; reception of Spirit:righteousness.

    Likewise, the inheritance of righteousness is linked to the Abrahamic blessing of the nations in verse 8: Scripture foresees that the nations will be justified by faith when it promises that Abram will be a blessing to the nations.  Blessing is eulogeo, etymologically, “good-word.”  The blessing that Yahweh pronounces over the nations is evidently the blessing of being counted righteous; “you are just” is the good word that God speaks to those who believe in Christ.

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 10, 2009 at 8:29 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Transgression and law

    [Print] | [Email]

    Transgression in Paul’s terminology refers to violation of specific commandments.  Mostly.  But Galatians 2:17 has a radical redefinition of transgression.  J. Louis Martyn says, when Paul says that re-erecting the wall of separation between Jew and Gentile makes him a transgressor, he implies that “the Law can play a role leading not to the defining and vanquishing of transgression, but rather to transgression itself! . . .whoever reerects the Law’s distinction between Jew and Gentile, as thought God were making things right through observance of the Law, rather than in Christ, has thereby shown himself to be a transgressor.”

    Transgression is usually boundary-crossing.  But Paul says that in the new covenant transgression can take the form of erecting boundaries.  And he is also implying that transgression is not judged by timeless moral standards, but is redemptive-historically qualified.

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 3, 2009 at 9:37 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Justification and nature, again

    [Print] | [Email]

    There does appear to be a positive connection between justification and nature in Galatians 2.  It’s elusive, but it seems to be there.

    In verse 17, Paul argues that those who seek justification in Christ cannot be found sinners without implying that Christ Himself is a minister of sin.  Me genoito!

    “We” in verse 17 is, I suggest, “we Jews,” the same identified as “Jews by nature” in verse 15.  

    Continue reading…

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 3, 2009 at 8:44 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Nature, Justification, Law

    [Print] | [Email]

    What is the logic of Paul’s argument in Galatians 2:15-16?  This breaks down into several questions: Where does “justification” come from?  How does Paul move from Jews-by-nature as opposed to Gentile-sinners to justification by the faith of Christ rather than the works of the law?  And, of course, verse 16 has two of the most controverted phrases in recent Pauline studies: What does Paul mean by “faith of Christ”?  And what are the “works of the law”?

    Let’s take the first questions first.

    Continue reading…

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, February 3, 2009 at 8:24 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: In me

    [Print] | [Email]

    In Galatians 1, Paul twice says things happen “in him.”  God reveals His Son “in me” (1:16).  The phrase could mean “through me,” suggesting that Paul is an instrument of God’s unveiling of the Son.  It’s just as possible, though, that Paul is himself the locus of that revelation; he is one of the places where God shows Himself.

    At the end of the chapter, Paul says that everyone was glorifying God “in me” because he had turned from persecutor to preacher (v. 24).  This could mean simply that everyone was glorifying God “on account of my conversion.”  But the phrasing is more striking: Paul is the locus of praise – not the object of praise, but the “place” or the “instrument” through which praise is offered to God.

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 9:33 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Then and Now

    [Print] | [Email]

    According to Paul’s summary, the gospel is about Jesus’ self-gift, which plucks us from this present evil age (Galatians 1:4).  What is that evil age?

    Paul’s use of “then/now” shows in the chapter shows what it means for him.  The Galatians have heard about his zeal for the ancestral traditions of Judaism, his manner of life “then” (1:13).  At that time, zeal took the form of persecution of the church.

    Paul returns to his life “then” at the end of the chapter, with a neatly arranged sentence: “only they were hearing that the one who persecuted you then now announces the faith which then he was destroying” (v. 23).

    For Paul at least, the present evil age involved zeal for the fathers’ traditions, persecution of the church, advancing beyond those of his generation.  Deliverance was deliverance from Judaism, which, Paul later goes on to tell us, was a system subjected to the elementary principles of the world.

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 9:27 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Announcing Christ

    [Print] | [Email]

    Paul uses the noun “gospel” or the verb “evangelize/preach the gospel” twelve times in the first two chapters of Galatians.  It is good news for the twelve tribes.

    While we can’t rest too much on grammatical forms, it is interesting to note the objects of the verb euaggelizo in these chapters.  Typically, the object of “evangelize” is not the audience but the content of the announcement.  Specifically, in Galatians 1:16 the object is “Him,” the Son whom the Fathe who separated Paul from the womb revealed in the apostle.  The verb might better be translated as “announce” or “proclaim” than “preach the gospel.”  Paul was sent to “announce the Son” to the Gentiles.  (“Preach” would be fine, but has churchy connotations that the original word didn’t yet have.)

    In 1:23, the Paul who once persecuted now preaches the “faith.”  This might well be another way of saying that He announces Christ, since “faith” seems to be a name of Jesus in 3:23.  It could also refer to the faith that the gospel elicits, or the teaching concerning Jesus that forms the content of the gospel.  Either way, the object is about what is said rather than the audience.  Again, “anounce” or even “herald” seems to be a good translation.  Paul’s calling is to announce Christ, the faith, to the Gentiles.

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 9:20 am

    Bible - NT - Galatians: Nature and Grace in Galatia

    [Print] | [Email]

    During a student presentation on Dunn’s article on the New Perspective on Paul, it struck me that there’s a nature/grace debate going on in Galatians and in the Judaizer conflict.  Judaizers say that grace has come, but the “cultural” or “natural” (cf. Gal 2:16) form of covenant life remains the same.  Grace doesn’t touch nature.  Paul says the opposite; the coming of faith/grace means the transformation of nature/culture.

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Friday, April 4, 2008 at 2:01 pm

    Bible - NT - Galatians Theology - Christology: Sermon Outline, December 21

    [Print] | [Email]

    God In Us

    INTRODUCTION
    Confessing that God the Son was incarnate as the baby Jesus is once of the church’s non-negotiable beliefs, however offensive it is to high-minded reason. But the church has often placed a wrong stress on the incarnation, as if God becoming man were in itself sufficient for our salvation or as if the presence of God in human flesh by itself sanctified, redeemed, and glorified fallen mankind.

    Against this, the Scriptures teach that our salvation is accomplished by the Son’s incarnation, life, death, resurrection, ascension, and gift of the Spirit. Christmas is the beginning of our salvation, but Pentecost is its end. The Spirit encloses the whole process, since He is the agent of the incarnation and the gift poured out at Pentecost. But the work is not done at Christmas, when God dwells in the man Jesus. The work is only done with the Spirit is poured out and God dwells in the disciples of Jesus, in the body of Christ. This is one important way to tell the good news of Christmas: God the Son has become incarnate so that through His death and exaltation He can secure the gift of the Spirit for His people, so that God might be in us.

    THE TEXT
    “I have been crucified with Christ, and it is no longer I who live but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me” (Galatians 2:20).

    CHRIST AND THE SPIRIT
    How can “Christ live in me”? The answer of the NT is that Christ lives in us through the work of the Spirit. The Spirit is the agent of the incarnation and the Spirit also “accompanies” and “guides” Jesus throughout His ministry. This point is especially prominent in Luke’s gospel, where the Spirit that comes on Jesus at His baptism impels Him into the wilderness, empowers Him for miracles and battle with Satan, and fills Him with wisdom for verbal conflicts with the Pharisees.

    The Spirit’s work in the gospels is a key prerequisite to Pentecost. By “accompanying” the man Jesus throughout His ministry, the Spirit becomes “Christomorphic,” takes on a “Christlike” shape. When He comes at Pentecost, He comes as the Spirit of Jesus, and the presence of the Spirit is therefore the presence of Jesus. The Spirit “in us” is also Jesus “in us.” As Paul says, Jesus has become “life-giving Spirit” (1 Corinthians 15:45) so that we can say that “the Lord [Jesus] is the Spirit (2 Corinthians 3:17).

    CHRIST FORMED IN US
    Through the Spirit of Christ we are conformed to Christ. Christ in us through His Spirit ensures that Christ will be evident in us, in the way we live. Paul spells out what this means in Galatians 4:19-20. In verse 19, he addresses the Galatians as “my children,” though he had previously been insisting that they are “sons of Abraham.” But if we think Paul is addressing the Galatians as a “father,” we are mistaken. He describes himself as a mother, in labor to give birth to the Galatians.

    There are several dimensions to this imagery:
    -First, the image of labor obviously has to do with pain and anguish, and describes the difficulty of Paul’s ministry among the Galatians (Genesis 3; Isaiah 13:8; 21:3).
    -Second, Paul writes these words to a church that is already in existence, one that is already “born” in some sense. Yet Paul describes himself as still being in labor with them. His labor, with its connotations of struggle and pain, does not end when the church is up and running, but continues until the Galatians reach full maturity.
    -The reason why the labor continues, thirdly, has to do with the goal of his labor. Paul’s goal in his ministry is not merely to see churches up and running. The goal of Paul’s labor, the “child” that he wants to bring forth, is “Christ.” The goal of all his struggle, all his perplexity, all his hard words is to see Christ reflected in the life and character of the members of the church.

    There is also a corporate dimension to this. The Greek phrase “in you” can mean “in each individual one of you,” but the preposition can also have the connotation of “among.” Paul wants to give birth to a community whose life together reflects the life of Christ. He wants to give birth to the body of Christ (cf. Galatians 3:16).

    US IN GOD
    Jesus also talks about the mutual penetration of Father and Son in John 17, and extends the notion to include us in that communion. He prays for “those who believe in Me through their word” (vv. 20-23):

    A. [I ask concerning] those who believe in Me through their word
    B. that they may be one
    C. even as Thou, Father,
    D. art in Me,
    D’. And I
    C’. in Thee
    B’. that they may be in us
    A’. that the world may believe that Thou didst send me.

    This shows that there is a “mutual in-dwelling” of God and the church and the church and God. God dwells “in us,” but we are equally dwelling “in Him.”

    In this context, Jesus also says that He has given the glory that He had from the Father to His disciples (17:22), and this glory is given to us so that the church may be one even as the Father and Son are one. The glory is connected particularly with the Spirit and that Father and Son share, and have now shared with us. And that Spirit-glory, dwelling in us and enabling us to dwell in God, manifests Himself in the world. What does it mean for God to dwell in us? It means that the glory, or the beauty, of God is in us and shines through us. And this beauty and glory is the means by which God intends to attract the nations to Himself.

    posted by Peter J. Leithart on Saturday, December 20, 2003 at 7:16 am

    | Next Entries in Category »