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Judgement for Israel: The Marriage of Wrath and Mercy in Romans 9–11

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2020

Thomas P. Dixon*
Affiliation:
Campbell University, PO Box 1029, Buies Creek, NC27506, USA. Email: tdixon@campbell.edu
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Abstract

Reviewing John Barclay's Paul and the Gift, Susan Eastman recognises the need for ‘fuller analysis of judgment’ in Paul to accompany such penetrating work on grace. The dearth of interest in wrath often perpetuates the Marcionite premise that wrath precludes mercy, a false antithesis that especially skews interpretation of Romans. This presumed opposition leads scholars to find dithering dialectic, two covenants, two Israels or contradictory fantasy in Rom 9–11. Replacing the simple binary with a thicker lens of provisional judgement clarifies Paul's argument that God strikes Israel in wrath in order to heal them.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press, 2020
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Table 1. Comparison of Argument in Rom 1–8 and Rom 9–11

Figure 1

Table 2. Wrath in Romans 1 and Romans 11