01924nam a2200313 a 450000500170000000800200001702000300003704100080006708200080007508200120008310000200009510000110011524500510012624500190017726000110019626000310020726000090023830000110024730000140025830000090027249000600028152009720034165000360131365000630134985600730141291100380148599900170152395200700154020260119071026.02023-08-08 10:13:21 a9780521632430, 0521632439 aeng a234 bK37-Y11 aYinger, Kent L. eAuthor aPaul, Judaism, and Judgment According to Deeds cKent L. Yinger aU.S.A. bCambridge University Press c1999 a318tr. bHardcover c24cm aSociety for New Testament studies. Monograph series 105 aWhy does ""judgment according to deeds"" produce no discernible theological tension for Paul, the apostle of justification by faith? For students of his writings, paradox, incoherence, or eschatological tension come more readily to mind. Paul felt no such theological tension because there was none - neither within his own soteriology, nor in that of the Judaism from which he learned to speak of ""judgment according to deeds."" For both, salvation is wholly by God's grace and the saved will be repaid (i.e., saved or condemned) in accordance with what they have done. Thus, Paul can promise eternal life to those who ""do good,"" while threatening wrath upon the disobedient (Rom. 2:6-11), and without undermining justification by faith. This thorough examination of second temple and Pauline texts interacts with recent discussions of ""covenantal nomism,"" justification, and the ""new perspective"" on Paul to explore the Jewishness of the apostle's theology. aBible -- NT -- Pauline Epistles aPaul -- the Apostle, Saint -- Criticism and interpretation4 uhttps://data.thuviencodoc.org/books/11506/img-70231.jpgyCover Image aNguyễn Thị Kim Phượng c11357d11357 00104070aTVCDbTVCDd2026-01-20g0.00l0pTVCD-11357v0.00yBK