An Advanced Study in Galatians: Part Two

Ordering the Messiah Community

Ratings 4.95 / 5.00
An Advanced Study in Galatians: Part Two

What You Will Learn!

  • Discover how Paul fits Jesus into the story Israel told about its coming Messiah.
  • Define the relationship between Jesus's work on the cross, individual ‘belief’, and the activity of God’s spirit.
  • Explore the role of ethics and Torah in the New Age.
  • Parse the tight argument Paul uses to develop his robust Christology.
  • See how Paul marshals multiple rhetorical modes in service of his argument.
  • Recognize unity as the primary message of Galatians, over-against modern debates of comparative religion or soteriology.

Description

Paul’s letter to the Galatians ranks among the earliest writings we have from the movement that became Christianity. It therefore brings into sharp focus key issues of theological debate within the early Jesus movement, including how people in this community saw themselves.

In this letter, Paul identifies a specific challenge to identity formation in the Messiah that is facing the church in Galatia. The particular question of whether Gentile converts needed to be circumcised, which is the direct impetus for Paul’s writing the letter, provides a basis from which Paul can expound a broader vision of membership in the Messiah community. Arguing against factions that would exclude Gentile converts failing to adopt Torah, Paul masterfully explores the logic of a New Age instantiated by Messiah Jesus, the new requirements for family belonging, and the reciprocal faithfulness of Jesus and believers which is the foundation of righteousness.

Across two courses (totaling 37 lectures), Prof. Wright walks students through Paul’s argument step by step, clarifying difficult translational matters, navigating the messy history of soteriology and interpretation since the Reformation. He then clears a path back to the original concerns of the time to help us see afresh what Paul considered the heart of the New Age.

Part Two, Ordering the Messiah Community, explores the implications of what it means that this new community of believers - marked by the reciprocal faith of, with, and in Jesus – is the single family of God promised on the Old Testament. In what ways does the Jesus movement fulfil the expectations and promises of the Old Testament? How are they to think of ethics and the Law if a New Age has indeed been launched? How does the life of the community result from the work of God’s spirit?

Prof. Wright continues his exploration of these questions, hinted at in Part One, to highlight Paul’s ultimate emphasis on the necessary unity of all believers in Messiah Jesus, yesterday, today, and tomorrow.

This course covers thoroughly advanced material, first explored in Prof. Wright's Galatians commentary. We encourage students to proceed through this course at their own pace, and consult the resources provided, such as Greek lexicon and concept reflection prompts. Every effort has been made to clarify the dense theological argument Paul makes in Galatians and bring it into practical application for members of the Messiah community today.

Who Should Attend!

  • Students of the New Testament and/or early Christian thought.
  • Believers interested in the community foundations of the Jesus movement.
  • Pastors preparing sermon series or studies on Galatians.
  • Teachers hoping to dispel myths and clarify their theology.

TAKE THIS COURSE

Tags

  • The Bible

Subscribers

684

Lectures

48

TAKE THIS COURSE



Related Courses