| Users online: 30 | Tell Friend | Add to Favorites Links: Popular | New | Pick | Top Rated | Random |
Definition of Justification written by N.T. Wright for the New Dictionary of Theology Edited by David F. Wright, Sinclair B. Ferguson, J.I. Packer:
1. The question of justification is a matter of covenant membership. The underlying question in (for instance) Gal. 3 and 4 is: Who are the true children of Abraham? Paul's answer is that membership belongs to all who believe in the gospel of Jesus, whatever their racial or moral background.
2. The basis of this verdict is the representative death and resurrection of Jesus himself. In view of universal sin, God can only be in covenant with human beings if that sin is dealt with, and this has been achieved by God himself in the death of his Son (Rom. 3:24-26; 5:8-9). Jesus takes on himself the curse which would have prevented God's promised blessing finding fulfilment (Gal. 3:10-14). The resurrection is God's declaration that Jesus, and hence his people, are in the right before God (Rom. 4:24-25).
3. Justification thus establishes the church as a new entity, the renewed Israel, now qualitatively distinct from Jew and Greek alike, transcending racial and social barriers (Gal. 3:28). The sharp edge of this point, for Paul, was the conviction not only that pagan converts to Christianity did not need to become Jews in order fully to belong to God's people, but also that the attempt to do so was in itself a renunciation of the gospel, implying that Christ's achievement was insufficient or even unnecessary (Gal. 2:21; 5:4-6)...."
Justification: God's declaration, from his position as judge of all the world, that someone is in the right, despite universal sin. This declaration will be made on the last day on the basis of an entire life (Romans 2:1-16), but is brought forward into the present on the basis of Jesus' achievement, because sin has been dealt with through the cross (Romans 3:21-4:25); the means of this present justification is simply faith. This means particularly, that Jews and Gentiles alike are full members of the family promised by God to Abraham (Galatians 3; Romans 4). - N.T. Wright (Mark for Everyone pg. 233).
| Sort by: Date added - Rating - Title |
- Paul and Caesar: A New Reading of Romans

N.T. Wright
- Romans and the Theology of Paul

N.T. Wright (pdf)
- Gospel and Theology in Galatians

N.T. Wright (pdf) - New Perspective on Paul
- The Letter to the Galatians: Exegesis and Theology

N.T. Wright - New Perspective on Paul
- The Law in Romans 2

N.T. Wright (pdf)
- On Becoming the Righteousness of God

N.T. Wright - 2 Corinthians 5:21 (Disclaimer - N.T. Wright is a leading proponent of the New Perspective on Paul)
- The New Perspectives on Paul

N.T. Wright - Rutherford House Lecture
- Justification: The Biblical Basis and its Relevance for Contemporary Evangelicalism

Faith and Current Christian Thought, Ed. Gavin Reid, London: Collins, 1980, p.13ff)
- The Shape of Justification

N.T. Wright
- N.T. Wright Page

Wright Lectures, Articles, and Interviews
- Coming Home to St. Paul

N.T. Wright
- Wright on Romans

Rich Lusk
- N. T. Wright on the Atonement - A Brief Statement

Mark Horne
- The Wittenburg Door Interview: N.T. “Tom” Wright

Becky Garrison
- Trevin Wax Interview with N.T. Wright (Full Transcript)

Kingdom People
- Interview with John Piper About The Future of Justification: A Response to N. T. Wright

John Piper
- When Wright Is Wrong

Keith A. Mathison
- The Problem of the Timeless Jew

Doug Wilson
- Bishop N.T. Wright's ordo salutis

Paul Helm
- N.T. Wright's Neo-Colonialism

Douglas Wilson Reviews N.T. Wright's Suprised by Hope
- Badly Informed Clerics

Douglas Wilson on N.T. Wright
- Paul Helm Compares N. T. Wright and Richard Baxter

Paul Helm
| Sort by: Date added - Rating - Title |







