14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Two Thumbs Way Up!, September 8, 2004
Finding a book that fills in the gaps in your understanding of the Bible is a rare and valuable find. This book is one of those rare finds. Written by a past professor of New Testament at Oxford, Griffith-Jones gives the reader valuable contextual information on Paul's theology that most of us Americans have never read. And as my college professor once said; context is everything.
Griffith-Jones begins by studying the main source for Paul's change in his theological belief. Remember, Paul was once a "Pharisee of the Pharisees" and "persecutor of the Church". But then he changed and what was the means to this change? Not just a bright light in the noon-day sky. This bright light transported him into Heaven itself. Now Paul has become a seer in the tradition of Isaiah and his beliefs change because he has seen truth beyond description. This truth can not be argue against. It can only change the mortals that see it. And it is this `vision' that Paul has to grapple with throughout his life. How can he tell of things that can't be spoken of? How can he convince those who know so little of Heaven what he has seen in words that are too small to convey the "reality" he has experienced?
But Paul's "good news" is more then a vision. It is about a Jesus who is more than a man. A Jesus he has seen in Heaven. A Jesus that is not merely the lamb that was slaughtered for our sins; a sacrifice fitting for our salvation. This Jesus has now become the New Temple; the Holy of Holies that is the bridge between God and us. For a Jew this is just too revolutionary to make sense of and Paul must make it believable to his Jewish audiences because he is sent to God's chosen people; first.
But what about Romans; Paul's book of theology? Does Griffith-Jones speak on this? He indeed does but he brings out a theme that is something I had never thought about, yet is so simple it makes perfect sense. Paul brings two factions together by showing them they both have missed the point. It is not those who flaunt the Law or those who observe the Law that are "right". Both groups miss the point entirely because those who have died are dead to sin and those who have died are not helped by the Law any longer. Those who have died with Christ in baptism are dead to this world but alive to Christ. They are new creatures. All is nothing when compared to the act of baptism that both have undergone. Now how many times have you thought of Romans as centering around baptism? But Griffith-Jones is right. It does.
But this book is far more. It goes through each of Paul's letters and shows the context that each was written in and discusses the objectives Paul was trying to accomplish in each. We discover a political struggle between the established centers of Christianity in Antioch and Jerusalem and Paul who separates himself from them. There is the hint that Christianity was never intended to become a new religion but only a renewing of Judaism. But there is Paul who is a personality stronger and crafter than we would like to admit struggling to keep control of "his children". And there are the outside influences of pagan culture on one side and the conservative Judaists on the other.
If you have a desire to learn the New Testament at a depth most Christian colleges in the States never attempt to teach, then this is a very good place to start. Read it along-side the Bible and you will gain insights that will change your outlook on your Faith; for the better.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent Second Interpretation. Read the Epistles First., October 21, 2006
This review is from: The Gospel According to Paul: The Creative Genius Who Brought Jesus to the World (Paperback)
`The Gospel According to Paul' by Oxford (Lincoln College) don, Robin Griffith-Jones is a deep, rigorous, and thoughtful examination of Paul's principal Epistles and a description of the personal and theological environment in which they were written.
The title contains an `illuminating error' in that while none of Paul's writings have ever been grouped together with the four canonical gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John), it signifies that Paul's writings are at least as important, and possibly even more important to both the early development of the Church and to later Theology. Paul's theology is especially important to a host of important figures. Some of the most significant of these are Augustine, Luther, Calvin, and Jonathan Edwards. Luther's most important theological lectures before his 95 Theses were on Paul's epistle to the Romans. In a nutshell, Paul is probably the most important figure in Christianity next to Jesus.
In the beginning of the book, the author makes some suggestions that this book was written for the lay reader and is possibly easier to read than commentaries written for Theology students and pastors. I wish to suggest here that the book may be really slow going for the reader unfamiliar with the underlying texts (I am inclined to agree with Luther in his commentary on `Romans' that one is almost compelled to memorize the text of this Epistle if you really expect to fully understand Christian doctrine.) The first practice which makes the reading slow going is the fact that biblical scholar Griffith-Jones insists on using unfamiliar translations for some really central terms, such as `Old Order' for `Old Testament', `New Order' for `New Testament', `breath' for spirit, and `assembly' for `congregation'. Simply making the mental translation is often not enough, as some passages simply sound foreign to our ears when the `breath' for `spirit' substitution is laid on. However, Griffith-Jones' fastidious translation often bears fruit. For example, in an extremely important passage from Romans 1:17, the author translates Paul's quote from Habakkuk 2:4 to be "Those who are just from faith will live". When one looks at the same translation in the `official' (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America) NRSV translation, the meaning almost comes across backwards: "The one who is righteous will live in faith". (Oddly enough, the NRSV does not translate the passage the same way in Habakkuk and in Romans, but then, Paul may have misquoted!).
While this book may be small compared to the commentaries on Paul's Epistles by several writers, it is valuable to those of us who wish to interpret the scriptures in that it makes a point of viewing the texts from a bit of a greater distance than writers such as Luther and the authors of, for example, `The Interpreter's Bible'. The single most important `meta-observation' Griffith-Jones makes is that Paul's letters are best read as a whole (see again, Luther's comment, above). Each Epistle is composed and hangs together much like a great poem, or maybe even more accurately like a great drama. Reading parts of chapters, as we do in services from week to week is sort of like taking Polonius' speech to Ophilia out of its context in Shakespeare's `Hamlet'. From this snippet, you think the play is about etiquette and not about the tragedy of indecision. The author's argument here is one of the best I've seen for supplementing readings in the service with adult Sunday School study where, as in a class on Shakespeare, one can hear and explore many alternate views of the scriptures.
Griffith-Jones' interpretation of Romans is a perfect example. Here, he give not one but three different readings of this most important text. The first is the most conventional, based on the observation that unlike all his other Epistles, this one is being written to an `assembly' he did not himself create and nurture in person. That means the text has no need to spend time on issues which are special to this local community, as when `Galatians' deals much with the importance observing the law of the `Old Order' for gentile followers of `the Way'. Thus, Paul can present a comprehensive discussion of his Theology without distractions. The second rendering of the Epistle looks a bit deeper and finds textual evidence that Paul is indeed addressing a specific agenda set by either the Romans or the Corinthians (Paul is writing the Epistle in Greek Corinth). The third reading explores to the fullest the composition of the Epistle to the Romans as a drama with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
If one is looking for biographical information on Paul, you will not find it in this book. Like the much later Shakespeare, the lion's share of information on the authors' biographies is about London and England of Shakespeare's time. In place of any biography, the author sets the stage for Paul by laying out the tradition of divine revelation from the `Old Order' prophets and seers and how Paul's revelation on the road to Damascus fits into this tradition. Griffith-Jones also for a chapter plays the devil's advocate by trying to discredit Paul's `bona fides' and confesses that Paul survives these arguments.
In a nutshell, this may be a difficult book to read. I can imagine much of the same material being presented in a more easily assimilated style. But, you may be missing much of the deeper currents in Paul's writings if you stick with the more conventional works. Reading Luther's commentary on `Romans', for example, just gives us the most conventional interpretation (especially since it was written while a professor of Theology for just three years). I suggest that you read both the individual Epistles and a conventional commentary before reading Griffith-Jones' interpretation on each Epistle.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A Dense, long and unsatisfying non-traditional commentary on Paul and his epistles, December 18, 2007
Robin Griffith-Jones is a British Anglican who is a New Testament scholar. His earlier work "The Four Witnesses" on the gospels was well done and helpful to me as a Presbyterian pastor.
It was, therefore, with eagerness I picked up this long and convoluted commentary on Paul in preparation for my teaching the Book of Acts in a Church Bible Study. I was disappointed with the post-modern jargon in which he doesn't even call Bible books by their names! Come on!
The book is good in explaining the Jewish scholarly tradition which produced Paul. Many general readers will find this heavy going and alien turf. This is not a book for the neophyte biblical student!
Griffith-Jones quotes extensively from rabbinical exegesis and the prophets most notably Ezekiel and Isaaih. Griffith-Jones says Paul was deeply influenced by the throne vision of Ezekiel as he expounded his theology. Griffith_Jones sees Paul's chief purpose in writing his letters to be that of a father-teacher instructing his followers on the basics of the Christian faith. Griffith-Jones views Paul as a maverick missionary who had distanced himself from Antioch-Jerusalem Christianity. I wonder if this assertion is valid to most biblical scholars?
His detailed analysis of the individual letters has good material. He is especially facile in looking at Paul's masterpiece "Romans" and the various factions in the Corinthian church. The book is best read as you have an open bible turned to the letter being exegeted.
Griffith-Jones needs to work at clarity in his style! He jumps too quickly from topic to topic. He sees Paul as a prophet and seer who was instrumental in carrying his brand of the gospel of Jesus to the Mediterranean basin cities of the first century.
I would not recommend this book to a layperson. The best book on Paul for the general reader is, in my opinion, the old classic by F.F. Bruce.
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