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Cracking the Foundation of the New Perspective on Paul: Covenantal Nomism versus Reformed Covenantal Theology

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The New Perspective on Paul claims that the Reformed understanding of justification is wrong - that it misunderstands Paul and the Judaism with which he engages. The New Perspective's revised understanding of Second Temple Judaism provides the foundation to a new perspective. This important book seeks to show that this foundation is fundamentally faulty and cannot bear the weight it needs to carry, thus undermining the entirety of the New Perspective on Paul itself.

320 pages, Paperback

Published April 7, 2017

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Robert J. Cara

3 books1 follower

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Andrew.
216 reviews14 followers
September 15, 2024
A very helpful overview and critique of the New Perspective on Paul (NPP). The appendix provides helpful background information on second temple Judaism.

The author addresses the key elements of the NPP focusing on three authors: Sanders, Dunn, and Wright. The first section addresses the methodology and hermeneutic of the NPP with the second section giving an exegesis of three texts (Ephesians 2:1-10, Titus 3:4-7, and 2 Timothy 1:8-19) to compare how it is interpreted by non-NPP commentators in contrast to NPP advocates.
Profile Image for Michael Pagan.
67 reviews3 followers
March 12, 2018
Cara is an engaging writer. Anyone that has taken a class with him or listened to his RTS lectures knows his characteristic humor. That humor comes through in his writing. Often his words are so clear and simple that you don’t get the feeling you’re reading a scholar. I mean that in the best way, of course. It’s only when you sit down and think through his logic that you realize he’s right.

I very much appreciated his honesty on his biases-inspiration of Scripture, authorship of Deutero-Pauline books, Covenant Theology, etc. Often in conservative scholarship, there’s a “play the game”mentality that you don’t get here.

Each chapter was excellent, and I especially enjoyed his last chapter on the three passages from the “Deutero-Pauline” letters. I think that chapter alone demonstrates the flaws in the NPP thesis, and that wasn’t even the point of the book!

I now feel that I can wrap my head around some of the 2nd Temple Judaism documents that are considered and referred to, and regarding this point, his critique of the NPP understanding of just what constitutes “works-righteousness” was very helpful for me as a layman.
Profile Image for Davis Sutton.
19 reviews
April 30, 2025
A very well researched book that offers plenty of helpful and insightful critiques of the New Perspective. The book is admittedly biased, and written from a perspective of a reformed Presbyterian scholar who is concerned that the New Perspective will damage the reformed doctrine of justification by faith. His critiques are clear, succinct, and well researched.
Profile Image for Joshua Sunderland.
84 reviews3 followers
January 28, 2025
I had to read this for a seminary class, but overall I thought it was a great polemic against NPP. While NPP can be disproven exegetically from Scripture, as Cara says is the primary defense, his main argument here is showing how even on its own ground, Sanders/NPP's argument just doesn't hold up (which is probably more persuasive to those who actually affirm NPP.)

However, I will say that there are a lot of redundant repetitions of content within the book. ~30 pages of writing could be removed before any information would be actually lost. Also, as he himself seems to recognize, chapter 4, while a good argument against NPP for those who believe deutero-Paul is actually Paul, isn't related to the majority argument of the book. The appendix, which gives information on the primary Jewish sources, is fairly important to read for context. In my opinion, the appendix should have been merged with chapter 3 and chapter 4 should have been the appendix or its own book.
Profile Image for Timothy Decker.
328 reviews25 followers
June 29, 2021
Fantastic book indeed cracking the foundation of the NPP. Also helpful for those unfamiliar w NT background studies.
Profile Image for Jim Hahn.
33 reviews1 follower
January 26, 2024
This book is a good place to start for anyone trying to navigate the nuances of justification and the pitfalls of the New Perspective on Paul.
Profile Image for LMS.
514 reviews33 followers
May 8, 2024
An introduction, helpful perspective, though the debate is still a little over my head.
Profile Image for Michael Dionne.
216 reviews4 followers
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July 10, 2024
Though not a “popular level” treatment of the NPP, this book displays the kind of theological reasoning and argumentation which our church needs more of. Cara masterfully presents his thesis (namely, that Sander’s covenantal nomism requires an over-simplified view of the variegated Judaism of the second Temple period), and then demonstrates his point carefully, clearly, and concisely.
Cara interacts with his Liberal and Semi-Liberal opponents without resorting to denigration or name-calling, often using their own words to prove his points. Additionally, he makes occasional devotional and pastoral observations which help to ground the work in the practical realm which it occupies.
Highly, highly recommended if you want to see the NPP significantly challenged with a cogent, level-headed, biblical argument.

If this is what the R.E.D.S series is producing, I can’t wait to read more!
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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