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Ethnocentric Legalism and the Justification of the Individual: Rethinking Some New Perspective Assumptions

Ethnocentric Legalism and the Justification of the Individual: Rethinking Some New Perspective Assumptions

  • Semi-Technical
  • Andrew Hassler

According to this article, a shift has occurred in how justification is viewed. The rise of the so-called New Perspective on Paul led to justification being viewed more in corporate terms. What is the place of the individual in Paul's view of justification? Hassler believes that the case that Paul was not really interested in “inner tensions of individual souls and consciences” has been overstated. He wants renewed emphasis on treating justification as a personal experience of forgiveness and deliverance from a sense of guilt. The thesis of the article is that the case for Jewish legalism need to be rethought. This will actually affirm a strong individual element in justification.

Source: Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, 2011. 17 pages.

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If the guilt of sin is so great that nothing can satisfy it but the blood of Jesus, and the filth of sin is so great that nothing can fetch out the stain thereof but the blood of Jesus, how great, how heinous, how sinful must the evil of sin be. Stephen Charnock
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