A Pauline approach to the theology of religions

The letters of Paul in the New Testament offer a number of insights which are relevant to the Theology of Religions, a branch of Christian Theology concerned with articulating a view of other religions and their adherents. This thesis seeks to offer a constructive approach to Paul’s theology in rela...

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Main Author: Whitehead, Philip
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48147/
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author Whitehead, Philip
author_facet Whitehead, Philip
author_sort Whitehead, Philip
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The letters of Paul in the New Testament offer a number of insights which are relevant to the Theology of Religions, a branch of Christian Theology concerned with articulating a view of other religions and their adherents. This thesis seeks to offer a constructive approach to Paul’s theology in relation to contemporary Theology of Religions and argue for an exclusivist view, positing that faith in Christ is uniquely the mode of salvation and that there is no basis in Paul’s theology for confidence in other religions as mediatory of salvation or divine revelation. Paul broadly aligns with what is known as the exclusivist view in the Theology of Religions, seeing faith in Christ as necessary for salvation. Paul views both Jew and Gentile non-Christians as standing under divine judgement and oppressed by sin. Gentile religion is viewed as an idolatrous response to natural revelation, and can be demonic in character. It is unable to offer true knowledge of God or to effect salvation. Salvation is achievable only by divine action to rescue, which Paul believes only occurs through faith in Jesus Christ. Paul’s theology divides humanity into two groups using his Adam-Christ dichotomy, with Christians seen as united to Christ and all others being associated with Adam. Conversion is a transfer from the realm of Adam to the realm of Christ, which implies an ontological transformation at the deepest levels of the human person.
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spelling nottingham-481472025-02-28T13:56:03Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48147/ A Pauline approach to the theology of religions Whitehead, Philip The letters of Paul in the New Testament offer a number of insights which are relevant to the Theology of Religions, a branch of Christian Theology concerned with articulating a view of other religions and their adherents. This thesis seeks to offer a constructive approach to Paul’s theology in relation to contemporary Theology of Religions and argue for an exclusivist view, positing that faith in Christ is uniquely the mode of salvation and that there is no basis in Paul’s theology for confidence in other religions as mediatory of salvation or divine revelation. Paul broadly aligns with what is known as the exclusivist view in the Theology of Religions, seeing faith in Christ as necessary for salvation. Paul views both Jew and Gentile non-Christians as standing under divine judgement and oppressed by sin. Gentile religion is viewed as an idolatrous response to natural revelation, and can be demonic in character. It is unable to offer true knowledge of God or to effect salvation. Salvation is achievable only by divine action to rescue, which Paul believes only occurs through faith in Jesus Christ. Paul’s theology divides humanity into two groups using his Adam-Christ dichotomy, with Christians seen as united to Christ and all others being associated with Adam. Conversion is a transfer from the realm of Adam to the realm of Christ, which implies an ontological transformation at the deepest levels of the human person. 2017-12-13 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48147/1/A%20Pauline%20Approach%20to%20the%20Theology%20of%20Religion%20-%20August%202017.pdf Whitehead, Philip (2017) A Pauline approach to the theology of religions. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Theology; Religious Studies; Theology of Religions; exclusivism; pluralism; religious pluralism; Paul; Pauline Studies; New Testament; New Testament Theology
spellingShingle Theology; Religious Studies; Theology of Religions; exclusivism; pluralism; religious pluralism; Paul; Pauline Studies; New Testament; New Testament Theology
Whitehead, Philip
A Pauline approach to the theology of religions
title A Pauline approach to the theology of religions
title_full A Pauline approach to the theology of religions
title_fullStr A Pauline approach to the theology of religions
title_full_unstemmed A Pauline approach to the theology of religions
title_short A Pauline approach to the theology of religions
title_sort pauline approach to the theology of religions
topic Theology; Religious Studies; Theology of Religions; exclusivism; pluralism; religious pluralism; Paul; Pauline Studies; New Testament; New Testament Theology
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48147/