The Theology of Paul's Letter to the Romans
in New Testament Theology (Cambridge)
Pages
196
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Published
12/8/2003
ISBN-13
9780521435352
A respected expert on Paul's writings, Klaus Haacker presents this introduction to the theology of the Letter to the Romans to complete Cambridge's New Testament Theology series. Haacker focuses on themes such as righteousness, mission, the "mystery of Israel", suffering and hope, and preaching. Engaging with Paul's rhetoric, he reveals how ancient Rome and the Christian reinterpretation of the legal heritage of Israel provide contexts for the Letter. The book will be of interest to teachers, pastors, and students of theology and the New Testament.
Reviews
Klaus Haacker s monograph on th e theology of Romans is the final installment of the New Testament Theology series edited by James D. G. Dunn. Haacker s recent preparation for writing this volume includes his 1999 Romans commentary in the Theologischer Handkommentar zum Neuen Testament series and his short, 1997 introduction to the life and thought of Paul, Paulus: Der Werdegang eines Apostels. The purpose of the New Testament Theology series is to provide a lengthier book-by-book engagement with the theology of the New Testament writers than is typically possible given the size constraints of introductions and commentaries. The works in this series each aim to provide a nucleus around which a course could be developed (iii). Haacker begins his study by penning a chapter on introductory questions: Is Romans a letter or a theological treatise? What do we know about Paul, who wrote the letter? What do we know about the Romans to whom Paul addresses his work? What do we know about the circumstances, time, and place of its writing? Haacker argues that Romans is properly understood as a true letter, penned by the Jewish man whose biographical sketch is provided in Acts, addressed to mixed Jewish and Gentile congregations, written in a time of tension in Paul s own ministry with th e aim of addressing real tensions within the Roman churches.
[Full Review]