Solid work! Just a thought here, but would you be willing to review the book ‘Galatians’ by Avi Ben Mordechai? It deals with some of what you discussed here, but was developed by a “Messianic Jewish” scholar. I was raised in that sect, but eventually converted to the Catholic faith. That book was instrumental in how my family raised me to read and understand Paul. I think with your review of this work - and your overall perspective on First Century theology in general - it would cause you to be a fantastic resource in the discussion with contemporary Hebrew Roots sect members. As far as I know, there has been no Catholic (or any Apostolic Christian) response. Regardless, thank you for your work!
Hi! Thanks for the compliment. I took a look at the book. It is kind of pricey for me right now. If I could get my hands on it I would certainly review it.
I just bought this book on Verbum/Logos and I can't wait to dive in. I've been studying Reformed Protestantism concept of forensic justification for the last few weeks and I was somewhat convinced of Reformed claims until I read about the "New Perspective on Paul." In my research, this book came up. Thanks for the review!
Thanks for the recommend! Ill add it to my list. I think understanding Pauline theology and communicating that understanding is one key for Catholics to become the bearer and safeguarder of the Holy Scriptures in the public eye once again.
Thank you for the excellent review and your engagement of the text. Catholic scholars are a bit late to the New Paul party, even though there is little to reconsider regarding Pauline theology. Thank you for your support of the legal motif of Atonement. You are right that this is definitely part of our patrimony. For so long, Catholics have avoided this motif. Now that scholars are rebooting their views on Paul and his milieu, I appreciate the second. BTW, I strongly recommend you to review Eleonor Stump’s magnificent Atonement (Oxford 2018).
I’d be interested in speculations about the development of the Church in Jerusalem post Council of Jerusalem in contrast the Churches Paul visits and preaches at. I’ve always had a sense that they maintained many of the Jewish cultural elements till the sacking of Jerusalem.
Also, I'm really looking forward to the second part of the Catholic/Anglican Eucharist dialogue
Really love these book reviews ❤
Solid work!
Just a thought here, but would you be willing to review the book ‘Galatians’ by Avi Ben Mordechai? It deals with some of what you discussed here, but was developed by a “Messianic Jewish” scholar.
I was raised in that sect, but eventually converted to the Catholic faith. That book was instrumental in how my family raised me to read and understand Paul.
I think with your review of this work - and your overall perspective on First Century theology in general - it would cause you to be a fantastic resource in the discussion with contemporary Hebrew Roots sect members. As far as I know, there has been no Catholic (or any Apostolic Christian) response.
Regardless, thank you for your work!
Hi! Thanks for the compliment. I took a look at the book. It is kind of pricey for me right now. If I could get my hands on it I would certainly review it.
@@Erick_Ybarra
I’ll happily buy you a copy. Just tell me where to send it. 🙂
I wish this was available as an audiobook, as many of Pitre's, Barber's and, e.g., NT Wright's Paul: A Biography are.
I just bought this book on Verbum/Logos and I can't wait to dive in. I've been studying Reformed Protestantism concept of forensic justification for the last few weeks and I was somewhat convinced of Reformed claims until I read about the "New Perspective on Paul." In my research, this book came up. Thanks for the review!
Thanks for the recommend! Ill add it to my list. I think understanding Pauline theology and communicating that understanding is one key for Catholics to become the bearer and safeguarder of the Holy Scriptures in the public eye once again.
This book just happened to be on sale this month on Verbum? Pretty cool.
"Petree" not "Petray"
Thanks
@Erick_Ybarra of course brother. Love your content! Sorry, im just a stickler when it comes to that
@@Thedisciplemike Oh I get it
Huh, I thought it was just pronounced same as Peter
Great video. Some exciting upcoming conversations!
Thanks!
Thank you for the excellent review and your engagement of the text. Catholic scholars are a bit late to the New Paul party, even though there is little to reconsider regarding Pauline theology. Thank you for your support of the legal motif of Atonement. You are right that this is definitely part of our patrimony. For so long, Catholics have avoided this motif. Now that scholars are rebooting their views on Paul and his milieu, I appreciate the second.
BTW, I strongly recommend you to review Eleonor Stump’s magnificent Atonement (Oxford 2018).
I’d be interested in speculations about the development of the Church in Jerusalem post Council of Jerusalem in contrast the Churches Paul visits and preaches at. I’ve always had a sense that they maintained many of the Jewish cultural elements till the sacking of Jerusalem.
I have a book proposal for them - Paul: A False Apostle