Part 1b - No Righteousness by the Law [2:6-3:20]
- [1:18-4:25] Justification by Faith
- [1:18-3:20] We cannot gain righteousness from the law
- [1:18-32] Sin is Universal
- [2:1-5] You are just as much under judgement as those you condemn
- [2:1] If you judge others, you automatically condemn yourself
- [2:2] God has a standard of judgement
- [2:3] Do you think that the fact that God has not judged you yet, means he has forgotten?
- [2:4-5] Whereas actually he is giving you time to repent, else you will be punished in the end
- [2:6-11] God’s judgement is according to his standards and impartial for both Jews and Gentiles
- [2:12-3:8] Having the law does not give Jews a special status
- [2:12-16] On the Day of Judgement will not be about what law you have, but how well you do what the law requires
- [2:17-29] The limitations of the Old Covenant
- [2:17-24] You may think you have a very special relationship with God because you have the law, but if you don’t keep it, the opposite is true—you dishonour God.
- [2:25-29] Your status as a Jew through circumcision is worth nothing unless you keep the law. A Gentile who obeys the law is more Jewish than you!
- [3:1-8] Problems
- [3:1-4] Problem 1: What advantage is it to be a Jew? —there are many advantages
- [3:5-8] Problem 2: Is God unjust to condemn actions that bring him glory —no, else he couldn’t judge anyone
- [3:9-18] Jews can be as evil as Gentiles
- [3:19-20] Therefore no-one can make themselves righteous by the law
- [1:18-3:20] We cannot gain righteousness from the law
Structure of [2:6-11]
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- Is this teachine we are saved by works?
- Is the Justification by works in [v.6]
- Hypothetical?
- Fulfilled by Christians through the Spirit?
- We really are saved by works?
- in the context here, the purpose is [v.11] to establish God’s impartiality
- but later, in [8:4] we see that in fact the Christian does fulfill the law
- Is the Justification by works in [v.6]
- [2:12-3:8] Having the law does not give Jews a special status
- [2:12-16] On the Day of Judgement will not be about what law you have, but how well you do what the law requires
- Two laws?
- Paul is “leveling the playing field between Jew and Gentile” (Moo, p.127)
- [2:15] “the work of the law written on our hearts”
- this is an important concept
- Adam
- defaced in the fall
- New Covenant
- relationship with conscience
- this is an important concept
- Two laws?
- [2:17-29] The limitations of the Old Covenant
- [2:17-24] You may think you have a very special relationship with God because you have the law, but if you don’t keep it, the opposite is true—you dishonour God.
- [2:25-29] Your status as a Jew through circumcision is worth nothing unless you keep the law. A Gentile who obeys the law is more Jewish than you!
- [3:1-8] Problems
- [3:1-4] Problem 1: What advantage is it to be a Jew? —there are many advantages
- [3:5-8] Problem 2: Is God unjust to condemn actions that bring him glory —no, else he couldn’t judge anyone
- [2:12-16] On the Day of Judgement will not be about what law you have, but how well you do what the law requires
- [3:9-18] Jews can be as evil as Gentiles
- [3:19-20] Therefore no-one can make themselves righteous by the law
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