Paul’s designations of God in Romans
dc.contributor.advisor
Foster, Paul
dc.contributor.advisor
Novenson, Matthew
dc.contributor.author
Au, Wing Yi
dc.contributor.sponsor
other
en
dc.date.accessioned
2022-02-07T15:17:28Z
dc.date.available
2022-02-07T15:17:28Z
dc.date.issued
2021-12-01
dc.description.abstract
This thesis investigates one aspect of Paul’s God-languages, namely, Paul’s
divine designations of θεός in his letter to the Romans. By comparing and contrasting
Paul’s designations with his Jewish and pagan contemporaries, this thesis argues that
Paul creatively reinterprets and adapts the socio-linguistic resources of divine epithets
to justify for the incorporation of Gentiles in God’s salvation. Despite a presumed or
neglected “preconceived understanding” of Paul’s God in Pauline scholarship, this
study begins with an observation that Paul’s divine designations are neither ordinary
nor precedented in Jewish tradition. Inspired by a systemic-functional linguist, Jay
Lemke’s model of thematic meaning, divine designations are taken as sociolinguistic
phenomenon. The meanings of Paul’s designations are first studied in the respective
arguments in Romans. Then, they are compared to the recurrent linguistic patterns of
divine epithets found in the OT, early Jewish, and pagan texts.
Although exact parallels of Paul’s designations are absent in Jewish tradition,
striking linguistic resemblance is found between Greco-Roman texts and Romans.
Paul does not make up these epithets out of nothing, nevertheless, their thematic
meanings divert from its pagan usage. Paul’s designations in Romans trace God’s
essential salvific activities that allows for the incorporation of Gentiles.
While God is the Father of Davidic kings in the OT, God’s Fatherhood (Rom
1:7; 6:4; 8:15; 15:6) is reinterpreted in terms of his redeeming acts on the cross. Yet,
the Father’s promise concerning Israel’s blessing of adoption is not redirected but
expanded to the Gentiles. As for εἷς ὁ θεός (3:30), Paul contends the impartiality of
the one God who justifies Jews and Gentiles alike on the same basis of faith. Besides
the scope of God’s justifying activities, four interconnected designations in 4:5, 17b,
24 are employed to justify the place of the ἔθνη in Abraham’s family, Paul’s mission
as well as God’s eschatological kingdom. In Romans 9: 12, 16, the designations
highlight God’s incongruous call and mercy are what constitute, create, and sustain
Israel from the beginning. In Romans, the same divine call and mercy incorporate
Gentiles into God’s community of salvation in the same way. In 15:5, the theological
vision of divine ὑπομονῆς and παρακλήσεως illustrates a transformation from
judgmental divisive minds into one conformed mind. The result of unified worship is
confirmed in “the God of hope”, configuring God’s eschatological hope for the
Gentiles (15:13). In the last two designations ὁ θεὸς τῆς εἰρήνης (15:33; 16:20a), Paul
reassures that any threats to the community of God’s people will be ultimately
“pacified” by the conquering warrior God.
For Paul, the God of Israel, especially in the OT and Romans, never falters in
fulfilling his role as the Father, redeemer, justifier, reviver, mercy-giver, and warrior
to create, rescue, and restore his people. However, compared with his Jewish and
pagan contemporaries, Paul’s designations put special emphasis on the inclusion of
ἔθνη in God’s universal salvation community.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38543
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/1807
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
Pauline theology
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dc.subject
designations
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dc.subject
names
en
dc.subject
titles
en
dc.subject
Romans
en
dc.subject
Letter to the Romans
en
dc.subject
Gentile inclusion
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dc.subject
Pauline epistles
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dc.title
Paul’s designations of God in Romans
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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