

Reading Romans after Supersessionism
Book • 2018
Brian Tucker's 'Reading Romans After Supersessionism' collects research and perspectives that challenge supersessionist interpretations of Paul's Letter to the Romans.
The book examines how Paul's language has been read in ways that displace the ongoing covenantal status of Israel, and it proposes interpretive alternatives that respect Jewish identity and Torah's continuing role.
Contributors engage biblical, historical, and theological methods to rethink ecclesial claims that have marginalized Jewish particularity.
The volume aims to correct historical and theological misunderstandings that have fostered supersessionist tendencies within Christian interpretation.
It is significant for scholars interested in post-Holocaust theological ethics, Jewish–Christian relations, and Pauline studies.
The book examines how Paul's language has been read in ways that displace the ongoing covenantal status of Israel, and it proposes interpretive alternatives that respect Jewish identity and Torah's continuing role.
Contributors engage biblical, historical, and theological methods to rethink ecclesial claims that have marginalized Jewish particularity.
The volume aims to correct historical and theological misunderstandings that have fostered supersessionist tendencies within Christian interpretation.
It is significant for scholars interested in post-Holocaust theological ethics, Jewish–Christian relations, and Pauline studies.
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when discussing contemporary resistance to supersessionist readings of Paul and the role of Torah and covenant.

Chris Tilling

Chris Tilling – Barth on Romans (Part 2)


