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Wiley InterScience | ||||||||
![]() International Journal of Systematic TheologyVolume 1 Issue 3, Pages 231 - 252 Published Online: 16 Dec 2002 © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract | Full Text: PDF (Size: 121K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Natural Theology in Paul? Reading Romans 1.19–20 Copyright Blackwell Publishers Ltd 1999 ABSTRACTThis reading of Romans 1.19–20 suggests that, viewed within the argumentative progression of the letter from 1.18–3.20, these verses are properly understood as a subversion of the premises of natural revelation, rather than an endorsement of them. The traditional account of Paul's argument, in which 1.19–20 announces a theology of natural knowledge of God, is contradicted both by Paul's wider theological commitments and by his attitude to the privileges of Judaism. An alternative construal of the argument considers it as an ad hominem strategy, in which the opening verses serve to recapitulate at the beginning of the argument the presuppositions that Paul seeks ultimately to overthrow. |
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