N. T. Wright video on the topic of justification:
See articles by Wright on sidebar.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Final presentations
Last night was our last session dealing with the text of Romans.
Now we take a week off (May 11), and the final two sessions (May 19, 25)
will be devoted to summary/applications...and your presentations.
Remember, this project can be a paper (4-6 pages) or a 2o minute class presentation (sermon, teaching, drama, video, interview, art, etc.) Also: between this project and your journal, I will expect you to interact with at least three of the books or articles on the website links (Note: I have added more; there are plenty of great options).
Please let me know if you have a preference on which night you would prefer;
they are working out pretty evenly so far.
Here are some of the suggestions we came up with for possible themes; but you are not limited to these:
- -Shifting our understanding from an individualistic emphasis on justification by faith to a corporate understanding of the righteousness of God.
- -A model for Jewish/Gentile unity and mutual understanding.
- Discussion of the "heaping hot coals" and love of neighbor/enemy. My audio here.
- -The implications of the Gentile offering to the Jerusalem church
- -Cross-cultural issues in the letter, and implications for contemporary church.
- -A sermon on a common "memory verse" in Romans, but bringing in the context of the passage, and the letter ( 3:23, 5:1, 8:28, 11:29, 12:1-3 etc)
- Role of women in chapter 16, and elsewhere in Paul.
- Interview with a Jewish person, or a non-believer, around issues raised in Romans.
- In-depth look at the problems of Romans 7
- Trace bounded, centered, and fuzzy sets throughout Romans, and offer application for today
- Dialogue with Rabbi Adam (how amazing to have a messianic rabbi in the class) around issues of theology and practice discussed in Romans.
- Importance of Paul's use of diatribe/ first order discourse.
- Use a certain church or ministry as case study related to issues in Romans
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