Paul and the Law: Keeping the Commandments of God

Mid-levelAdvanced students / scholars, Pastors-in-trainingStrong recommendation

Evaluation

Overall Score: 8.4/10

A careful and bracing guide for preaching Paul, helping you hold grace and obedience together without confusion or compromise.

Publication Date(s): 2013
Pages: 249
ISBN: 9780830826322
Faithfulness to Scripture: 8.8/10
The argument is driven by close work in major Pauline texts. It models how to handle disputed passages without overstatement.
Doctrinal Clarity: 8.3/10
Christ remains central as the ground of justification and the source of new covenant obedience. The book helps keep ethics tethered to union with Christ.
Depth of Theological Insight: 8.9/10
Nuanced distinctions are handled well and pay dividends for teaching. The depth is most useful for those willing to think carefully.
Clarity of Writing: 8.1/10
Generally clear, though the topic demands precision and slows the pace. Definitions and summaries help readers stay oriented.
Usefulness for Preaching & Teaching: 8.4/10
It provides language for addressing legalism and laxity with equal firmness. Very useful for sermon preparation and training leaders.
Accessibility for the Intended Audience: 7.6/10
Readable for theologically trained readers, but not light. A slower reading plan will make it more profitable.

Summary

At a Glance

Length
249 pages
Type
Theological
Theo. Perspective
Broadly Evangelical
Overall score
8.4 / 10

This study tackles one of the most pastorally sensitive and exegetically contested topics in Pauline theology, the place of the law in the life of the Christian. The author argues with careful attention to the text that Paul is not anti obedience, yet he is deeply opposed to using the law as a covenant of righteousness. The book seeks to hold together what many sermons accidentally separate, justification by faith apart from works, and a real call to holiness shaped by the will of God. It moves through major Pauline passages, engages the language of commandment keeping, and shows how the new covenant reshapes the believer relationship to the law. The result is a framework that can help preachers avoid both legalism and lawlessness while honouring Paul own emphases.

Strengths

The greatest strength is its exegetical sobriety. Arguments are built from key texts rather than from slogans, and the author takes the time to clarify definitions, especially when the word law can mean different things in different contexts. The discussion of how Paul can affirm commandment keeping while denying the law as the basis of justification is particularly helpful for preaching. It also gives a pastorally workable way of speaking about the moral will of God without collapsing the covenants into one flat scheme. The book stays alert to the danger of importing later debates into Paul, yet it does not refuse theological synthesis. Ministers will appreciate that the conclusions are not merely academic, they provide categories that can serve discipleship, assurance, and church discipline.

Limitations

The careful pace means the argument can feel dense for readers who want quick answers. Some chapters require you to track distinctions that are not difficult, but they are necessary, and they may slow down more casual readers. Because the scope is biblical theology rather than a commentary, individual passages are treated selectively, and you may wish for more sustained exposition of particular problem texts. It also assumes a reader who is already aware of common positions in the debate, so absolute beginners may need a simpler introduction before they can benefit fully.

How We Would Use It

This is an excellent tool for preparing sermons in Romans, Galatians, and the letters where ethical instruction is prominent. It can also serve as a corrective when a church has grown confused about grace and obedience. We would use it in training settings, perhaps with elders in training, where you can read a chapter and then work through several Pauline texts together. It would also help in shaping membership teaching on sanctification. Keep your own pastoral context in mind, and translate the categories into plain language for your people, always letting the gospel drive the call to holiness.

Closing Recommendation

If your preaching on Paul tends to drift into either harshness or vagueness, this book can restore balance, offering clear categories rooted in careful reading of Scripture.

Where to buy
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Classification

  • Level: Mid-level
  • Best For: Advanced students / scholars, Pastors-in-training
  • Priority: Strong recommendation

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Puritans

Bible Atlas

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