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Scripture, Texts, and Tracings in Romans

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The Apostle employs the Scriptures more in Romans than in any of his other letters. Scripture, Texts, and Tracings in Romans advances the interpretation of Romans by exploring how the Apostle Paul quoted, alluded to, or "echoed" the Jewish Scriptures. Identification of allusions is at the forefront, as are questions of methodology, the texture of Paul's theology, his understanding of Scripture, and implications for other areas of Pauline studies, such as empire-criticism.
Introduction: Scripture, Texts, and Tracings in Romans - A. Andrew Das 1.Habakkuk 2:4 in Romans: Echoes, Allusions, and Rewriting - Roy E. Ciampa 2.Paul's Use of Deutero-Isaiah in Romans 2:24 and in the Gospel of Romans - B. J. Oropeza 3.To David? Paul's Use of Composite Quotations in Romans 3:10-18: Taking the Context into Account - Michael Graham 4. As the Sin-Offering in Romans 8:3: A Critique - A. Andrew Das 5.The Interceding Spirit: Reevaluating the Background of Rom 8:26-27 - Joseph R. Dodson 6.The Isaianic New Exodus Wisdom Polemic in Romans 9-11 - Steven P. Sullivan 7.Who Do You Think You Are? Paul's Use of the Old Testament in Romans 9:20-21 - Brian Abasciano 8.Righteousness by Faith, Not by the Law: Paul's Argument from Scripture in Romans 10:1-8 - Harry Alan Hahne 9.Agency and Obduracy: A Comparison of Romans 11:8 And 1QIsa 6:9-10 - Stuart B. Langley 10.Echoes and Allusions to the Jewish Scriptures in Paul's Ethical Discourse in Romans 12:9-21 - Michael F. Bird 11.Christ as Messiah in Romans - A. Andrew Das 12.Text and Topos: Intertextuality in Romans and the Question of Paul's Politics - Neil Elliott Afterword - Craig S. Keener About the Contributors
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