A review from John D. Caputo:
George Martin has given us a Paul straight from the Apostle’s mouth, focusing on the authentic Pauline letters, adopting the standpoint of Paul’s own self-description, and taking Acts with a grain of salt. He breaks up the sedimented views of Paul that have been baked into the tradition and filled seminary libraries for centuries, allowing us to catch sight of a Paul who was not trying to start up a new religion, but announce the fulfillment of his Jewish faith. A Paul who was an apostle of Messiah Jesus, not a “convert” to “Christianity” (no such thing), who wanted to get out the word that the rule of the God of Israel was about to be established and it included everyone. He was not speaking against the Jews but adding the gentiles to the Jews; he did not exclude women but included them. He was not guilt ridden and he did not dismiss the Law; he simply thought the Law was for the Jews and the Gentiles could get along fine with love, which fulfilled the Law. All this and more, along with surveying a mountain of literature in perfectly clear English which studiously avoids the density of academic jargon. A pleasure to read.
John D. Caputo                                   T
Thomas J. Watson Professor Emeritus of Religion, Syracuse University
David R. Cook Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Villanova University
https://johndcaputo.com/
https://www.facebook.com/pages/John-D-Caputo/102354246484058

A review from Joseph B Tyson, Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies, Southern Methodist University.

“Thank you again for sending your book and especially for the kind words you inscribed.

 I very much enjoyed reading the book.  It is an impressive accomplishment. I doubt if I am qualified to judge its suitability for the audience you intend, but, for what it’s worth, I think it should be accessible to serious readers who bring with them an interest in Paul and early Jesus movements.

 I was particularly impressed with the range of your own scholarship, which undergirds your presentation. It is clear that you have a deep acquaintance with those books and articles that have shaped modern Pauline studies.

 Your sensitivity to issues relating to Paul as a Jew seems right on target. Your terminology seems carefully chosen: I have in mind the concept that Paul embraced a theology of Judaism with messiah Jesus.

 I also appreciate your descriptions of Paul as a “nobody.” Studies of his sociological context seem rarely to have influenced popular imagination, but your study should help to remedy this situation.

 This email comes with the hope and, indeed, the expectation that your work will be well received by a large audience.

  • Brother Glen Lewandowski. O.S. C. (Holy Cross Priory, Onamia, MN)

    Charles Lyell, inventing geology, taught us to dig down, dig deeper. George Martin teaches us not to trust upper-crust impressions of Paul, hagiographical Church Saint, nor deutero-pauline hierarchical caricatures of a church ordering Paul, and not even of a peace-maker Paul, boon companion of Luke in his rose-colored travelogue in Eye-Witness Acts. To understand Paul the man, dig deeper. Dig down under outsiders’ impressions to Paul the writer himself on Paul the Gospel Apostle. Bedrock letters, warts and all.

  • Tex Sample, Robert B. And Kathleen Rogers Professor Emeritus of Church and Society, Saint Paul School of Theology

    Well written, clear, and engaging George Martin addresses Paul's story as a pastor, attempting to let this amazing ambassador of the early ekklesia speak for himself from his authentic letters. Demonstrating an acquaintance with a broad range of current scholarship Martin brings fresh eyes to the Pauline narrative with thoughtful implications in every chapter. Martin’s humble appreciation for the complexity of final conclusions, does not keep him from providing well supported considerations about the Paul of the first century

  • L.L. Welborn, Professor of New Testament, Fordham University

    “George Martin’s Paul Found in His Letters is an exciting journey into the mind and heart of the apostle—a man who remains unknown to most Christians, whose views are shaped by the traditional image of Paul as the guarantor of a divinely willed hierarchy. Martin’s work is fully informed by the most rigorous historical-critical scholarship. Yet, the Paul whom Martin discovers is surprisingly original, a thinker of equality. Martin’s book is a rewarding read for scholars and students alike.

  • Bill Tammeus, Former Faith Columnist with the Kansas City Star, from his blog at www.billtammeus.typepad.com

    Can we really know who the Apostle Paul was? Maybe.

    No one in the first century of the Common Era was more important in drawing people to become followers of Jesus of Nazareth than the man Christians call the Apostle Paul, or St. Paul.

    And it's hard to think of anyone in Christian history who has been more misunderstood over the centuries, especially by Christians (and Jews, for that matter), than Paul.

    But starting in 1963, with the publication of an article in the Harvard Theological Review by Krister Stendahl, bishop of Stockholm in the Church of Sweden, Paul has been coming into a clearer focus in countless ways. In recent times, in fact, a Kansas City scholar, Mark D. Nanos, has been at the forefront of this Pauline scholarship. One of the essays you can find on Mark's website is "Paul -- Why Bother?: A Jewish Perspective." You can read it here.

    Among the major themes of this new perspective on Paul are that he always thought of himself as a Jew, that he never converted to Christianity because, in his lifetime, Christianity as a religion separate from Judaism didn't exist and that Paul didn't ever say a lot of what people have long thought he said. Beyond that, this misunderstood and, thus, mischaracterized Paul has been among the roots of almost 2,000 years of anti-Jewish teachings in Christianity.

    One reason many people don't know about this newer view of Paul is that the considerable scholarly work that's been done rarely seems to find its way into the pulpits of churches even if the scholarship is read and grasped by the people who deliver weekly sermons. In some ways, that's understandable, given that explaining to a congregation that although the scripture passages being used as the basis of the sermon is attributed to Paul, someone else actually wrote it in Paul's name -- and sometimes, thus, it misrepresented what Paul said or would have said on that subject. By then, half the sermon time is gone and half the congregation is yawning.

    However, retired Episcopal priest George H. Martin has written a new book -- Paul Found in His Letters -- in which he does his best to equip preachers to make it much clearer to those who hear their sermons who Paul really was and what he really said and thought.

    It's helpful, insightful and rooted in Martin's own long experience as a preacher. And if Christian pastors preaching sermons would just read it and take its message to heart, a lot of the controversy caused by what people think Paul said might disappear or at least diminish.

    Paul is credited with writing 13 of the 27 books in the New Testament. However, scholars consider only seven of them indisputably authored by Paul. So Martin limits his effort to find the real Paul to those seven. And he notes quite carefully and thoroughly how the Paul he finds in Paul's authentic epistles differs -- sometimes starkly -- from the Paul who appears in other books, especially in the Acts of the Apostles.

    For example, writes Martin, "Paul's way of telling the story of being called to be an apostle is quite different from the account in Acts. . .(W)hen we let Paul have the last word on what happened, we will see a different Paul. . ." Among other things, we will be more likely to say that the risen Christ "called" Paul to be an apostle, not that Paul had a conversion experience. The latter always sounds as if he converted from Judaism to Christianity. Instead, he became part of the rather small segment of Jews at the time who were convinced that Jesus is the Messiah for whom Jews had waited so long. And far from leaving a Jewish life, Paul spent his apostleship calling others "to live Jewishly," Martin writes.

    The book of Acts, Martin writes, "has played such a significant role in planting the image of Paul in our minds. More often than not all that is reported in it has been accepted as fact, not fiction. But it seems likely that it contains both fact and fiction."

    So he suggests always checking Acts against what Paul really said in his authentic letters: Romans, I and II Corinthians, I Thessalonians, Philemon, Galatians and Philippians. There is general consensus (though with some dispute) that II Thessalonians, Colossians and Ephesians were not written by Paul, but there is even more solid scholarly consensus that Paul did not write I and II Timothy and Titus. And as Martin notes, it's from those three so-called "pastoral epistles" that come "most of the most troubling statements attributed to Paul." By contrast, it's in the so-called "Letter of Tears" (II Corinthians chapters 10 through 13) where we find "the greatest amount of autobiographical material from any of the undisputed letters."

    Martin acknowledges that neither he nor anyone else, using the New Testament as the sole source, can "present an organized biographical story regarding Paul," mostly because "we actually don't know much." But by using the undisputed epistles, Martin believes he can get closer to that. And much more important for the church today, he can get closer to Paul's theological thinking about such hot-button topics as slavery and the role of women in both the church and marriage. In this way, Paul's thinking turns out to be much more nuanced and even liberated than it might seem to be when we read the epistles he didn't really write.

    As Martin notes, "what will surprise some about this Paul is that he cannot be categorized as a misogynistic patriarchal male who distrusted women." Indeed, in many ways, by the standards of his day, Martin says, Paul could be called an "unmanly man," meaning he was comfortable with his feminine side.

    The picture of Paul that emerges from Martin's study is of a poor man who gave up any privilege he had as a Pharisee with, perhaps, Roman citizenship so that he could not just identify with the poor and outcast on whom Jesus focused his ministry but actually become poor and outcast himself. And yet it was all worth it to Paul, who, Martin writes, may have traveled more than 10,000 miles in his ministry for the sake of being "in Christ."

    As Martin writes, "Paul knew, from firsthand experience, the world of the urban poor, who lived (in the words of II Corinthians 11:27) "in toil and hardship, through many a sleepless night, hungry and thirsty, often without food, cold and naked."

    Even after reading Martin and other books on Paul, we still see the apostle "through a mirror, dimly," to use words found in his famous chapter on love in I Corinthians. Still, what we can discern quite clearly in the authentic Pauline letters is that, as Martin writes, "his wasn't a gospel for some kind of inner spiritual renewal, but it was actually a bold political vision, a direct challenge to those claiming to rule the world."

    That's the Paul people in the pews of Christian churches can and should hear and hear about. This book can help make that happen.

    My only negative surprise about this book was that the publisher, Claremont Press, the official imprint of Claremont School of Theology in Claremont, Calif., has done the author no favors by allowing too many typographical and punctuational errors and misspellings into the final text. In the end, it doesn't affect meaning but careful readers will find it needlessly annoying.

    NOTE: From George Martin, author
    Fortunately Bill Tammeus and an astute Lutheran Pastor friend notified me about the editing issue. The Copy Editor has fixed them. This is a print-on-demand book, which meant the fix was easy. Copies of the book purchased beginning in February 2023 are corrected!

  • Bill Tammeus: Book Review in the March issue the Presbyterian Outlook

    Tammeus review of Paul Found in His Letters, by George H. Martin – 562 words

    Paul Found in His Letters

    George H. Martin

    Claremont Press, 336 pages / Published Nov. 1, 2022

    Reviewed by Bill Tammeus

    Christian preachers must choose which Apostle Paul to offer congregants.

    Is Paul radically inclusive, in harmony with advocates of diversity, equity and inclusion? That Paul can be found in Galatians 3:28: “There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.”

    Or is Paul a “misogynistic patriarchal male who distrusted women”? George Martin, author of this splendid new book, dismisses that description, but you can find that Paul in Ephesians 5:22-23: “Wives, be subject to your husbands as you are to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife just as Christ is the head of the church. . .” and in I Timothy 2:12: “I permit no woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she is to keep silent.”

    So, which Paul is it?

    Martin begins his search for the authentic Paul by limiting his sources to seven of the 13 New Testament books to which Paul’s name is attached — the seven for which there’s scholarly consensus that Paul actually wrote (or dictated) them: Romans, I and II Corinthians, I Thessalonians, Philemon, Galatians and Philippians.

    As Martin notes, many of the "most troubling statements attributed to Paul" come from the three so-called "pastoral epistles," I and II Timothy and Titus. And, he asserts, the Paul portrayed in the book of Acts can differ rather dramatically from the Paul found in what he really wrote.

    Martin’s goal — a worthy one — is to help preachers understand the real Paul so they and their congregations can learn from him and not get distracted by words that don’t represent fairly what he really thought.

    The reality is that Paul has been misused in various ways for 2,000 years. One of the most damaging misunderstandings about him is that he abandoned Judaism and converted to Christianity. But in Paul’s time there was not yet a Christian religion to which to convert. Misunderstanding Paul in this way has been a major source of the anti-Judaism that Christianity has promoted for most of its existence.

    Never a “Christian,” Paul became part of a small Jewish sect that believed the Messiah had come as Jesus and that this Jesus had called him to tell the gospel story everywhere he could. Paul didn’t leave a Jewish life, Martin writes, but, rather, spent his apostleship inviting others "to live Jewishly."

    That Paul emerged with the innovative Pauline scholarship that began in 1963 with publication of an article in the Harvard Theological Review by Krister Stendahl, bishop of Stockholm in the Church of Sweden, and has since been added to by many others.

    Martin properly acknowledges the impossibility of producing an accurate, full biography of Paul using New Testament books. But by focusing on the seven books he actually wrote, it’s possible to gain a clearer understanding of this often-misconstrued man.

    Anyone who preaches can learn from this book. But it also should be a good resource for adult Christian education classes that want to take the Bible seriously, which means, among other things, not taking it all literally.

    <<<<<<<>>>>>>>

    Bill Tammeus, a Presbyterian elder and former Kansas City Star columnist, is the author or co-author of seven books, most recently Love, Loss and Endurance: A 9/11 Story of Resilience and Hope in an Age of Anxiety.

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