paul
+ NewAbraham's Faith Counted as Righteousness — Romans 4
Paul proves justification by faith from the Old Testament itself, citing Gen 15:6: "Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness." He develops this throughout Rom 4:1-12, arguing that the reckoning came before circumcision, so Abraham is father of believing Jew and Gentile alike. What does this "counting" mean? Wright stresses covenantal-membership language; the Reformers read the imputation of a righteousness received as gift; Trent emphasized that the same grace truly renews the believer. The contrast in 4:4-5 between wages and gift is what all affirm: righteousness is reckoned "to the one who does not work but believes." This Abrahamic promise anchors the covenant of grace traced through Gen 17:7 and reappears in Gal 3:6. Augustine had already insisted that even faith is God's gift, lest grace be owed, a point the Council of Orange made the church's common teaching.
Adam and Christ: The Two Heads of Humanity — Romans 5:12-21
Paul's clearest statement of the two representative heads is Rom 5:12-21: "as one trespass led to condemnation for all, so one act of righteousness leads to justification." Death reigned "from Adam," so that all are bound up with him. Augustine built the Western doctrine of original sin on this passage, reading the Latin in quo omnes peccaverunt as "in whom all sinned"; Trent received this, teaching that Adam's sin is transmitted to all and remedied only in Christ. Irenaeus had earlier framed Christ as the new Adam who recapitulates and heals humanity — the Eastern accent on restoration. The two heads structure the whole of redemptive history. The Adam-Christ parallel reaches back to the fall of Gen 3:17-19 and forward to the resurrection harvest of 1Cor 15:22: "as in Adam all die, so in Christ shall all be made alive." Bavinck treats this organic solidarity as the hinge of covenant theology.
The Kenosis — Philippians 2:5-11
Phil 2:5-11 traces Christ's descent and exaltation: though "in the form of God," he "emptied himself, taking the form of a servant," and was therefore "highly exalted." The hymn is the pattern of Christian humility and the map of redemption. Debate centers on the kenosis: of what did Christ empty himself? Chalcedon's two-natures grammar rules out any loss of deity; the self-emptying is the veiling of glory, not its abandonment. Barth read the passage as God's freedom to be lowly, while Bavinck guarded the immutability of the divine nature. The "form of God" language parallels Col 1:15 and John 1:1, and the universal homage of 2:10-11 fulfills the monotheistic oath of Isa 45:23. Every knee will bow to the crucified Lord.
The Resurrection as Vindication — 1 Corinthians 15
1Cor 15:3-8 preserves the earliest creed: "Christ died for our sins... was buried... was raised on the third day... and appeared." Paul stakes the whole faith on it: "if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile" (15:17). Wright argues at length that only a bodily resurrection explains the rise of the church, and Athanasius saw the resurrection as the public defeat of death itself. The resurrection is the Father's vindication of the crucified Son. The Adam-Christ contrast of 15:22 ties back to Rom 5:18, and the resurrection body of 1Cor 15:42-44 anchors Christian hope for the believer's own glorification promised in Rom 8:30.
The Lord's Supper — 1 Corinthians 11:23-26
1Cor 11:23-26 hands on the words of institution: "this is my body... this cup is the new covenant in my blood... do this in remembrance of me." The meal proclaims the Lord's death "until he comes." Aquinas articulated transubstantiation as the mode of Christ's presence, which Calvin rejected in favor of a true spiritual feeding by the Spirit. The Catechism summarizes the Catholic eucharistic faith. The Supper has been the central sacramental dividing line of the church. The "new covenant in my blood" fulfills Jer 31:31 and the Passover of Exod 12:23. The shared loaf expresses the one body of 1Cor 12:12.
The Church as the Body of Christ — 1 Corinthians 12
1Cor 12:12-27: "for just as the body is one and has many members... so it is with Christ." By one Spirit all are baptized into one body, and the diversity of gifts serves the common good. Augustine's totus Christus — the whole Christ, head and members — expresses this unity, and Calvin treated the church as the mother of believers. The Catechism develops the body-of-Christ image for the communion of saints. The Spirit who distributes gifts here is the same Spirit of John 15:26 and Pentecost in Acts 2:17. The one baptism into one body connects to Rom 6:3 and Eph 4:4-6.
The Resurrection of the Body — 1 Corinthians 15:35-58
1Cor 15:42-44 describes the resurrection body: "sown perishable... raised imperishable... sown a natural body... raised a spiritual body." The Christian hope is not escape from the body but its glorification. Wright argues that 'spiritual body' means Spirit-animated, not immaterial, and Bavinck treats bodily resurrection as the goal of the whole ordo salutis. Augustine devoted the close of City of God to the glorified body. The pattern is set by Christ's own resurrection in 1Cor 15:20 and promised as glorification in Rom 8:30. Death is finally "swallowed up in victory" (15:54).