Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Asking new exegetical questions
- 2 Exegesis of Romans 1.16–4.25: the basic conception and its problems
- 3 Romans 1.16–4.25: what do we want to know?
- 4 The basis for separating presuppositions from intended address
- 5 How to trace what Paul was intending to say to the Romans
- 6 Working from the problems of interpretation within the justification framework
- 7 Paul's purpose in creating the text
- 8 The nature of the text
- 9 Hypothesis describing Romans 1.16–4.25
- 10 The teleological exposition of Romans 1.16–4.25
- 11 Testing the teleological reading
- 12 The causal exposition of Romans 1.16–4.25
- 13 Review and conclusion
- Select bibliography
- Index of biblical and other ancient sources
- General index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Asking new exegetical questions
- 2 Exegesis of Romans 1.16–4.25: the basic conception and its problems
- 3 Romans 1.16–4.25: what do we want to know?
- 4 The basis for separating presuppositions from intended address
- 5 How to trace what Paul was intending to say to the Romans
- 6 Working from the problems of interpretation within the justification framework
- 7 Paul's purpose in creating the text
- 8 The nature of the text
- 9 Hypothesis describing Romans 1.16–4.25
- 10 The teleological exposition of Romans 1.16–4.25
- 11 Testing the teleological reading
- 12 The causal exposition of Romans 1.16–4.25
- 13 Review and conclusion
- Select bibliography
- Index of biblical and other ancient sources
- General index
Summary

- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Purpose and Cause in Pauline ExegesisRomans 1.16-4.25 and a New Approach to the Letters, pp. i - viPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999