Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Daniel K. Eng on δικαιοω in James 2:21, 25

  

. . . even if εδικαιωθη refers to a present event and it not related to σωσαι, the discourse devices reveal that the focal point of each appeal to an exemplar is not the verb, but εξ εργων. Thus, regardless of the referent of εδικαιωθη, the author uses these examples to support the notion that eschatological salvation 9through faith, given 2.13-14) is εξ εργων. IN other words, the point of continuity between the hearers and the two OT exemplars is εξ εργων. Just like Abraham and Rahab were justified by their deeds (2.21-25), one is saved by faith that has deeds (2.13-14).

 

In James 2.26, the author again gives the axiom that faith without deeds if impotent to save. This time, an analogy supports the point. With clauses introduced by ωσπερ and ουτως, the first clause acts as a framing comparison; the focus is on the second clause. Word order is used to highlight the important element in each clause: νεκρον/νεκρα is in the preverbal P2 position, indicating saliency. As a body without a spirit is dead, so is faith without deeds. In other words, deeds bring life to faith, making the faith potent.  This potency is not a matter of degree: ‘James is not merely arguing that a “faith working with works” is more “righteous” before God . . . What is at stake is salvation and justification in an eschatological sense’ (Cargal, Restoring the Diaspora, p. 132. Cf. Kondradt, Christliche Existenz, p. 289). (Daniel K. Eng, Eschatological Approval: The Structure and Unifying Motif of James [New Testament Monographs 45; Sheffield: Sheffield Phoenix, 2022], 151-52)

 

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