The final section of Wright’s chapter on Galatians is pretty good (pp. 114-118), and the observations I have already made would remain. There are just two things that deserve a brief comment.
If my inclusion in Abraham’s family in the present is defined by “the faith which works through love,” three questions occur to me straight off. And they are, how much faith, how much work, and how much love? Because when I look at those days when my faith is raggedy, my work slipshod, and my love in tatters, is Abraham still my father?
My point here is not that Wright is threatening to undo justification, but that he has obscured it on the individual level to an extent that is going to do some significant damage to the individual assurance of many. I am not saying that Wright is teaching salvation by works, but I am saying that when free grace is clumsily expressed to God’s people, some of them will figure out a way to get a works principle into the affair in about fifteen minutes. C.S. Lewis once made a comment about writing that applies to pastoral care — he said that when driving sheep down a lane, if there is any open gate along the side of the path for them to go through, they will go through it. So close those gates.
My second comment is on a subject I have already noted, but I really want to say something about it again.
But I bet you ten dollars that when that day comes, everybody will still be capitalizing the Archbishop of Canterbury properly. Wonder why. The late Fulton Sheen had an exchange with an editor who kept reducing his upper case H in Hell to lower case. They went back and forth a few times, and then the editor asked Sheen why he kept capitalizing Hell. And Sheen said, “Because it’s a place. You know, like Scarsdale.”