In his discussion of the last part of Romans, Wright returns to his great theme. The gospel is all about the vindication of God’s righteousness in that the Messiah finally came, as promised, and fulfilled God’s-plan-for-the-world-through Israel. That’s Wright’s drum, and I have to say that he is consistent in how he lays down the beat. And it is a good beat, one that the Church should dance to. What I don’t get is why he leaves out the lead guitar and bass. No matter how good the beat is, the jazz is still impoverished.
Now when God has declared He will do something, it is the essence of unbelief to get in there and try to do it yourself. This is what the Pelagians were doing, this is what medieval merit-mongers were doing, and this is what these first-century Jews were doing. They differed, certainly, in what they believed the standard of righteousness was actually supposed to be, but they shared the autonomous push to run the show. Whatever righteousness was, they wanted to be in charge of it. That autonomous push has one name throughout all Scripture, throughout all generations, throughout all eras. It is unbelief, and it is the necessary fruit of an unconverted and unregenerate heart. Regardless of what the standard of righteousness is assumed to be, there is always an insistence that the unbeliever be allowed to go about to establish his own form of it.
Now Wright argues that Israel could not have been attempting works-righteousness “in the old Reformational sense,” and the reason he gives is that the “law was they way of life for a people already redeemed” (p. 215, emphasis mine).
But according to Wright (and I think he is right about this), Israel was in exile, and because they had been in exile for centuries, they were desperately in need of another Exodus, desperately in need of redemption. What is exile but a type of being in Egypt again? What is it but a confession of helplessness and slavery? And because they were in this experienced condition of exile (as Wright has ably demonstrated elsewhere), it is not possible to say that Israel could not have been attempting works-righteousness “because they were already redeemed.” This is a major tension within Wright’s approach, and he really needs to fix it.
Wright is more comfortable with Calvinism than with Lutheranism. He believes that the Lutheran idea of the law as negative is wrong, and he believes the Calvinist view of the law as positive is correct but far too limited. He wants his broader proposal to take everybody in the Reformation tradition up to the next level.
“Do we then overthrow the Reformation tradition by this theology? On the contrary, we establish it. Everything Luther and Calvin wanted to achieve is within this glorious Pauline framework of thought” (p. 224).
Now, at the same time, to be fair to Wright, when he talks about Calvinists with a truncated vision, men who are so focused on the minutiae of the ordo that they cannot see the panorama that Wright points to — I confess that they do exist. I have tangled with them, and he is not making them up. They not only have screwed down the lid of the Westminster Confession, but they then put screws in it, wrapped it with duct tape, and buried it in the ground. They have precious truth in there that will never get lost now. They do this because they have a harsh master who doesn’t put up with much.
Moreover, some of these guardians of orthodoxy are so blinkered that not only do they refuse to look at the grand view, but they also accuse of heresy anyone who dares to look up at the view. They are so busy analyzing the gravel in the pull-out by the highway that looks across at the Grand Tetons that they are suspicious of anyone who gathers by the rail to oooh and aaah, even for a minute. Of course, Wright doesn’t help matters when he then announces, “Gravel? What gravel? There’s no gravel in Paul.” And I am tempted to say, “For pity’s sake, Tom, look at what you are standing on for a minute. Stop exasperating them.” Now I don’t feel right calling a bishop Tom, but what can you do in these egalitarian days? And that’s what they put on the cover of the book.
One last major irritation, mentioned before.
“. . . what Jesus Christ continues to do and teach by the gift of his holy spirit . . .” (p. 222).