This series of Lenten Conferences was preached by Mgr Ronald Knox in Westminster Cathedral on the Sunday evenings in Lent 1950. The titles of the conferences: "The Pauline Approach," "St. Paul and the Old Testament," "St. Paul and Christ's Divinity," "St. Paul and Christ's Humanity," "St. Paul on the Mystical Body," and "St. Paul on the Risen Life of the Christian." His approach: "I want to study St Paul's letters in isolation, forgetting for the moment that we have any Christian tradition, any Gospel narrative to supplement them." What we discover is that St. Paul dovetails with the gospels while concentrating attention on different things (e.g., no mention of Jesus' bio and virtually no quoting of Him). Then, throughout the book, Knox points out certain emphases of Paul's that the reader may not have considered or which may not immediately come to mind to, especially, the non-Bible scholar (e.g., Paul giving Christian theology the Fall of Adam; Christ dying as our representative, not in our stead).
In the concluding words of this little book, Knox brings full circle what he proposed at the beginning: "[Paul] has preserved for us, concurrently with [the Gospels] yet independently of them, the same tradition of Christian teaching which has come down across all these centuries to you and me; only, he tapped it at the source."
A recommended read that can be taken as quickly or as slowly as you'd like; with the former it is a welcome addition to the reader's Pauline knowledge; with the latter it becomes a tool for reflection and meditation, particularly if all Scripture references are also looked up and read.
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