Corruption and Redemption of Creation: Nature in Romans 8.19-22 and Jewish Apocalyptic Literature



Corruption and Redemption of Creation: Nature in Romans 8.19-22 and Jewish Apocalyptic Literature

"Romans 8.19-22 is the most important passage expressing the Apostle Paul's theology of the present condition and eschatological hope of the natural world. The corruption and suffering of creation and its longing for deliverance are placed in the context of the suffering of the children of God, who look forward to sharing glory with Christ (vv. 17-30)."

Dr. Harry Hahne


Harry A. Hahne
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Nature plays an important and often neglected role in Jewish apocalypses. Most Second Temple Jewish apocalypses (ca. 200 BC - AD 100) do not oppose the material world, but view nature as damaged by human and angelic sin. Rather than expecting God to destroy the world, many look forward to God's dramatic eschatological deliverance of nature from corruption. Although Romans 8:19-22 was not written in the genre of an apocalypse, it shares the basic apocalyptic world view. The Apostle Paul follows that stream of apocalyptic thought that looks forward to the transformation of creation by an eschatological divine act, the reversal of the damage caused by sin, and the perfection of nature to share glory with redeemed humanity. A comparison of nature in Jewish apocalypses and Romans 8:19-22 reveals important insights into the theology of early Judaism and its influence on early Christian thought.
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