Does Romans 2:14 Refer to the Natural Law?

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Does Romans 2:14 Refer to the Natural Law?
Abstract
Whilst after decades of research, exegetes have all agree on the complexity of Paul’s line of thinking in Rom 2:14–16, the ITC in its 2009 document, In Search of a Universal Ethic, still in an oversimplified manner propagates the view that Rom 2:14 presupposes a theory/theology of the natural law. This article makes plain the major disagreements among Pauline exegetes whether such presupposition stands by reviewing some major contributions to the discussion by raising major questions regarding the issue of φύσει in those verses, the nature of the law mentioned by Paul, the identity of the people Paul calls “Gentiles.” This article offers a more nuanced understanding of Rom 2:14. Keywords: Rom 2:14, ITC, Universal Ethic, Natural Law, φύσει, Gentiles
Publication
Orientis Aura: Macau Perspectives in Religious Studies
Issue
6
Pages
57-74
Date
2021
Language
en
ISSN
2519-5425
Short Title
Does Romans 2
Accessed
2/27/24, 3:47 AM
Library Catalog
journals.usj.edu.mo
Rights
Copyright (c) 2024 Andrew, Chi Hei Leong
Extra
Number: 6
Citation
Leong, C. H. (2021). Does Romans 2:14 Refer to the Natural Law? Orientis Aura: Macau Perspectives in Religious Studies, 6, 57–74. https://journals.usj.edu.mo/index.php/orientisaura/article/view/191