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Romans 8.19–22 and Isaiah's Cosmic Covenant

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2008

JONATHAN MOO
Affiliation:
The Faraday Institute, St Edmund's College, Cambridge CB3 0BN, England

Abstract

There are striking thematic and verbal parallels between Isaiah 24–27 and Rom 8.18–30 that suggest that Isaiah 24–27 provides the primary source for Paul's description of the ruin and groaning of creation in Rom 8.19–22, a possibility that is strengthened by the fact that Paul elsewhere explicitly cites Isa 25.8. If Paul has used Isaiah 24–27 in this way, it helps to explain the emergence in Romans 8 of a cosmic theme in the context of resurrection hope; it also implies that a historic ‘fall of nature’ in the traditional sense is not strictly in view, but that Paul rather considers creation to be enslaved to the effects of ongoing human sin and divine judgment. This slavery itself can be considered the result of God's decision to link the fate of the natural world and humankind through what Isa 24.5 calls an ‘eternal covenant’.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© 2008 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

A version of this paper was presented at the Senior New Testament Seminar at the University of Cambridge on March 6, 2007. I am grateful to Prof. William Horbury for his comments on an earlier draft and to the Faraday Institute for providing funding (via a grant from the Templeton Foundation) to support my research.