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Liberating Paul: The Justice of God and the Politics of the Apostle is unavailable, but you can change that!

For centuries the apostle Paul has been invoked to justify oppression—whether on behalf of slavery, to enforce unquestioned obedience to the state, to silence women, or to legitimate anti-Semitism. To interpret Paul is thus to set foot on a terrible battleground between spiritual forces. But as Neil Elliott argues, the struggle to liberate human beings from the power of Death requires “Liberating...

become the scapegoats of other groups resentful of Roman domination. As Gager observes regarding the leaders of the pogrom in Alexandria, “Their own anti-Semitism had its roots not in hatred of Jews as such but in nationalistic and violent anti-Romanism.”165 We know the Jewish community of Rome was even less organized and thus more vulnerable, as the expulsions under Tiberius (19 C.E.) and Claudius (49 C.E.) demonstrate.166 As Dunn observes, in Rome as elsewhere “Jews, by reason of their special
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