Mark Reasoner
Scot McKnight brings Romans to life in ways unmatched by traditional commentaries or textbooks. With eyes focused on the letter’s first audience and later interpreters in peripheral vision, McKnight responds to today’s readers’ questions with the questions that Paul sought to answer for the believers in Rome. New connections and fresh resonances emerge from this well-conceived and well-written approach to Romans.
Matthew W. Bates
When you are axle-deep in mud, backward is the only way forward. McKnight lifts, spins, and energetically pushes in a new direction. Hang on tight. The church and academy are careening down an adventurous new path.
Paul Trebilco
Reading Romans Backwards sheds fascinating light on Paul’s famous letter. Starting our reading with Romans 12–16 means the whole of Romans can be seen as a pastoral letter addressed to Jewish Christians and Gentile Christians in Rome, speaking about privilege and power, and replacing both with the peace of Christ at the heart of the empire. Working backwards creates a whole new set of connections and unwraps Romans as lived theology of the grace of God.
Nijay K. Gupta
Most scholars consider Romans the jewel of Pauline theology, but McKnight has recovered Romans as a pastoral letter that communicates a lived theology to a divided Christian community in Rome. By focusing on clues about the socio-historical context especially found in the last few chapters of Romans, McKnight offers a compelling reading of the letter as a whole. He brings the text to life in such a way that the reader can imagine what it was like to be in the room when Romans was first read aloud.
N. T. Wright
Two things stand out from this fresh, creative reading of Paul’s greatest letter. Scot McKnight is a historian who grounds his exposition in messy, on-the-ground, first-century reality; and he loves the church and longs to see it attending not just to abstract theories about salvation but to the practical questions of how to embody the gospel in actual communities. Thus, whether or not you agree with all of McKnight's interpretations, this book will compel all of us to think afresh about how Paul’s vivid theology challenges our often sleepy discipleship.
Paula Gooder
Anyone who begins reading Romans at chapter 1 verse 1 may be forgiven for allowing their attention to slip by the time they have reached chapter 16. In this important reading of Romans, Scott McKnight offers a different way of looking at the letter—starting at the end, with the lived experience of those to whom Paul writes, and working backwards. It is a fascinating exploration of this most important letter and brings it to life in new ways. Highly recommended!
Greg Carey
To read Romans backwards with Scot McKnight is to experience the epistle as a pastoral intervention directed toward believing communities under stress. Read backwards, Paul’s great insights concerning justification, grace, and faithfulness reveal themselves not as doctrines received from the sky but as Paul’s active work as a missionary theologian. Accessible to students and pastors, this book will provoke scholars to examine our assumptions about Romans as well.
Timothy Gombis
Christians typically read Romans forwards but too often stop at chapter 8 or 11, thinking they have the good stuff—the abstract theology that informs our traditional debates. In Reading Romans Backwards, McKnight reminds us that Paul’s final chapters are the crescendo of his letter, not an afterthought. He calls us to reckon with Romans as lived theology, pastoral counsel for cultivating unified communities of God’s peace.