This dissertation project aims to construct a model of the understanding of human agency that underpins Romans 6–8. These chapters present certain anthropological puzzles, which, this dissertation argues, can be elucidated using conceptual tools developed by the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. Bourdieu introduced the concepts of habitus and field to move beyond persistent dualisms, into which discussions of human agency tend to slot themselves more or less automatically (subject/object, individual/community, free/determined, structure/agency, etc.). These same dualisms also represent the default categories within which discussions of Pauline anthropology often take place. This dissertation contends that the concepts of habitus and field enable us to grasp an elusive feature of Pauline anthropology in Romans 6–8: the human person’s complete subjection to cosmic powers and their simultaneous exercise of agency.