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Old 06-08-2009, 05:31 AM   #11
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Well, I admit it is not an easy idea to get one's head around. Paul without Christ? Impossible!! It took a long time for me to accept it myself, back in the late 80's and early 90's when I finally sorted it out.

What I had proposed was...

Jesus, the leader, was executed for sedition, and the later Jewish rebellion failed utterly, causing many among the gentile wing of this movement to became disenchanted. In time, they reinterpreted Jesus the messianic king into Christ the divine redeemer, thus creating Christianity as we know it within a decade or two of the failure of the rebellion in 70 AD.

Proponents of the new, revised (gentile) Christianity, came upon genuine writings of Paul, which had reached out to "faithful gentiles" (faithful to the God of the Jews), something they also thought of themselves as, and published them in redacted form to make Paul a Christian after their own fashion. What I did was separate from the consistent narrative about faithful gentiles the Christ doctrine of the redactor(s).

A short essay explaining the process and a complete (although not final) analysis of all of the Pauline books is available at Ben Smith's Text Excavation site:
http://www.textexcavation.com/dch.html

Ben put my hypothesis out there as a courtesy, although I believe he thinks it is truly a bit "out there," if you know what I mean. However, it was (and is) a serious attempt to make sense of the sources.
An interesting hypothesis, but nonetheless, out there.

It may be possible that there was some redaction of Paul's thoughts by Luke as he recorded the letters to be sent out. Thus, some material may be read as parenthetical asides meant to explain more fully the arguments Paul makes. The idea that someone (or a group) redacted the material to add "Jesus Christ" throughout seems farfetched. Given that Paul was preaching a consistent message where ever he went, his letters would have had to be consistent with that message. Only after Paul was dead could the redaction take place and it would seem difficult to track down all the copies of Paul's letters that had been made. Have you run your hypothesis by the textual critics? Bart Ehrman might be predisposed to consider seriously your opinions given his writings. Any chance you have corresponded with him?
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Old 06-08-2009, 06:06 AM   #12
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The argument seems a little contrived....
You know how much I hate to disagree with you, Toto , but I do not think the argument here is a little contrived; it is totally contrived, and there is not one iota of a chance that either the original author of Genesis or its eventual LXX translators meant the singular seed to be applied to one single person. Seed is just an idiom meaning descendants.

Ben.
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Old 06-08-2009, 10:05 PM   #13
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The argument seems a little contrived, typical of Christian's off kilter reading of the Hebrew Scriptures.

The problem with this argument is that "off kilter" has no meaning. It is a meaningless label, unless one can explain what is "on kilter".

Pointing to this or that jewish interpretation of the Hebrew bible puts one in a catch 22 situation, as the Hebrew prophets themselves often point out that the jews themselves miss the boat.
If one follows the Hebrew prophets then one cant follow jewish interpretations of their works with any confidence.
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Old 06-09-2009, 11:51 AM   #14
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By several types, I get the sense that you mean primarily that type promoted by Paul and that type promoted by James. I don't see any real differences between Paul and James if all we have are the writings in the Bible attributed to them.

Can you describe the sizable gap that you discovered between Paul, James, and the teachings of Jesus.
The differences that strike me are that in the Synoptic Gospels salvation is based on righteous behavior, while in G John and Paul's writings salvation is based on the accuracy of beliefs.

Jesus promotes observance of the Law and even warns his listeners that to break the least commandment was a grave offense, whereas Paul totally rejects the Law and never even quotes Jesus to support his message.

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Paul's story can seem strange, but it is documented fully and we do find Paul having to defend his claim to be an apostle. The plot line does not seem strange given its beginning on the road to Damascus and verification to Barnabas of God's actions and intent. When you dug beneath the official traditions, what exactly did you find?
I am finding that Wilson's theory and arguments account for the success of Paul's doctrines over those of the Jesus movement.

Why should one give more credence to the traditional version of Christian origins?


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Apparently so. Paul provides his exegesis of the language in Genesis. Given the acceptance of Paul by the Christian community in the 1st century, I see no reason not to accept Paul's explanation. The Jews were notorious for misunderstanding (or maybe of always trying to circumvent) the teachings of the OT. Why should we think they got this part right?
Paul provides no exegesis, he just says "seed" means the opposite of what any person looking at the context would take it to mean.

I find it ironic that Christians get really concerned about context and condemn quote mining of the NT by groups they consider heretical (like Jehovah's Witnesses), but throw all that out the window when it comes to the writers of the NT doing it with the OT.

I think it is wrong to say the Jews tried to circumvent the teachings of the OT, they appeared to understand, they just failed to obey the covenant.

Yahweh spends hundreds of years commanding them to follow the Law, tells them it is an eternal covenant, sends prophets to warn them to return to obeying it and then supposedly comes personally and tells them to continue to obey the Law then gets executed and later inspires some unknown to berate the Jews for observing the very thing he has harped on them about throughout their existence.
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Old 06-09-2009, 08:58 PM   #15
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Doesn't Paul attempt to sidestep the covenant made with Abraham in circumcision with a faith acceptable through Melchizedek of non-circumcision?

When Paul speaks of the school teacher, is he indicating circumcision or laws of Moses?

The laws of Moses given 450 years after circumcision did not make the covenant of Abraham in circumcision invalid. The one seed was identified in circumcision, as perscribed by God. Without circumcision there was no "seed", no people. The cutting off of flesh[people refusing circumcision] is shown in the ritual itself. What then was the need for law of Moses? It provided civil order whereas circumcision could not. It then made the "old" covenant in circumcision a better , or what might be construed as a new covenant.

Where is there room for Gentiles[the uncircumcised and lawless] in this predetermined plan?
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Old 06-10-2009, 05:41 AM   #16
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No he doesn't. He says that no-one invalidates a covenant after the fact. The faith covenant was still binding between God and anyone who believes in his "promises." Same goes with the law of Moses for Abraham's physical descendants. This is the paradox of reading Paul as a unified whole. There are two completely different concepts regarding how one can be right with God (faith in God's covenants vs faith in the atoning death of Jesus Christ). These have been noticed and heavily discussed by biblical critics for 150 years. If you can find it, read Albert Schweitzer's Paul and His Interpreters (1912, you might have to get a copy used or from an inter-library loan) for an introduction of how this realization came to be seriously considered and the implications worked out in the 19th century.

I, of course, have my hypothesis to explain it (intersection of two unrelated movements with literature from one being published by the other in a redacted form), but if you would like to read a modern author who clearly identifies these themes (but thinks Paul successfully - in Paul's own mind at least - integrated these competing concepts in a more or less rhetoric based manner), read Mark Nanos' Mystery of Romans (or via: amazon.co.uk), Irony of Galatians (or via: amazon.co.uk), or for more on rhetorical explanations for these competing themes in Paul read The Galatians Debate (or via: amazon.co.uk), which he edited. Very in-depth.

BTW, the Melchizedek thing is in Hebrews, which even ancient commentators though was not written by Paul.

DCH (starting late this morning due to working over yesterday, boss)

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Originally Posted by storytime View Post
Doesn't Paul attempt to sidestep the covenant made with Abraham in circumcision with a faith acceptable through Melchizedek of non-circumcision?

When Paul speaks of the school teacher, is he indicating circumcision or laws of Moses?

The laws of Moses given 450 years after circumcision did not make the covenant of Abraham in circumcision invalid. The one seed was identified in circumcision, as perscribed by God. Without circumcision there was no "seed", no people. The cutting off of flesh[people refusing circumcision] is shown in the ritual itself. What then was the need for law of Moses? It provided civil order whereas circumcision could not. It then made the "old" covenant in circumcision a better , or what might be construed as a new covenant.

Where is there room for Gentiles[the uncircumcised and lawless] in this predetermined plan?
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Old 06-10-2009, 08:01 AM   #17
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But the "promises" had required protocol of circumcision and observance of laws of Moses. Paul seems(to me at least) to be sidetracking these two "witnesses" to identity of the "seed" of Abraham. What was Paul up to? I see a conspiracy of Paul in his gospel that doesn't give Gentiles anything but hope, and not a name in Israel. But then if Jesus thought it beneficial to deceive the multitudes then Pauls gospel[lie] was meant to secure that deceit. For it was for the purpose of securing identity in that one named seed of Abraham, "a people", Israel[Jews].
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Old 06-10-2009, 01:52 PM   #18
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But the "promises" had required protocol of circumcision and observance of laws of Moses. Paul seems(to me at least) to be sidetracking these two "witnesses" to identity of the "seed" of Abraham. What was Paul up to?
According to James C Waters who writes in the book Paul in the Greco-Roman World (or via: amazon.co.uk), Paul wasn't so much "sidetracking" these two witnesses (as you put it) as "driving a wedge between Abraham and the Law" (as James C Waters describes it)

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. . . Subsequent to Paul's proclamation of the gospel in Galatia, other teachers entered the churches insisting that full membership in the people of God required cirumcision and keeping the Law of Moses-- or at least some of the Law's requirements. . . .Paul's opponents insisted that Gentiles must keep the Law. . Becker argued persuasively that the opponents had constructed a "chain argument" featuring Abraham in order to persuade the Galationas to reevaluate Paul's gospel. Abraham's status as the first proselyte, his cicumcision, and Jewish traditions regarding his faithful keeping of the Law (prior to its revelation at Sinai) suggest how useful his example would have been to rival teachers. The argument establishes a line of continuity between Abraham, cicrumcision, the Law, and the Messiah that has obvious implications for Gentiles. Consequently, Paul's discussion in Gal 3 attempts to disrupt the opponents' argument by driving a wedge between Abraham and the Law.
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Old 06-10-2009, 02:13 PM   #19
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"Driving a wedge between Abraham and the law" is on p 59-60 of Paul in the Greco-Roman World. The wedge involves a new cosmic order.

The author claims that construing Christ as Abraham's single "seed" is crucial to this argument, as it eliminates the special status of Abraham's descendants.

It's still rather contrived.
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Old 06-10-2009, 09:38 PM   #20
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"Driving a wedge between Abraham and the law" is on p 59-60 of Paul in the Greco-Roman World. The wedge involves a new cosmic order.

The author claims that construing Christ as Abraham's single "seed" is crucial to this argument, as it eliminates the special status of Abraham's descendants.

It's still rather contrived.
Actually the argument is that Abraham's descendants are the people of faith as oppossed to those under the "law." Paul writes that the law was necessary before faith in much the same way that a child needs a guardian (the law) before becoming an entirely free person. Paul writes a person becomes free through a union with Christ which eliminates all status be it male or female, slave or free, Jew or Greek. The noted author writes;

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. . . "the law was our disciplinarian [paidagogos] until Christ came". Moreover, using a baptismal formula Paul connects the fullfillment of the Abraham promise with the believers' union with Christ effected in baptism, a union that results in the sonship of believers by virtue of their union with Abraham's singular seed, Christ (Gal 3:16). . . Paul introduced inheritance language in association with Abraham in Rom 4, the only other extended treatment of Abraham in Paul's letters besides Gal 3. As in Gal 3, Paul uses inheritance language with Abraham to dissolve distinctions between Jews and Gentiles: faith, not circumcision or Law-keeping, makes one an heir of Abraham.
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