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Old 03-17-2012, 09:22 PM   #11
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What's complicated here? He wasn't known in the place he was persecuting......churches? "the Church"?

how intensely I persecuted the church of God and tried to destroy it 21 Then I went to Syria and Cilicia. 22 I was personally unknown to the churches of Judea that are in Christ. 23 They only heard the report: “The man who formerly persecuted us is now preaching the faith he once tried to destroy.” 24 And they praised God because of me.
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Old 03-17-2012, 09:59 PM   #12
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What's complicated here?

It's not an issue of complication, but of inference. For example:
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In the flow of the sentence this also sounds like an interpolation before the words coming "called me by his grace...."
How can you possibly have any idea about the "flow" of a sentence you can't read?

Or again:
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Originally Posted by Duvduv View Post

Leaving Acts aside, where Paul is said to have persecuted the Christians in Jerusalem, in Galatians all we find is that "he" claims he persecuted "the Church of God." This by itself sounds like an insertion from a time when "the Church" actually existed.
The word used which you translate as "church" was around hundreds of years before the first century CE. So I suppose the use of the word by Plato, Aristotle, Thucydides, etc., were also all interpolations.

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He wasn't known in the place he was persecuting......churches? "the Church"?
That's not what he says:
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I was personally unknown
"Personally unknown"? That's how you translate to prosopo? Not 'by sight" or "by face" which is what it actually means? Hence:
Quote:
23 They only heard the report: “The man who formerly persecuted us is now preaching the faith he once tried to destroy.” 24
They knew of him, but did not know what he looked like. How else do you explain προσώπῳ?
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Old 03-17-2012, 10:06 PM   #13
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In other words he was in Jerusalem persecuting the Christians but the victims never saw him. They only heard of him..persecuting "The church of God" who is "us"........unknown to the churches of Judea.....What do they want to say? That he wore a mask?
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Old 03-17-2012, 10:18 PM   #14
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In other words he was in Jerusalem persecuting the Christians but the victims never saw him. They only heard of him..persecuting "The church of God" who is "us"........unknown to the churches of Judea.....
No, in other words you are positing interpolations because of the "flow" of sentences you can't read, making claims based off of your interpretation of words (church, churches) which aren't in the text, and the entirety of your initial post is just a series of speculations dependent upon not only a misunderstanding of context, but an inability to actually read the words you are using to string together into a series of illogical conclusions.

Interpolation because of the use of the word "church." Only there is no word church.

Interpolation because of the "flow" of an english translation of a sentence you can't read.

The use of the word "christians" despite the fact that Paul never uses the term.

And now this: "In other words he was in Jerusalem persecuting the Christians"

Only he never says he was in Jerusalem persecuting Christians.
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Old 03-18-2012, 07:16 AM   #15
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The implication seems to be that Paul was known by reputation.
This implication was not required in the 4th century, when the forged correspondence between Paul and Seneca was in official orthodox christian circulation.
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Old 03-18-2012, 08:33 AM   #16
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Originally Posted by Duvduv View Post
Leaving Acts aside, where Paul is said to have persecuted the Christians in Jerusalem, in Galatians all we find is that "he" claims he persecuted "the Church of God." This by itself sounds like an insertion from a time when "the Church" actually existed.

Then a few verses later Paul says that he was "unknown to the churches (plural) in JUDEA" but had now started preaching the faith". The CHURCHES only heard the report that he was persecuting "US". Does "us" mean the "church" in Judea or outside of Judea? WHAT churches existed in Judea, and WHERE when he was persecuting them? He doesn't say.

This of course also sounds like something interpolated from a much later time in its reference to "the faith" as something other than Judaism. He also doesn't even say WHEN that was - although it is understood via Acts to be a couple of years after the crucifixion.

One would imagine that once Acts came out, and the persecution was determined to have been in Jerusalem, that some church person would have corrected the contradiction.
You may be onto something there: we know that Acts was widely resented in the later church, as the idea of Christian church being consecrated and hosted in Jerusalem clashed with the growing anti-Jewish sentiment. Eusebius provides us with a much abridged version of the church existence in Jerusalem, which begins not with the event at Pentecost but the event of the ordination of the seven deacons and Stephen appointment to administer church finances. (HE 2.1) It was followed next by the martyrdom of Stephen and persecution of the church by the Jews in which strangely everyone was expelled from Jerusalem but the ringleaders.

The 'great persecution' was a formula by which Acts sought to explain the establishment of Christian communities in the diaspora, a formula which at once confirmed and denied the Jewish origins of the new faith. It needed to confirm the Jewish origins because Eusebius church saw itself the legitimate successor of the Jewish faith (with which it competed for converts). It denied (or minimized) the dependence on Jewish communities because most (or perhaps, all) of the earliest proto-Christian groups originated in Diaspora which had little or no connection to the messianist movement in Jerusalem.

As Paul's apostolic career by his own witness clearly originated outside Palestine, a narrative had to be found to connect him to the Jerusalem messianists and make him derive his own theology from artifacts and early liturgy of an existing church, i.e. one which already at Paul's time thought of himself as a separate entity and which shared the vision of Jesus as messiah. Hence the parallel of Paul with king Saul, the one-time persecutor of David, who was dramatically converted.

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Jiri


Quote:
After already saying how learned he was in Judaism he ADDS as an AFTERTHOUGHT rather than as a starting point that he was "set apart from my mother's womb," In the flow of the sentence this also sounds like an interpolation before the words coming "called me by his grace...."

The words "to reveal his Son in me" seems to mean something very different than knowledge of the three or four gospel religion. For that matter, it sounds like something very different than that possessed by any other adherent to the Christ.

Of course when did he find out he was chosen from his mother's womb? Was it as he was growing up or when he was persecuting the Christians? He never says.

HAD the author of Galatians known about the Great Commission of the Matthew and Luke, then he would have known that the directive to preach to the gentiles was the responsibility of many other people than himself, in which case there was no need to debate it with people in Jerusalem since they also knew about the need to preach to gentiles and must have been doing it in the place where Paul was persecuting "the CHURCH or CHURCHES".
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Old 03-18-2012, 12:31 PM   #17
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As Legion points out ekklhsia has been around a lot longer than christianity. This leads us to an important issue: you cannot trust your understandings of any overtly christian term found in Paul's writings. He is writing at the dawn of christianity, so the terms he uses were either not christian at all or else he is using them in new ways that become the standard. Trusting your understanding of his use of "church" will not help you.

Side issue of note: the significance of "church" for Paul seems to be similar to its use in LXX Deuteronomy, a meeting, a congregation, that can happen in someone's house. He talks about the church in Corinth (one church) and the churches in Judea. However, in Gal 1, we find "the church of god" (singular), not referring to any particular congregation, but apparently the whole body of believers. This is extremely fishy. He talks about the "church of god" in 1 Cor, but that can be taken as the particular church at Corinth. There is an exception though, in 1 Cor 15:9, a section that I have in this forum argued for other reasons is an interpolation. In both cases is the notion of persecuting the church of god. I'm highly suspicious of this line about the church of god. It doesn't reflect the understanding we have of Paul's notion of "church".
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Old 03-18-2012, 12:39 PM   #18
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The marcionite text of galatians began near the end of chapter 2. everything before that is probably bullshit
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Old 03-18-2012, 12:42 PM   #19
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The people in the churches of Judea in christ, ie the messianic assemblies or meetings in Judea, didn't know Paul by face, suggests that he was known through his activities in the diaspora, so people in Judea had heard about him through people that they knew in the diaspora, but had never met him.

There is no way of knowing the beliefs of those messianic assemblies, in that we don't even know if they knew anything about Jesus and Paul doesn't enlighten us. We never learn the beliefs of the pillars in Jerusalem. Did they believe in Jesus or something else, such as the messianism of John the Baptist? Paul always contrasts Jesus with Jewish praxis in Galatians: salvation comes through Jesus, not doing the law. His criticism of Peter is of a person who can't follow the law unless bullied into it, but he is supposed to follow the law. Does this sound like a person who had direct experience of Jesus and the replacement of the law? Clearly not. I think this Peter is Ur-Peter before he has become christianized. How come it's Paul flogging the Jesus message and not Peter and the rest of them?

There are a lot of fish in the place and they stink.
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Old 03-18-2012, 12:42 PM   #20
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The marcionite text of galatians began near the end of chapter 2. everything before that is probably bullshit
That's fourlegsgoodism.
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