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05-13-2013, 03:25 AM | #41 | ||||||
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Or we can say that he is the author of Gal. and 1 Cor 15 and then try to find out what that can tell us about the early resurrection-belief. I would like to do the latter in this thread. Quote:
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05-13-2013, 07:19 AM | #42 |
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05-13-2013, 08:00 AM | #43 | ||||||||
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So here now death and resurrection, historical or not, is where Matthew and Mark present us now eternal suffering, for another 40 years, and die in the promised land nonetheless looking forward even to the day that [the second death] do us part. Opposite this is where in Luke and John the real Jesus is in heaven as Christ and the Jesus image went poof to leave the imago behind as Christ here now on earth. Note here that resurrection appears to be a given with no question about it, while we here in our world do not even think about that. |
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05-13-2013, 08:29 AM | #44 | ||
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05-13-2013, 08:37 AM | #45 |
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Who anywhere near the alleged crucifiction site outside of Jerusalem would have any immediate awareness of the Temple curtain tearing ...much less from which direction the tear had occurred?
How did these Roman guards keeping watch over 'Jesus' way outside of the city, witness to any dead saints appearing to many -inside- of the holy city'? "saw the earthquake and what took place, they were (immediately?) terrified and said, ‘Truly this man was God’s Son!" Something stinks to high heaven in this 'witness'. |
05-13-2013, 08:45 AM | #46 | |
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Fully rent from top to bottom is crucial here so that walls seen by others are not really there. |
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05-13-2013, 11:26 AM | #47 | |
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Do you mean why I think the guy named Paul existed, who apparantly have written a bunch of letters? To start off, because he seems to have written a bunch of letters. |
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05-13-2013, 11:51 AM | #48 | ||
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Or there could have been a guy named, say, Simon, who was famous, and someone else wrote the letters and called him "Paul" which means "small" to subvert his message. Or the whole thing could have been fictional - someone decided to write some letters that would demonstrate certain key points of theology or church organization, and later people mistook them for real letters. These are all possible, and you can think of more possibilities if you try. How can you pick one? We don't have any of the original letters, we don't have any letters outside of a compilation. We don't have any evidence that there were churches that received these so-called letters. (It has been suggested that the letter to the Corinthians was actually a letter to the Cerinthians,a heretical sect.) We don't even have any indication that Paul existed outside of these letters, or church legends preserved in the Book of Acts or the apocryphal Acts of Paul and Thecla, but the amount of history contained in these is questionable. You might decide that the best explanation of the evidence is that there was a Paul who wrote these letters, but you have to go through a lot of of intermediate steps to show this. What is your basis for rejecting the other possibilities? |
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05-13-2013, 12:06 PM | #49 | ||||
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Was the resurrection of Jesus then also a literary invention? No. Why? Let's never forget that Christianity as a literary philosophy did not arise until the advent of "theology" with the apologetic fathers and what not. There were practitioners first, not authors of the gospels and epistles. Christianity was at first a cult with members practicing the worship of the risen Jesus, it was not at first a literary phenomenon. In the matter of the resurrection-belief I'm way more interested in Paul than the gospels for several reasons. In my view he's the earliest witness to Christianity that has come down to us, where the gospels reflect a later stage in the history of Christianity, coupled with the fact that they are a different genre altogether. What genre? I don't know precisely, but they are stories told by storytellers mainly for theological and religious purposes. Quote:
So let's stay with Paul and just forget the gospels for a while. This exercise requires for a minimum the premise that Paul existed of course. |
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05-13-2013, 01:18 PM | #50 | |
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I know that's not satisfactory enough for you right now, and my opinion can change with new information, but in this thread I would like to discuss the subject matter on the premise that the letters in question were written by Paul sometime before 60 AD. I understand that this premise is not a certain truth. |
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