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Old 02-19-2008, 07:51 AM   #91
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Religions invent Gods, devils, angels, people, natural disasters and history. Show me a religion and I will show an invention. Who invented the angel Gabriel, the Holy Ghost and Jesus?
The same people who invented Paul.
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Assertions are not the same as argument.
The authors of the NT invented prophecy, they invented a star, the magis, the angels, the killing of the innocent, the temptation by the devil, the transfiguration, the words of Jesus, the miracles of Jesus, the trial of Jesus, the crucifixion, the death, the 3-hr darkness, the resurrection and then the ascension. They invented the Acts of the Apostles, the history of the Peter and Paul.

They invented Jesus, but they didn't invent Paul. This is a joke! Paul was one of their greatest invention.

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You're dreaming if you think Jesus, the disciples and Paul are not inventions.
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You lump Paul in with Jesus and 'the twelve', but they are distinct. Paul is not a part of the gospel story, and unlike Jesus or 'the twelve', we have writings attributed to Paul that are not filled with magic and fantasy, but are instead fairly ordinary. All the evidence points to Paul being a real person, albeit somewhat delusional.
There is no corroborated evidence anywhere that Paul was a real person and somewhat delusional. Where did you find such information? It appears to be bogus. You make claims about evidence for Paul, yet you just cannot provide one single non-apologetic credible source. And you can't. Never.
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Old 02-19-2008, 09:26 AM   #92
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There is no corroborated evidence anywhere that Paul was a real person and somewhat delusional. Where did you find such information? It appears to be bogus. You make claims about evidence for Paul, yet you just cannot provide one single non-apologetic credible source. And you can't. Never.
You say there is no corroborated evidence, but there is. We have the writings attributed to Paul, and we have Tertullian talking about Paul as discussed in this thread. In addition to that, Origen (via Eusebius of course) refers to Paul, as does Polycarp (The Letter to the Philippians), Marcion (via Tertullian), Valentinus, Valentinius' disciple Ptolomy, Valentinus' disciple Marcus, as does Ireneus.

I don't generally consider apologetic sources as historically worthless nor subsequently declare everyone mentioned in them to be fictional.

How on earth do you consider that a reasonable standard!?

http://www.ntcanon.org/authorities.shtml
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Old 02-19-2008, 09:36 AM   #93
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In addition to that, Origen (via Eusebius of course) refers to Paul....
Nitpick. Origen refers to Paul even apart from Eusebius (see Against Celsus, On First Things, and so forth). That passage in Eusebius is often used to summarize Origen and his views on the canon because Eusebius took the trouble to look up which sources Origen considered authoritative.

Ben.
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Old 02-19-2008, 10:39 AM   #94
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There is no corroborated evidence anywhere that Paul was a real person and somewhat delusional. Where did you find such information? It appears to be bogus. You make claims about evidence for Paul, yet you just cannot provide one single non-apologetic credible source. And you can't. Never.
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Originally Posted by spamandham
You say there is no corroborated evidence, but there is. We have the writings attributed to Paul, and we have Tertullian talking about Paul as discussed in this thread. In addition to that, Origen (via Eusebius of course) refers to Paul, as does Polycarp (The Letter to the Philippians), Marcion (via Tertullian), Valentinus, Valentinius' disciple Ptolomy, Valentinus' disciple Marcus, as does Ireneus.
I repeat, you make claims about evidence for Paul, yet you CANNOT provide one single NON-APOLOGETIC credible source. You can't. NEVER.
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Old 02-19-2008, 11:04 AM   #95
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It might be helpful if you laid out a timeline for when you think these various works were originally penned. By most standard datings, Paul and anyone who knew him would have been long dead by the time Acts was written.
I'm not sure about the anyone who knew him bit.

On standard (not necessarily correct) datings; Paul died shortly after 60 CE and Acts was written shortly before 100 CE. Elderly people who had known Paul when they were young would still have been around.

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Old 02-19-2008, 11:40 AM   #96
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I repeat, you make claims about evidence for Paul, yet you CANNOT provide one single NON-APOLOGETIC credible source. You can't. NEVER.
On what basis do you simply dismiss everything written by an 'apologetic source' as fiction? There is no rigor or thought whatsoever in your approach.
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Old 02-19-2008, 12:38 PM   #97
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It might be helpful if you laid out a timeline for when you think these various works were originally penned. By most standard datings, Paul and anyone who knew him would have been long dead by the time Acts was written.
I'm not sure about the anyone who knew him bit.

On standard (not necessarily correct) datings; Paul died shortly after 60 CE and Acts was written shortly before 100 CE. Elderly people who had known Paul when they were young would still have been around.

Andrew Criddle
Something strange is going on here.

My KJV Bible states as follows, concerning the Acts of the Apostles
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Luke has long been recognized as the author of Acts. The date of AD 61 is widely accepted as the date of writing.....
Now if Acts is considered to be written at around 100 CE, instead of 61 CE, who wrote Acts, the same Luke? And if it was still Luke, why didn't he write about the martyrdom of Peter and Paul?

The author wrote about the death of Stephen and James the brother of John, why didn't he write about the deaths of Peter and Paul, the main characters of Acts, when he lived up to 40 years after their assumed martyrdom? The author forgot?

Paul is unknown, he is fiction.
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Old 02-19-2008, 01:25 PM   #98
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My KJV Bible states as follows, concerning the Acts of the Apostles
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Luke has long been recognized as the author of Acts. The date of AD 61 is widely accepted as the date of writing.....
...most secular historians don't consider the datings in the KJV to be even worth the ink they're printed with. I don't see much reason to date Luke or Acts even as early as 100 CE.

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Now if Acts is considered to be written at around 100 CE, instead of 61 CE, who wrote Acts, the same Luke? And if it was still Luke, why didn't he write about the martyrdom of Peter and Paul?
...because they weren't martyred? You've got to stop assuming that every writer was familiar with writings and traditions that came later.

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The author wrote about the death of Stephen and James the brother of John, why didn't he write about the deaths of Peter and Paul, the main characters of Acts, when he lived up to 40 years after their assumed martyrdom? The author forgot?
I would argue that Paul's death is not mentioned, because Paul is a syncretic character within Acts - an attempt to merge the Pauline sect into the fold of Catholic beliefs. What's important to the author of Acts in regards to Paul, are the Pauline epistles, not the life and death of Paul. The author need only write enough about Paul to make the claim that Paul was actually part of the Catholic story all along.

You see this as evidence that Paul is fiction. I see it as evidence of a pre-existing Pauline tradition at the time of the writing of Acts. Both will explain the facts as we know them, but yours is more complicated.

You have provided no motive for why someone would invent Paul, a character whose theology is completely out of whack with the Gospels, and then argue that Marcion had it all wrong. It's counter productive and makes no sense at all. The Gospels are a nice tidy bit of propoganda without the mess created by inserting Paul. It takes mental gymnastics to reconcile Paul with the Gospels.

All you do is repeat ad nauseum that Paul is fictional because we only know of him through apologetic sources, as if the word 'apologetic' meant 'everything written here is fiction. Any similarity to any real person living or dead is purely coincidental.'
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Old 02-19-2008, 01:33 PM   #99
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There is no rigor or thought whatsoever in your approach.
Bingo!
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Old 02-19-2008, 03:04 PM   #100
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I would argue that Paul's death is not mentioned, because Paul is a syncretic character within Acts - an attempt to merge the Pauline sect into the fold of Catholic beliefs. What's important to the author of Acts in regards to Paul, are the Pauline epistles, not the life and death of Paul. The author need only write enough about Paul to make the claim that Paul was actually part of the Catholic story all along.
What support do you have for your argument? How can you use fiction to confirm the historicity of Paul?

Irenaeus, Tertullian, Origen,and Eusebius appear to have never realized that the Paul in Acts was fiction. These Church fathers appear not to know that there were at least two different persons writing epistles under the name of Paul. There are no known documented objection to Acts or the epistles being canonised with fiction and unknown characters posing as Paul. Philo, Josephus and even Justin Martyr never mentioned Paul in their extant writings.

It is clear the Church fathers cannot account for Paul.

Your argument is just faith-based, you seem not to care that the evidence even from APOLOGETIC sources are either complete fiction or erroneous.

Your support for Paul is baseless and without external or internal support.

When Tertullian, Irenaeus, Origen or Eusebius write about "Paul", which "Paul" are they writing about, the fiction or the one they can't identify?
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