FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 07-12-2007, 11:37 AM   #91
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: London UK
Posts: 16,024
Default

The Orthodox line of succession goes back to Rocky Peter and in fact puts far more weight in the Pontifex Maximus and Rome than in an alleged bloke wandering around Galilee who is the Son of God.

Paul does a similar trick, seeing himself as talking directly to God and his Christ is in fact only an ingredient that needs to be cooked in a special way - death and resurrection - to fulfill requirements of holiness and make the magic spell that saves us all work.


Both sides are in fact extremely iffy and diffident about this hybrid godman - the whole history of Christs and of worship since have emphasised the godly nature of Christ - Constantine's emperor christ being a wonderful example - and the various teachings about a "real" Jesus is stuff to make god seem like us, having known what it is to be human - a very powerful psychological motif that we can be gods as a god can be a man. St Francis of Assisi may be partly to blame for that motif. The existence of the mystics is further evidence for this.

It is all dream figures all the way down - the arguments between gnostics and orthodoxy in fact can be seen as arguments about god man percentages until within the last three hundred years we started focussing on historical aspects of a god - talk about oxymoron!
Clivedurdle is offline  
Old 07-12-2007, 02:51 PM   #92
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 2,579
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewcriddle View Post
IF Peter became an apostle because of a vision of the risen Christ, a Christ of whom he had no knowledge prior to this vision, then he was changed from one totally ignorant of Christ to an apostle.

Paul was changed from one who was hostile to Christ to an apostle.

Although these are different trajectories they are IMO sufficiently similar to make Paul's drastic distinction between himself and the other apostles unlikely.

There is a far more drastic distinction between Paul's trajectory and Peter's if Peter was previously a follower of Jesus who was appointed an apostle subsequently. This explains better Paul's drastic distinction between Peter's story and his.

Andrew Criddle
It is interesting to note, in proposing the former scenario, that Paul's letters do not in appear to support the theory that Peter's knowledge of Jesus, and apostolic credentials, originated in spiritual gnosis, like Paul's. 1 Cor 15:5, which I believe is a part of later gloss to Paul's letter, comes nonetheless early enough to place Cephas outside of the Twelve. It agrees with Paul's nomenclatura of 1 Cr 9:5 which separates Cephas from the "other apostles" and "the Lord's brothers".

Mark, after Paul, was also a diligent tradent of the view of Peter had a profane knowledge of Jesus, failing to recognize him spiritually.

Jiri
Solo is offline  
Old 07-13-2007, 07:58 AM   #93
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Illinois
Posts: 236
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gamera View Post
Paul is (typically) talking about two things at once: the risen Jesus appearing to the all the apostles, and the risen Jesus appearing to all kinds of other people. And I think it's fair to conclude that the 500 are those assembled at Pentecost, and they aren't apostles.

So 1 Cor 15 reiterates that portion of the gospel Paul preached that asserts that there were many witnesses to the risen Christ (some still alive he says). Within that context, he gives us information that suggests that the apostles were already designated apostles. And that tangentially leads him to a discussion of how his apostlehood differs.

It is a bit disshevelled, but such is Paul's style.
All seems a bit needlessly complicated to me. And frankly I don’t see where it does much to help your case.

I would like to go back to a point I’m surprised you didn’t address: How an “apostle” gets so named.

Going on the notion of apostolic succession, it is my understanding that an apostle can appoint a successor. That is, some apostles were called by other apostles.

The “pillars” are the exceptions as they (believed they) were appointed directly by the risen Christ.

Paul’s claim is that he, too, was directly called by the risen Christ. Just that his calling came a lot later than the pillars.

The number of “apostles” who came before him is irrelevant. Most of those were only called by mere humans. Paul’s calling is thus “special”.

BTW: I am aware that this is drifting off topic, but some of the arguments used here seem to depend on the nature of Paul’s “differentness”.

dq
DramaQ is offline  
Old 07-13-2007, 08:01 AM   #94
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Illinois
Posts: 236
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ben C Smith View Post
Just to be clear, unless DramaQ is also named Ben, I think you have crossed your interlocuters here.
It's Mark, named after a certain book. So I always appreciate a touch of sarcasm or irony.

dq
DramaQ is offline  
Old 07-13-2007, 10:25 AM   #95
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: USA, Missouri
Posts: 3,070
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Solo View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by TedM View Post

I find it unlikely that the idea of our carnal nature causing separation from God was a new idea with Paul given the story of Adam and Eve. In any case, my point was that Paul's gospel was probably strongly influenced by his own personal interpretation of the OT. He obviously was very well versed in it, quoting and alluding to it over 100 times in his epistles.

2 Cor 5:21 "knew no sin" doesn't mean "didn't know he was a sinner". It means he didn't know what sin was--ie he didn't experience sin. That is to say, he was sinless.

Phil 2:6 "did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped" doesn't mean he was a sinner

Rom *3 "in the likeness of sinful flesh" doesn't have to mean "a sinner". It could mean his form was the same of that of sinners--ie fleshly.
Ted,
to have a meaningful discussion, you will need to make some critical distinctions. 2 Cor 5:21 says also that "God made him sin". IOW, God made him appear a sinner.
Quote:
21He made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.
It doesn't say God made him sin as if it is a verb. It says God made him to 'be sin'. Sin is a noun--God made Jesus the personification of sin itself. How could this be? Consider the belief that Jesus 'took on' all the sins of all mankind at the cross. He 'took them on' as an obedient act of sacrifice which results in defeating the result of all sins--death. It's a poetic way of saying a sinless man took on the sins of the world.


Quote:
Phil 2:6 uses the Greek word harpagmos which means "robbery"...Jesus did not think it a "robbery" to be equal to God. How did Paul know Jesus was thinking that and how does it relate to his being perceived a fool and a blasphemer by outsiders ?
I don't see the relevancy here to claiming Paul believed Jesus was a sinner.


Quote:
Rom 8:3 says "in the likeness of sinful flesh"....i.e. for those not endowed (by God) with special "insight", he would be a "sinner", period.
I thought you believed Paul thought Jesus was a sinner, and not sinless. Are you now just saying that others thought Jesus was a sinner? If so, that is not relevant to my point.


Quote:
The distinction between the appearance of Jesus (in an earthly form) and his true nature as the "sub-eternal", unique, Son is what Paul is after. According to Paul, all of those whose nature is "spiritual" mirror the fate of Jesus. Of course, the unspoken premise of what Paul says was that Jesus did not "know" what Paul was given to know and reveal. God gave Paul the utterance to reveal Jesus as the Christ, not to Jesus, or his earthly following.
What evidence from Paul do you have that he believed Jesus didn't 'know' his true nature. Wouldn't the verse that says Jesus didn't think it not robbery to be equal to God suggest the exact opposite?

ted
TedM is offline  
Old 07-13-2007, 11:55 AM   #96
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Palm Springs, California
Posts: 10,955
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by DramaQ View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gamera View Post
Paul is (typically) talking about two things at once: the risen Jesus appearing to the all the apostles, and the risen Jesus appearing to all kinds of other people. And I think it's fair to conclude that the 500 are those assembled at Pentecost, and they aren't apostles.

So 1 Cor 15 reiterates that portion of the gospel Paul preached that asserts that there were many witnesses to the risen Christ (some still alive he says). Within that context, he gives us information that suggests that the apostles were already designated apostles. And that tangentially leads him to a discussion of how his apostlehood differs.

It is a bit disshevelled, but such is Paul's style.
All seems a bit needlessly complicated to me. And frankly I don’t see where it does much to help your case.

I would like to go back to a point I’m surprised you didn’t address: How an “apostle” gets so named.

Going on the notion of apostolic succession, it is my understanding that an apostle can appoint a successor. That is, some apostles were called by other apostles.

The “pillars” are the exceptions as they (believed they) were appointed directly by the risen Christ.

Paul’s claim is that he, too, was directly called by the risen Christ. Just that his calling came a lot later than the pillars.

The number of “apostles” who came before him is irrelevant. Most of those were only called by mere humans. Paul’s calling is thus “special”.

BTW: I am aware that this is drifting off topic, but some of the arguments used here seem to depend on the nature of Paul’s “differentness”.

dq

Paul himself insists on the difference of his apostlehood, both in 1 Cor. 15 and elsewhere. Indeed, he suggests it is "freakish" in some way, a miscarriage.

Your reconstruction isn't helped by ignoring what Paul himself says about his difference.

It is by exploring this difference (as he sees it) that we may get entree into what he knew that was different from the prior apostles.
Gamera is offline  
Old 07-13-2007, 12:02 PM   #97
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Palm Springs, California
Posts: 10,955
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
["The graduates received their diplomas at 12:00" is perfectly understood by all to mean "the guys who had not yet graduated, but who graduated as a result of receiving their diplomas, received said diplomas at 12:00" with no implication that they were graduates prior to that moment.

"President Bush smoked crack when he was in college" is also perfectly understood by all to mean "Bush, who is currently the President, smoked crack when he was in college" with no implication that he was President when he was in college..

The problem with this prolepsis is that it isn't like the prolepsis you are assuming in 1 Cor 15.

There, sequence seems to be the point. Paul is at pains to tell us to whom the risen Jesus appeared first, then second, and so on until lastly, he appeared to him, which is significant enough to Paul to make his apostlehood somehow freakish and miscarried.

Once sequence is the issue, the proleptic use of titles becomes an unlikely usage. So, in the following passage, we wouldn't use prolepsis like this:

"Let me explain the sequence of events that leads to graduation. First the graduate must enroll and complete 15 units in core courses in his first year at the college, then in his second year, the graduate . . . "

It's already confusing and can only get worse. When sequence is in issue we tend not to use prolepsis to avoid confusion
Gamera is offline  
Old 07-13-2007, 06:29 PM   #98
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 11,525
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gamera View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
["The graduates received their diplomas at 12:00" is perfectly understood by all to mean "the guys who had not yet graduated, but who graduated as a result of receiving their diplomas, received said diplomas at 12:00" with no implication that they were graduates prior to that moment.

"President Bush smoked crack when he was in college" is also perfectly understood by all to mean "Bush, who is currently the President, smoked crack when he was in college" with no implication that he was President when he was in college..

When sequence is in issue we tend not to use prolepsis to avoid confusion
I disagree completely. We do it all the time when we know those we are speaking to will understand what we mean.

(please ignore the obvious failing of history in the following demonstration)

"President Washington was the first to sign a foreign treaty, then the next twelve presidents also signed treaties. After that Lincoln signed a treaty, and then 500 signed treaties, some of whom are still among us. Then President Carter signed one. As the last to sign one, I am the least among Presidents."

Nothing in this is even slightly confusing as to what it means. There is no implication that the signing of a treaty is what causes the title of Presidency.

The same holds for 1 Cor 15. Paul is merely claiming to be the last in the list to experience an appearance - which must mean is less important than the others.

(Notice that the implication is that he could possibly have been the first to have had an appearance, but wasn't. If it were not possible - because too much time had passed from the first appearance, then it would make no sense to claim to be the least. IMHO, this suggests that Peter actually was the first apostle as far as Paul is concerned.)

I don't see any confusion in 1 Corinthians 15 at all, as long as you don't assume that an appearance by Jesus is a necessary precondition to apostleship. Since Paul never indicates that to be the case anyway, it's an unjustified complicating assumption.

The simplest interpretation is that Paul claims to have converted as a result of his vision, then appointed himself an apostle as a result of it, and is using the fact of his vision to support his claim of apostleship. He is not claiming that having a vision is a pre-requisite to apostleship.

Why would anyone even think that's what he's saying?
spamandham is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:48 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.