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09-02-2008, 12:45 PM | #1 |
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Existence of Jesus and the Paul-James controversy
I am very much inclined towards the position of Doherty and others of a mythical Jesus. It makes sense of so many things : from the lack of contemporary witnesses to Paul's "mythical" view of Jesus, from the parallel to the dying-and-rising gods to the lack of reference to an earthly Jesus in Christian authors of the first centuries and to the many inconsistencies/contradictions in the Gospels.
There is however a major problem in my view and I would like to ask you about your opinion on this. The problem I see is that the controversy between Paul and the Jerusalem church in Acts and in Paul's letters is well explained by the typical conflict between the inner circle of the family and the outer circle of followers and "newcomers" of prophets (and of political/religious leaders in general), like you find in Islam between shi'ites and sunnites. This has been well discussed in Maccoby's book "Paul and the invention of christianity (or via: amazon.co.uk)". Paul the newcomer is the self-appointed charismatic follower; James and the Apostles are the original family (in an enlarged sense) and claim the ultimate authority over the post-crucifixion christianity, perhaps because they see it as a claim to royalty over a messianic Israel. If this is the fundamental reason of the Paul-James controversy, then Jesus must have been a real person, with a real family and some chosen companions. Otherwise, how to explain the sudden and undisputed primacy of James-the-brother over the Jerusalem "church" ? on what basis did everybody (except Paul that is) accepted the leadership of the obscure James, hardly mentioned at all in the Gospels, were it not for the fact that he was the real brother of the Lord ? This explains also the insistence of Paul on his personal revelation that bypassed all apostolic intermediation. Of course the Paul-James controversy could be explained merely by conflict over points of doctrine and interpretation or on how best to expand christianity into Gentile nations, but the whole story smells of the typical struggle for power and control over the community. The power of Paul is his personal revelation; the power of James is his closeness to a real Jesus. So although the mythical Jesus theory is compelling (for me) from an historical point of view, the sociology of the early christianity is better explained by a real Jesus. |
09-02-2008, 02:04 PM | #2 |
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Hi tubalkain. I'm new here, and no scholar, just another infidel
There was a recent thread about James ("the James gang"), and others earlier. I agree with Doherty's mythicist arguments, and his skepticism about the Gospels and Acts as reliable records. I wouldn't put much faith in the information in Acts re James and the earliest apostles. You seem to put a lot of weight on the "brother of the Lord" title, which I think is a misinterpretation. Paul himself may have been a product of the Syrian church, such as it was in the early 1st C. I don't know if there is any reason to assume that the Judeans were the first to follow the Christ teachings (assuming a mythic Christ). Who knows, maybe there was a "logos" group in Alexandria? As far as controversy, Paul seems to have harbored resentment towards Cephas rather than James, but the point is the same either way: the acceptance of Gentiles into the group, and how to apply the Mosaic law to them. Without the Gospels there isn't much material with which to reconstruct pre-Revolt sociology. |
09-02-2008, 03:07 PM | #3 | |
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Once you have done that it should become obvious that the history of the Church, including Peter, Paul and James are most likely to be fiction, or did not exist at the time implied. To use one single questionable source, where different authors are using the same name, with chronological discrepancies, or uncorroborated events, and then accept or believe that there was some Paul-James controversy is not very prudent at all. It would appear that the author called Paul was alive long after Eusebius claimed he was DEAD, around 66 CE. The author called Paul was aware of Acts of the Apostles and Acts of the Apostles was deduced to have been written well after the days of Nero. Even Justin Martyr did not mention Paul or his Epistles, or Acts of the Apostles up to or around 80 years after Nero. |
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09-02-2008, 03:46 PM | #4 | |||||
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Suppose James was not obscure in his own day and circle. He was a leader in a Messianic Jewish sect, and was known as the "Brother of the Lord" meaning the Brother of God. Then a later group of Christians, mostly followers of Paul, around the early second century decide to create a history for themselves, and write stories about Jesus. They add James in as a minor character, maybe a biological brother of Jesus, maybe a disciple. James' followers are losers in the political struggle, and do not leave their version of history, in which James was an upright, law abiding pillar of the church, while Paul was an upstart, sleazy lying weasel who had to turn to gentiles to build his power base. <just speculation.> Quote:
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09-02-2008, 04:11 PM | #5 | |
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In regard to Acts, there are several other noncanonical 'Acts' style texts that show up in the late 2nd century. I see no valid reason for dating the canonical Acts earlier than that (which means Luke would then also be a late 2nd century work). The fact of a few tidbits here and there suggesting a historical Jesus, does not discount in my mind the mountains of evidence suggesting mythology. I don't dogmatically subscribe to mythicism, but I think it's the simplest explanation for all the evidence. |
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09-02-2008, 10:33 PM | #6 | |
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Paul claimed equality on the basis that "he also" had seen the Lord -- implying the same type of vision as experienced by James and co. The rift between the two does not require the gospel narrative myth to explain it. The term "brother/s of the Lord" does not have to be read literally to make sense of such a rift. Simply different positions, titles, and Paul comes along as a latecomer claiming equality at the very least, and with a different idea of what Christianity should mean. Neil |
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09-02-2008, 11:05 PM | #7 | |
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Overemphasizing 'brother' in relation to James and 'christ', 'jesus', or 'the lord' seems a bit like grasping at straws. James is depicted as the head of the Jerusalem church. I would think such a lofty position would have been worthy of a lofty title. |
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09-02-2008, 11:47 PM | #8 | ||
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?? Neil |
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09-03-2008, 12:18 AM | #9 |
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"Paul" was working for the competition.
His acts were "reconciled", after the aquisition. |
09-03-2008, 02:07 AM | #10 |
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James the brother of the Lord, as meaning the brother of God, a strict adherent to Jewish Law? Either adherence was not that strict, or the law was not Jewish, or he would not have been called ‘the brother of the Lord’.
Paul in Gal 2:6 suggests that Peter and James added nothing to his message. If not because of physical proximity to the source of the faith in the past, why didn’t Paul simply reject them undisputedly to lead his own church? Why paying ‘the pillars’ the least allegiance, why coming to terms with them? I split for tubalkain. Good point. |
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