I'm not trying to disagree with you, but you offer very little evidence to agree with, I think that's the problem.
I'm not looking for agreement. I'm looking for disagreement, reasons for thinking that what I'm picturing didn't happen.
With regard to the Holy Spirit, that seems indisputably tied to the Pentecost event in Jerusalem. We can pre-empt that with the 'Pentecost of the Gentiles' in the house of Cornelius the Centurion in Caesarea (Acts 10 et seq) – in fact, I think the evidence is stronger for Caesarea as a 'starting place' than it is for Capernaum – the latter is not mentioned once in Acts.
I want to see if I'm understanding what you're thinking about the resurrection, the growth and spread of Christianity, and the Holy
Spirit. Are you thinking of the survival, growth and spread of Christianity as proof of the resurrection, because the resurrection is the only possible explanation for it? Is the reason we need to know that He was resurrected because believing that is a requirement for salvation?
I'm thinking of the Holy Spirit as working in the world everywhere all the time, as long as the world has existed. Are you thinking of the Holy Spirit as only coming into the world at a few particular times and places, after the resurrection of Jesus?
One is inclined to ask what other scriptures and cosmology would Jesus have applied to Himself?
Logically, the Jewish sort was the only kind He knew.
Sorry, I should have said "passages" rather than "scriptures." I'll give some examples.
Here are some features of Paul's high Christology, with references:
- Feature | Representative Epistle References | Notes
- Pre-existence of Christ | Philippians 2:6–7; Colossians 1:15–17; 1 Corinthians 8:6 | Paul explicitly places Christ in the divine sphere before creation.
- Divine Titles / Identification with God | Romans 9:5; Titus 2:13; Hebrews 1:8 | Titles normally reserved for God are applied directly to Christ.
- Incarnation / Taking on Flesh | Galatians 4:4; Romans 8:3; Hebrews 2:14 | Christ’s humanity is emphasized as part of divine mission.
- Cosmic Role / Sustainer of Creation | Colossians 1:17; Hebrews 1:3; 1 Corinthians 8:6 | Christ is portrayed as cosmic sustainer, not just redeemer.
- Exalted Status / Enthronement | Philippians 2:9–11; Ephesians 1:20–22; Hebrews 1:3–4 | Enthronement language mirrors divine kingship.
- Salvific Mission Grounded in Divinity | Romans 5:18–19; 2 Corinthians 5:19; Hebrews 9:26–28 | Salvation is rooted in Christ’s divine identity and action.
- Full Divine Consciousness / Wisdom | 1 Corinthians 2:16; Colossians 2:3; Hebrews 4:15 | Christ embodies divine wisdom and awareness.
- Worship of Christ | Philippians 2:10–11; Hebrews 1:6; Revelation 5:12–13 | Worship directed to Christ signals divine status
All of those features were already part of diaspora cosmology when Paul was born, part of the air he breathed, before he ever heard of Jesus or His disciples
- Feature | OT References | Pre-NT Jewish Writings
- Pre-existence | Proverbs 8:22–31 (Wisdom before creation) | Sirach 24:3–9; Wisdom of Solomon 7–9; Baruch 3:37; Philo’s Logos
- Divine Titles / Identification with God | Daniel 7:13–14 (Son of Man given dominion) | 1 Enoch 62–69 (Son of Man exalted); Qumran 11QMelchizedek (Melchizedek called “El”); exalted Moses traditions
- Incarnation / Dwelling Among Humans | Isaiah 63:9 (Angel of God’s presence) | Sirach 24:8 (“Wisdom pitched her tent”); Baruch 3:37 (“Wisdom appeared on earth”); Philo’s Logos dwelling among humans
- Cosmic Role / Sustainer of Creation | Genesis 1 (creation by God’s word); Psalm 33:6 | Wisdom of Solomon 7:22–27 (Wisdom ordering all things); Philo’s Logos as instrument of creation
- Exalted Status / Enthronement | Psalm 110:1 (Lord at God’s right hand); Daniel 7:13–14 | 1 Enoch 69:27–29 (Son of Man enthroned); Qumran exaltation texts; Moses/Enoch exaltation traditions
- Salvific Mission | Isaiah 53 (Suffering Servant); Isaiah 11 (Messianic judge) | Wisdom of Solomon 2–5 (Righteous One suffering/exalted); apocalyptic mediator figures reconciling heaven and earth
- Divine Consciousness / Wisdom | Proverbs 8:12–16 (Wisdom as counselor); Job 28 (Wisdom hidden with God) | Wisdom of Solomon 7 (Wisdom all-knowing, radiant); Philo’s Logos as divine mind; angelic vice-regents
- Worship of Heavenly Figure | Daniel 7:14 (all peoples serve the Son of Man); Psalm 97:7 (angels worship God) | 1 Enoch 48:5 (nations worship the Elect One); Wisdom hymns; Qumran angelic liturgies
Each pre-NT diaspora feature was associated with one or more OT passages that Jesus applied implicitly to himself.
- Feature | OT Anchor | Jesus’ Implicit Self-Application
- Pre-existence | Proverbs 8 (Wisdom before creation); Genesis 1 (Word as creative agent) | “Before Abraham was, I Am” (John tradition); in Synoptics, his authority over creation and nature echoes Wisdom/Word motifs.
- Divine Titles / Identification with God | Daniel 7:13–14 (Son of Man enthroned); Psalm 110:1 (Lord at God’s right hand) | Jesus’ repeated use of “Son of Man” with Danielic overtones; trial scene in Mark 14:62 citing Daniel 7 + Psalm 110.
- Incarnation / Dwelling Among Humans | Isaiah 63:9 (Angel of God’s presence); Exodus 3 (God’s messenger) | Jesus’ “I am with you” sayings; his role as God’s embodied presence among his disciples.
- Cosmic Role / Sustainer of Creation | Psalm 33:6 (creation by God’s word); Genesis 1 | Jesus calming the storm, commanding nature, multiplying food — actions echoing divine creative authority.
- Exalted Status / Enthronement | Psalm 110:1; Daniel 7:13–14 | Jesus’ trial confession (“you will see the Son of Man seated at the right hand of Power”); Stephen’s vision in Acts 7 echoes this.
- Salvific Mission | Isaiah 53 (Suffering Servant); Isaiah 11 (Messianic judge) | Jesus’ passion predictions; “Son of Man came to give his life as a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45) echoing Isaiah 53.
- Divine Consciousness / Wisdom | Proverbs 8; Job 28 | Jesus’ wisdom sayings (“greater than Solomon here”); his teaching authority and parables echo Wisdom traditions.
- Worship of Heavenly Figure | Daniel 7:14 (all peoples serve the Son of Man); Psalm 97:7 (angels worship God) | Jesus accepts worship in the Gospels (healings, resurrection appearances); “in my name” sayings echo divine Name traditions.
I’m thinking that maybe the diaspora disciples, hearing that Jesus applied those passages to himself, applied to him all the diaspora features that they associated with those. Then when Paul was interrogating Christians before executing them, he would have heard them applying to Jesus all the features of diaspora cosmology that he grew up with. That would have nagged at him, until he was ready for Jesus to reveal to him on the road to Damascus that He, Jesus, truly was all of that.
Later, after hearing that Peter had baptized some gentiles, he started doing the same, which meant that he had to re-imagine all of that cosmology for gentiles who didn’t have any of the Jewish context. That’s why the Christology in his letters have that gentile flavor sometimes.
There's a lot of supposition going on here ...
It's pure speculation, what seems to me like the best explanation of what we see in the NT and earliest writings, based on everything that I've read and seen discussed. In Capernaum where he lived, among the many other disciples besides the twelve, and in the crowds that came to hear him, there would have been people taking notes and writing letters and teaching aids, just like in any other teaching network. Those would have survived long enough to be the Q, L, M and other sources that scholars are imagining.