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05-19-2006, 04:01 AM
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#151 (permalink)
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
Many contemporary authors like Hyam Macoby go to great length to demonstrate that Paul could not have been the man he purports to be. It's hard to know exactly who the historical Paul was. Christian tradition is that he was an ascetic Pharisee, and scholar of Jewish ceremonial Law. Saul/Paul, the man in the story is an ethnic Jew, but also a Roman citizen by virtue of his patronage. Paul is a tentmaker by trade.
The consensus of most modern biblical scholars I've read is that some of the material in the NT ascribed to Paul is not from his hand. These psuedo-Pauline works, like Hebrews, are written in the style of Paul by others.
How one understands Paul, it seems to me, depends on the context within which his story is framed: Paul, as a character in his own story within his own time, Paul in the context of the whole of the NT, or St. Paul- a much larger historical character in the story of the establishment of Christianity, and its evolution through time up to, and including the present.
Paul himself says that his evangelistic strategy is to become "all things to all men". Paul preaches a message designed for universal appeal, which he tailors to the cultural disposition of his audience. For Jews he's a Jew discussing the Law, to Greeks he purports to be, on one occasion, a representative of the "Unknown God" whose statue he noticed on the way into town, to Roman officials he's a Roman citizen.
When taken in the narrow, contemporary context of the world of Paul's own experience, and provided we understand his writings as audience specific epistles, or letters, his anti-semitic, misogynist, and apparently pro-slavery sentiments seem pretty unremarkable.
Paul may not have been a Pharisee, but he was no intellectual dolt. Paul's attempt to reason through the Jewish Law in order to co-opt the seminal elements of Judaism into his universalist Christian philosophy is an example of his acumen as Christ's number one salesman.
Paul's comments on marriage relations and the role of women in the church reflect the man he was. Paul was an ascetic. Paul probably believed that there was a trade off between abstaining from sex, and spiritual acuity and awareness. All of Paul's relations with women in his writings seem to be quite egalitarian, though he can't bring himself to take a stand against patriarchic control of the church . Paul realizes that his way won't work for everyone, and when pressed for advice he recommends marriage for anyone who just can't subjugate his sexual desire. Again, in terms of Paul's own time, his attitude toward women and sex seems almost liberal.
Paul exhorts slaves to respect and serve their masters. Is this Paul's endorsement of the "peculiar institution"? I don't think so. Paul wants to get along with the Roman government, and the Roman Empire of Paul's time was cracking down on miscreants and rebels. Paul seeks respectability, and he sees the pounding that anti-empirial messianists are taken at the hands of the forces of Roman law and order. No one in Paul's sphere could imagine a world without slavery, it was a fact of life. Paul the pragmatist chooses order over chaos as a means to an end.
Paul, when reduced to a local character in a small story becomes quite likeable and innocuous. Zoom out to the next frame of reference, that of the NT writers from Matthew thru John the Revelator, and consider the most immediate effects of the Pauline doctrine on young Christianity:
The evolution of religion is one process within the sum cultural evolution of humanity. The success of Christianity as the defacto religion of choice for empire building is owed directly to Paul's vision of an inclusive, cosmopolitan religion which transcended localized, ethnic identity oriented rivals. This is why, when the Roman Empire became over-extended and difficult to control centrally, Constantine saw a role for an organized state religion. Freed from it's ethno-particularist bindings, monotheism had come of age.
While it is true that Paul drove the stake between Judaism and Christianity, the authors of the Gospels evolved Paul's thesis of the universal applicability of God's covenant with the Jews through the Law into a wholesale rejection of the Christ by the Jews. Paul never envisions the Jews screaming "crucify him" and volunteering to have the bloodguilt for murdering the Messiah retroactively, and for perpetuity attached to them.
The everyday, on the street Jew hated, more than any Roman, the humiliating manner in which his interests were sold down the river by his own corrupt puppet government of the religious elite. It was to this sentiment that both Paul and the gospeliers appealed while they sought the indulgence of Rome by absolving the empire, through the device of Pilate's hand washing, of blame. In this context, the motives of the author of Revelation become clear. He is the backlash against the hypocrisy of condemning the scribes and Pharisees of the Jewish politico-religious establishment for selling out to Rome while actively engaging in the same bootlick behavior.
O.K., zoom all the way out to today. Paul has attained mythological status. He is encrusted, gilded, and opulated in sainthood. Thanks to Paul, some sects like the JW's still force women to cover their heads when taking an active part in the church service. That's merely emblematic of the frozen grip of patriarchic control that has ruled our societies from time in memorial. Thanks to Paul, proponents of human slavery were able to stay under biblical cover until only a century and a half ago. Thanks to Paul and the gospeliers, institutional anti-Semitism became an official function of organized Christianity- a dark legacy that is alive and well just below the surface of our illusions of civility in western society.
All of that said, I enjoy Paul for the real gems in his writing:
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Philippians 4:8 Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.
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Chris
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05-19-2006, 04:05 AM
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#152 (permalink)
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Executive Member
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Originally Posted by Jeannot
BTW, about Paul and "the gospel." He's always talking about "the gospel"--but what does he mean? Obviously not the four canonical gospels we have, since they weren't written yet. Does he mean a written document? If so, what? The fabled "Q"?
Or does he just mean the "kerygma," the proclamation of faith that Jesus is the first born of the dead, and shows the path to salvation?
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That's just one of the tantalizing questions about Paul. There are these little hints in Paul's writings about the inner politics of the emerging Church.
Chris
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05-24-2006, 11:05 PM
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#153 (permalink)
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Senior Member
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Originally Posted by Abogado del Diablo
I think everything but the genuine Pauline epistles should be removed.
BTW, the tradition older than Catholicism - and which is still around, JJM, is the Gnostic philosophical fabric from which Catholicism adapted all of its symbols.
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Hello Senor Diablo! Nice reversal of fortune, in keeping with the principle that the way down is the way up. Paul & Jesus are joined at the hip, and thought by many to be in mortal danger as a result. There’s a perennial desire to want to save the one from the other. I think you would agree that the prevailing choice – from Thomas Jefferson to the Jesus Seminar – is to save Jesus from Paul, not Paul from Jesus.
I come at this a little out of my depth, in that I haven’t read the early patristic writers or later theorizers you refer to. But I am hip to the general framework of the times. The New Testament – the strangest book ever written – is a syncretistic document reflecting the interpenetration of Greek & Jew. That interpenetration as you know went both ways. It wasn’t just the Hellenising of Jews but also of the Judaizing of Greeks, noted (usually as an accusation) in the philosophies of Hellenistic times and of late-antiquity from the Stoics to the Neoplatonists.
So I wouldn’t argue with your general framework, which is indeed pretty much in line with what I know of standard scholarship. But I would put some of what you say into question.
First, there’s the question of what constitutes Gnosticism in the first place. Its fundamental definition is a method that seeks the divine or enlightenment through knowledge/insight. This is in contrast with (or complementary to) that other royal road to God, submission/love. Secondarily, Gnosticism is associated with certain metaphors dominated by a dualist, world-negating metaphysics. On both counts, the original form of Buddhism is perhaps the greatest example of the Gnostic project. Certainly, insight is the hallmark of the Pali Canon, and the dominant goal is escape from existence – laypeople who weren’t up to that level of renunciation were given the lesser goal of better (or heavenly) rebirth, much as St. Paul advised marriage for all believers who couldn’t handle celibacy.
The point here is that this Gnostic impulse was extremely varied in practice & expression, that it circulated around the general syncretistic stew of the times, and was not as distinctly defined as might seem to us now or as is reflected in the standard role call of heresies. To me, this presents difficulties to the Gnostic hypothesis you appear to be offering here. There was no definable “iron curtain”, no east/west divide, so how in this incredibly mixed environment could Christianity at any point be characterized as either Gnostic or literal, exclusively dedicated to either knowledge or love?
Second, this naturally leads to the question of the “gnosticism” of Paul. I’m hardly prepared here to go into the intricacies of the mixed bag of his theology, but I think it’s fair to say that the salient feature of Paul’s theology is that it’s very distinctly his own. It’s possible of course that later redactors suppressed some overtly Gnostic passages, but I think that while it’s possible to read Paul as a Gnostic (it’s possible to read anyone as a Gnostic, for those who have eyes!), I don’t think he can be easily slotted into that camp. Like his times, I think Paul’s thought is highly mixed. In particular, the central theme of love, while perhaps assimilatible to a Gnostic practice is hardly Gnostic in tone to the extent of the emphasis it’s given here.
Third, I think the scholarly consensus that Paul’s genuine letters are among the earliest and least altered Christian documents is not automatic proof that Paul is representative of the earliest or most authentic Christianity. You’ve said yourself that the truth is the truth no matter who says it or where it’s found, so that the trail of documentary evidence is hardly the final & unassailable factor in judgement. In fact, we have no more independent evidence for the existence of Paul than we do for Jesus. The difference is that we have in the Pauline writings a much more rounded personality, and thus a heightened sense that we are indeed hearing the voice of an actual person. On the other hand, I think you would agree that while this is a kind of evidence for the existence of Paul, it’s not necessarily evidence against the existence of Jesus.
Someone else has already pointed out on another thread that the most plausible assumption is that an historical Jesus actually did exist, but that nearly everything else we think we know about what he did or said is open to question.
That’s what makes most sense to me. In modern terms, one might see Paul as an early example of the process of branding. Before Paul’s conversion the Jesus “brand” was metastizing throughout the Middle East, as open source, one might say. Paul took that open source and made it a fully registered brand, so that between the sayings gospels & the fragmentary narratives and the final canon, he managed to stamp his register on nearly the whole story. “His” gospel is both a brilliant elaboration of the original, and a decisive (sometimes unfortunate) redirection.
So I would take almost a traditional, or at least a middle view here. I don’t think Paul is an evil doppelganger of Jesus, but I also don’t think Jesus is & his gospel is merely a projection of Paul. Like beans & cornbread, they’re ultimately inseparable.
Sincerely,
Devadatta
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08-16-2006, 02:37 AM
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#154 (permalink)
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Ferally Decent
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
Devadatta:
Thanks for the interesting replies and comments. I don't know if you are still visiting this forum, but if you are I apologize for not noticing these comments earlier.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
Hello Senor Diablo! Nice reversal of fortune, in keeping with the principle that the way down is the way up. Paul & Jesus are joined at the hip, and thought by many to be in mortal danger as a result. There’s a perennial desire to want to save the one from the other. I think you would agree that the prevailing choice – from Thomas Jefferson to the Jesus Seminar – is to save Jesus from Paul, not Paul from Jesus.
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I think both need to be saved from us.
My statement that everything but the genuine Pauline Epistles should be removed was intended as a thought provoker. (It didn't really work  ) I like plenty of other stuff in the NT, including the basic story. I think much of it has been tampered with and forged by polemicists (including the Book of Acts, Luke, Matthew and John, and the Pastorals) though I find a lot of truth scattered about in these books as well.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
The New Testament – the strangest book ever written – is a syncretistic document reflecting the interpenetration of Greek & Jew. That interpenetration as you know went both ways. It wasn’t just the Hellenising of Jews but also of the Judaizing of Greeks, noted (usually as an accusation) in the philosophies of Hellenistic times and of late-antiquity from the Stoics to the Neoplatonists.
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I agree with that assessment. I think that's pretty similar to the way I've expressed it in various places here.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
First, there’s the question of what constitutes Gnosticism in the first place. Its fundamental definition is a method that seeks the divine or enlightenment through knowledge/insight. This is in contrast with (or complementary to) that other royal road to God, submission/love.
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That's only if you understand Gnosticism through the lens of literalism. Gnosticism is the road to Love by understanding the mythical vehicle that allows you to transcend yourself and have epiphanous moments of connecting empathy with others. The Gnostic ideal is "know thyself" and the Gnostic moral is "knowledge and law should never get in the way of love and understanding." (my version  ) Thus, if you think those who came up with the idea of a "demiurge" meant it literally, you are missing the point entirely.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
Secondarily, Gnosticism is associated with certain metaphors dominated by a dualist, world-negating metaphysics.
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Gnosticism is finding the balance between the inner and the outer worlds through creative mythology. If you only understand the denotation of the myths, it might seem otherwise, but they almost always have double (and sometimes triple) meanings.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
The point here is that this Gnostic impulse was extremely varied in practice & expression, that it circulated around the general syncretistic stew of the times, and was not as distinctly defined as might seem to us now or as is reflected in the standard role call of heresies.
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I agree with this.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
To me, this presents difficulties to the Gnostic hypothesis you appear to be offering here. There was no definable “iron curtain”, no east/west divide, so how in this incredibly mixed environment could Christianity at any point be characterized as either Gnostic or literal, exclusively dedicated to either knowledge or love?
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There are those who know the law of Love. All else is vanity.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
Second, this naturally leads to the question of the “gnosticism” of Paul. I’m hardly prepared here to go into the intricacies of the mixed bag of his theology, but I think it’s fair to say that the salient feature of Paul’s theology is that it’s very distinctly his own.
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Of course it is. But you can make it yours, too.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
It’s possible of course that later redactors suppressed some overtly Gnostic passages, but I think that while it’s possible to read Paul as a Gnostic (it’s possible to read anyone as a Gnostic, for those who have eyes!)
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LOL
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
. . . I don’t think he can be easily slotted into that camp. Like his times, I think Paul’s thought is highly mixed. In particular, the central theme of love, while perhaps assimilatible to a Gnostic practice is hardly Gnostic in tone to the extent of the emphasis it’s given here.
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Again, this may be a result of thinking Gnosis isn't first and foremost about love, empathy and connection.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
Third, I think the scholarly consensus that Paul’s genuine letters are among the earliest and least altered Christian documents is not automatic proof that Paul is representative of the earliest or most authentic Christianity.
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I wouldn't contend with you on this issue. Paul is clearly at odds with something in Jerusalem that sounds from Paul's letter like a precursor to the Nazarenes or Ebionites, but which is clearly claiming some sort of "faith" in the revelation of the Christ before it came to Paul.
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Originally Posted by Devadatta
That’s what makes most sense to me. In modern terms, one might see Paul as an early example of the process of branding. Before Paul’s conversion the Jesus “brand” was metastizing throughout the Middle East, as open source, one might say. Paul took that open source and made it a fully registered brand, so that between the sayings gospels & the fragmentary narratives and the final canon, he managed to stamp his register on nearly the whole story. “His” gospel is both a brilliant elaboration of the original, and a decisive (sometimes unfortunate) redirection.
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This is a very interesting way to think about it. I've been reading books about cultural evolution and memes in religion that may speak to some similar ideas. I am just finishing Daniel Dennett's Breaking the Spell, which I highly recommend if you want to go a little further with this idea. I'd love to discuss this further with you.
Best regards.
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08-16-2006, 03:55 AM
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#155 (permalink)
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What was the question?
Join Date: Dec 2003
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Quote Abogado:
BTW, the tradition older than Catholicism - and which is still around, JJM, is the Gnostic philosophical fabric from which Catholicism adapted all of its symbols.
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That is certainly subject to debate...
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08-16-2006, 02:24 PM
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#156 (permalink)
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Ferally Decent
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Originally Posted by Quahom1
That is certainly subject to debate... 
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What isn't subject to debate?
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08-16-2006, 03:10 PM
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#157 (permalink)
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What was the question?
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Originally Posted by Abogado del Diablo
What isn't subject to debate? 
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i don't know...death and taxes? The periodic chart? Murphy's Law? (though I do contend that Murphy was an optimist...)
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08-16-2006, 03:14 PM
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#158 (permalink)
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Ferally Decent
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Originally Posted by Quahom1
i don't know...death and taxes? The periodic chart? Murphy's Law? (though I do contend that Murphy was an optimist...) 
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LOL. I know we have tax protesters and death protesters. And I bet even the periodic chart has its detractors. But you may be right about Murphy's Law.
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08-16-2006, 03:26 PM
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#159 (permalink)
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What was the question?
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Maryland
Posts: 9,060
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Originally Posted by Abogado del Diablo
LOL. I know we have tax protesters and death protesters. And I bet even the periodic chart has its detractors (jk). But you may be right about Murphy's Law.
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Nuts, I would rather have been right about the first two...
v/r
Q
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08-16-2006, 03:29 PM
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#160 (permalink)
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What was the question?
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Maryland
Posts: 9,060
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Originally Posted by Abogado del Diablo
LOL. I know we have tax protesters and death protesters. And I bet even the periodic chart has its detractors. But you may be right about Murphy's Law.
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It seems your link only shows up in my response, however I found it extremely thought provoking.
What is pointed out as the "new periodic table", is something "Wiccans and Druids" knew about all along...
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08-16-2006, 03:34 PM
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#161 (permalink)
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Jeannot
Join Date: May 2006
Location: East Coast US
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
Devil's Advocate:
"I wouldn't contend with you on this issue. Paul is clearly at odds with something in Jerusalem that sounds from Paul's letter like a precursor to the Nazarenes or Ebionites, but which is clearly claiming some sort of "faith" in the revelation of the Christ before it came to Paul."
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I agree with most of what you said, but why "precursor"? The Nazarenes (or Nazarites?)/Ebionites were supposedly very early, before Paul and maybe before James--or simultaneous with him. We're they the remnants of Jesus' followers in Galilee--the group significantly missing in Acts?
("Nazirites", BTW, were those who, like Sampson, took a vow of sobriety, etc. Jesus may have been one for a time--the vow could be just for a period of time)
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08-16-2006, 03:37 PM
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#162 (permalink)
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What was the question?
Join Date: Dec 2003
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
Hey Abo!
You just proved the point about Paul staying in the NT...
Paul's writings are the original "periodic chart". Very detailed and studied, before being commited to the NT. Before Paul there was Earth, Wind, Water and Fire as a periodic chart. Not quite specific concerning Christian guidance.
v/r
Q
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09-14-2006, 08:39 AM
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#163 (permalink)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 69
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Originally Posted by I, Brian
Should Paul be removed from the NT? For example, have the Pauling epistles diminished the ministry of Jesus, by turning it from practice to theory?
. . . . .OR does Paul deserve a most necessary place in the New Testament, because without Paul, Christianity lacks an inpsired commentator to explain the life of Jesus?
General discussion point... 
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Weren't there different versions of the NT. . .in which different books were included or excluded? Didn't the Ethiopians include the book of Enoch, for instance? Etc. Which version of the NT would we be talking about?
And are not the words of Jesus clear enough to explain His message, whereas 2nd Peter said Paul's words were hard to understand?
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09-14-2006, 08:24 PM
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#164 (permalink)
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What was the question?
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Maryland
Posts: 9,060
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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Originally Posted by Excaliburton
Weren't there different versions of the NT. . .in which different books were included or excluded? Didn't the Ethiopians include the book of Enoch, for instance? Etc. Which version of the NT would we be talking about?
And are not the words of Jesus clear enough to explain His message, whereas 2nd Peter said Paul's words were hard to understand?
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Enoch is from the Old testament. I don't recall various versions of the NT, prior to the first counsel, Nor do I believe the Ethiopian version seperated the NT from the OT, so perhaps that is what you are referring to?
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09-14-2006, 08:31 PM
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#165 (permalink)
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
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Posts: 3,267
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Re: Should Paul be removed from the NT?
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