benchwarmer wrote: ↑Thu May 16, 2024 1:48 pmIf Jesus never existed, Christianity is pointless.
It's a pretty minor point, but I disagree with this. Modern Christianity would require few changes to accommodate a mythic Jesus. Christians would have to reevaluate the meaning of the gospels and Acts in a historical sense, but the whole impetus behind mythicism in the first place is that Pauline theology works just as well with a mythic Jesus and perhaps even better. If Christians can say things like, "he is risen," and, "the Lord lives today," and believe that it's literally true, it doesn't matter whether Christ was born, crucified, and raised from the dead in first century Palestine or a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.
benchwarmer wrote: ↑Thu May 16, 2024 1:48 pmIf Paul never existed, then... well not much changes. Someone had visions/thoughts about Jesus and wrote them down. Whether this someone is named Paul doesn't really matter.
Maybe not in Christian practice, but that would change a lot for me. The foundation of my synthesis of the New Testament and Christianity is that the genuine Pauline epistles are the earliest Christian writings that we have and influenced the gospels. If the earliest Pauline epistles are second century documents (as would be the case if Marcion is "Paul"), then the gospels and Acts might conceivably predate Pauline theology. Part of the reason that Acts is suspicious as a historical document is that it conflicts with the Pauline epistles. If the epistles are based on Acts or both are based on prior tradition, then the epistles are no longer a primary source with which to compare Acts. Furthermore, if Marcion is "Paul," then it's conceivable that he had Acts in front of him when he wrote the epistles. The "Gospel of Marcion" is already accepted to have been a version of Luke, but Marcion's canon didn't include Acts itself. If he had Acts, then the epistles could conceivably be an attempt to rehabilitate the tradition behind Acts, making the Paul character of Acts less Jewish.
Of course, a Paul that's both early and fictional would solve some of this, but we're back to finding a reason for both the forgeries themselves and their acceptance.