bjs1 wrote: ↑Mon Jul 08, 2024 3:29 pm
TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Mon Jul 08, 2024 5:24 am
bjs1 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 07, 2024 9:44 pm
TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Sun Jul 07, 2024 12:02 pm
No more that the evidence should be ignored that points to Paul having invented Christianity, Jesus' followers being observant Jews and not Gentile - style Christians and the Jesus of the gospels not being the actual Jesus in terms of his words, at any rate
What specific evidence are you referencing?
That Romans is Paul working out his thesis for himself, not passing on what he got from God or man, that Paul hints at his own side of interaction with James, who appears to have given Paul a latter permitting associate Jews (Gentiles) who observe the Noahide laws and a squabble with Peter about not eating with non - Jews, where we only hear what Paul said, not what Peter retorted; and for what it's worth, Acts shows Peter refusing to eat unclean food, and James concerned about Paul's teaching against circumcision and covering up for him.
Ok, but none of this is evidence. It is a hypothetical. This is an imagined scenario with no evidence or reason to suggest that is true. Now there is nothing wrong with a hypothetical, but we should not treat our imagination as evidence.
TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Mon Jul 08, 2024 5:24 am
And, as for the gospels, just one telling point, the Blasphemy charge makes no sense, unless from a Christian point of view, where claiming to be a Messiah is blasphemy. That is only the case in a Christian view of Jesus. There is also the same in Herod leaping to the conclusion that the 'King of the Jews' is something to be found in scripture, not amongst his own family, nobles or generals.
It is written by Christians, thinking in Christian terms, not by Jews, recounting eyewitness events. The gospels express views invented by Paul, not by Jesus.
This paragraph is better than the first one since it includes reasoning, though not evidence. However, the claims made are incorrect.
The gospels say that Jesus was accused of blasphemy for claiming to be the Son of God, not for claiming to be the Messiah (See Matthew 26:63 and Luke 22:70)
This is a Jewish approach to being the Son of God. First-century Jews would have said that they as the collective nation of Israel were Gods son, but for an individual to make that was making himself equal to God. (See John 10:33)
Christians, on the other hand, would have no problem claiming to be sons of God. The claim to be the son of God could have been excused from a Christian perspective, but it was blasphemy from the Jewish perspective of the Gospels.
It is hypothetically possible that Paul "invented Christianity" but, as we see from these posts, there is no evidence to suggest that it is true.
It is not speculation that Paul argues out (in the form or working out) his theory. His argument is flawed. We see in Corinthians that his 'Faith will make you perfect' ideas didn't work and he has to reintroduce good Works to avoid losing salvation. Thereafter he's excusing and self - justifying himself and his beliefs. You may dismiss this as Speculation, but to me it is there for anyone who 'Really Reads' the Bible.
The thing about Son of God is that it does or did not mean for Jews what it means for Christians. A Messiah/son of God, was a man chosen by God for something special. My understanding is that we are all sons (and I suppose daughters) of God. A messiah is anointed (by man or God) to do a particular job (1). It is only Gentile Christian thought that had to make Jesus a demigod like the Greek ones. That wasn't it to start and it's clear that the 'spirit' arrived in Jesus at the Baptism and not before and the faked nativities were invented to make Jesus Divine from birth.
Probably you will deny this and insist the Bible reads as Christian interpretation insists. But it doesn't. Not from what I read about what messiah and Son of God meant (and means) to Jews. Including Paul who (all though the authentic letters) sees Jesus as a man chosen by God as a sacrifice of (original) sin, and not as a divine being apart from the spirit that occupied him. And abandoned him on the cross, too.
This is even clear in the gospels from Mark's man being driven about by the Spirit, and Jesus being able to know or do anything without using spirit power from the spirit of God that was in him. The doctrine of wholly man is right there, but Christianity has made them all identical, the man being divine as well, it seems, which is why the solid -body resurrection had to be invented.
It can hardly be (reasonably) denied (to those who see it, as a thousand years of Experts and Authorities have failed to do) that Herod in Matthew's nativities sees 'King of the Jews' as a religious title, the birthplace of which is to be found in scripture. This is clearly Matthew back - engineering the OT to concoct a Prophecy, but it illustrates how the NT is based in Christian thought, not Jewish.
No doubt you will dismiss all this as speculation and opinion. Much of it is, but based on clues that are ignored and not picked up. It is (like Abiogenesis) an Alternative, that cannot be dismissed, even if it isn't taught in the history class along with the Bible.
I'm used to people not listening and not liking anything they haven't thought of themselves

but to me the thing explains all the puzzles (even those ignored by the believers) and (like the Babylonian invention of Genesis and Exodus) will one day be recognised. In the meantime, you may reject it but I don't. And I offer it to others to decide.
(1)The term "Son of God" is used in the Hebrew Bible as another way to refer to humans who have a special relationship with God. In Exodus, the nation of Israel is called God's firstborn son.[2] Solomon is also called "son of God".[3][4] Angels, just and pious men, and the kings of Israel are all called "sons of God."[Wiki]