Did St Paul Get Jesus Right?
78 pages
English

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78 pages
English

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Description

Was St Paul a distorter of Jesus' original message, or a faithful follower? Over recent years some critics of Christianity have claimed that while Jesus was a gifted teacher and a man of unparalleled kindness, St Paul was the true founder of Christianity, which he based on a delusional mistake: the idea that Jesus was God. This theory has found its way into academia, churches, newspapers, and, most recently, novels. In Did St Paul Get Jesus Right? respected New Testament scholar David Wenham looks at the historical evidence for such claims. Comparing the life and message of Jesus with the writings of St Paul, he offers a thoughtful exploration of their relationship, concluding that far from imagining Christianity, Paul was the messenger of an inherited faith.

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Publié par
Date de parution 19 octobre 2011
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780745958460
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0400€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Copyright 2010 David Wenham This edition copyright 2010 Lion Hudson The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
A Lion Book an imprint of Lion Hudson plc Wilkinson House, Jordan Hill Road, Oxford OX2 8DR, England www.lionhudson.com ISBN 978 0 7459 6248 1 (print) ISBN 978 0 7459 5846 0 (epub) ISBN 978 0 7459 5845 3 (Kindle) ISBN 978 0 7459 5847 7 (pdf)
Distributed by: UK: Marston Book Services, PO Box 269, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4YN USA: Trafalgar Square Publishing, 814 N. Franklin Street, Chicago, IL 60610 USA Christian Market: Kregel Publications, PO Box 2607, Grand Rapids, MI 49501
First edition 2010 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 First electronic edition 2011 All rights reserved
Acknowledgments pp. 27, 28, 47, 75, 85, 88, 93: Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version, copyright 1973, 1978, 1984 International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan and Hodder & Stoughton Limited. All rights reserved. The NIV and New International Version trademarks are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by International Bible Society. Use of either trademark requires the permission of International Bible Society. UK trademark number 1448790. All other Scripture quotations are the author s own translation.
Cover image: Images.com/Corbis
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Contents

Preface

Chapter 1 What is the Question and Why is it Important?

Chapter 2 Can We Use the New Testament as Evidence?

Chapter 3 How Paul Got Jesus or How Jesus Got Paul: The Evidence on Paul s Conversion

Chapter 4 Was Paul Interested in the Real Jesus? Evidence from Corinth on the Crucifixion and Resurrection

Chapter 5 Sex, Apostleship, and Love: More Evidence from Corinth and Beyond

Chapter 6 Abba , and What Happens When We Die: Evidence from Galatia and Thessalonica

Chapter 7 Was Paul the Inventor of Christian Doctrines?

Chapter 8 Did Paul and Jesus Really Agree?

Chapter 9 Is Paul Behind the New Testament Gospels?

Chapter 10 But Paul Was Certainly a Controversialist

Chapter 11 So Did Paul Get Jesus Right?

Notes
Preface

Sensational stories about the origins of Christianity appear in the media with unfailing regularity. In recent years we have heard that: Christianity was originally a psychedelic mushroom cult. Jesus married Mary Magdalene and had a child, or several children - a story successfully suppressed by the church. The Gospel of Judas has been found which seems to vindicate Judas, the disciple who betrayed Jesus.
Such stories sell books and make good films, but they almost always represent at best a fanciful reading of the evidence. Indeed there is often rather little evidence, and what there is is culpably misused.
Some of the books that have recently caught the headlines deliberately mix history and fantasy. Dan Brown s The Da Vinci Code has the hero and heroine racing from scene to scene cracking codes and discovering dark conspiracies in the Catholic church. They find, among other things, that Jesus was married, that the idea of Jesus as Son of God was not established until the fourth century AD , and that there were other gospels than those of the church, which gave a very different account of Jesus from that officially approved by the church.
More recently, in Philip Pullman s The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ Mary has twins, one called Jesus and the other - a much less attractive child - called Christ. In discussing the background to his novel, Pullman contrasts the real historical Jesus (the good man) with the Christ of St Paul and the church (represented in his fictional story by the scoundrel Christ ). Paul doctored and skewed the original story of Jesus, turning the man Jesus into the divine Christ; and it is this version of Christianity that the church adopted and has followed ever since.
Although both Brown and Pullman are explicitly writing fiction, they both bring in ideas about the origins of Christianity which they, as authors, take seriously. And readers have understandably been confused as to what is fact and what is fiction.
In the face of such confusion this book tries to help. It touches on many of the questions mentioned, but looks particularly at the widespread view that Paul skewed the story of Jesus and, in effect, founded a different religion from that of Jesus. It is intended for readers, Christian and other, who want to look carefully at the question of Paul and Jesus, and who want to distinguish the fact from the fiction. The book is not an entertaining page-turner like The Da Vinci Code. But I have tried to make it readable and to avoid being over-technical. I hope that readers will have the patience to follow the argument through, to consider the evidence, and to weigh the conclusions, which I believe to be very important.
I have deliberately not loaded this book with references, but I have noted some important ones in endnotes, so that readers who wish to can check the evidence being cited.
I am very grateful to all the friends who have commented on this book and have helped to make it better than it was.
CHAPTER 1
What is the Question and Why is it Important?

The history of the world is a story of power struggles - between tribes, nations, empires, and ideologies. Today is no different from the past: there are military conflicts, political and economic rivalries, and ideological wars between the religions and other belief systems. These include Marxism and communism (at present on the wane), other forms of atheism and materialism (not at all on the wane), religious fundamentalism (of various sorts), postmodernism, and paganism. The great religions of the world are still competing strongly: Islam is obviously in the ascendant. Hinduism arguably has a modern reincarnation in postmodernism, and Christianity, though declining in the West, is growing in other parts of the world.
Military and political struggles feature all the time on our television screens, and it is easy to see how important and dangerous they are, not just to those living in war zones, but to the whole world. The ideological wars are not always so visible or so easily portrayed in the media, though they are often bound up with politics (as in the Middle East). But they are also very important. Richard Dawkins and the new atheists may be wrong about many things, but in this respect they are right: they recognize that the struggles going on in our modern world for the hearts and minds of human beings matter; the outcomes will be of huge importance for the future of human society and indeed of our planet.
In today s ideological battles certain issues regularly come to the fore, and this book is looking at one of the key points where Christianity has often been under attack in recent years. It concerns St Paul (as Christians call him) and his relationship to Jesus.
Who were Jesus and Paul?
Jesus was a Jew who lived in Palestine in the first part of the first century AD . A healer, a teacher, and the founder of a popular movement, he became by any reckoning a hugely important figure. His followers, who were initially all Jews, came to see him as their messiah whom their Scriptures, the so-called Old Testament, told them about. The word messiah means anointed one , and the Old Testament spoke of God sending an anointed king who would save the Jewish people from their enemies and bring peace and prosperity. Jesus followers saw him as that saviour.
Jesus was opposed by people in power, both the Jewish authorities and the Romans, who ruled Palestine, and he was finally crucified. But his movement did not die with him. His followers claimed that he rose from the dead two days after his crucifixion and that his death was a sacrifice, bringing the forgiveness of people s sins. They started to proclaim him as Lord and Son of God around the Mediterranean world. Christians have gone on making these claims ever since.
If this is the Christian story of Jesus, who was Paul? He was one of the most important figures in the Jesus movement in its earliest days. He helped shape the church as it evolved; he was at the forefront of its missionary outreach; and a large part of the Christian New Testament was written by him or about him. He should probably be considered as second only to Jesus (with apologies to Peter) among people who influenced the development of Christianity.
The accusation against Paul and his inventive imagination
But this is precisely the issue that this book is intending to address, because Paul is frequently accused of not being a faithful interpreter of Jesus, but distorting Jesus message almost out of all recognition. It is alleged that Paul and others turned Jesus, who was no more than a popular Jewish teacher and healer from Palestine, into a divine cult figure who came down from heaven to save humankind, died as a blood sacrifice for the sins of the world, was raised from the dead and ascended into heaven, and who will one day return to judge the world.
Paul turns out to be the author of key Christian doctrines, so the argument goes, and the founder of Christianity as we know it. But the religion that he created was not that of Jesus. It was something constructed out of the story of Jesus through Paul s own imagination: he was influenced by the pagan religions of the Greek world (for example the mystery religions with their ideas of gods dying and rising) and most of all by his own experience of conversion to Christianity on the road to Damascus, when he claimed to have seen, heard, and been called by Jesus. His imagined view of Jesus dominated the early church, and the real Jesus, it is claimed, lost out.
Does it matter?
If this view of Paul is true, then the case for Christianity in the market-place of ideas is greatly weakened. It is unlikely that many people would want to go on believing in a Jesus produced by Paul s imagination. It

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