Brian referenced this text elsewhere, so I thought I'd comment.
Thomas
Nonsense. Each Gospel is a theological testimony. The Book of Hebrews (not by Paul) has a profound theology. What the author's talking about is ethics, not theology.... but Paul's Epistles demonstrate the building of the real theology of Christianity.
A brief look at the text-books of doctrine, The "Catechism" say, or Ott's "Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma" would suffice to show how inaccurate and ill-informed that statement is.without the theology of Saul of Tarsus there is no Christian Doctrine.
Funny how the Apostles and the Church never noticed that, I mean, they all died for what they believed, yet they stood by and let someone make a mockery of it ...In this in-depth scholarly thesis by victor, he systematically analyses the letters of Saul - to set up his ultimate prosecution, and the accusation that Saul of Tarsus did not simply usurp the embryonic Jerusalem Church under Jesus's brother James, but that he also corrupted the entire original message of Christianity as it was then into something utterly alien.
I might tackle this on the Theology Board if anyone's interested?In all honesty I can say that I have searched for rebukes against the criticisms against Saul of Tarsus, all of which Victor has developed, and more - but never have I found anything that even begins to present itself as a coherent defence. Ultimately the acceptance of Saul of Tarsus remains a matter of faith. However, should anyone take it upon themselves to ever write-up a proper defence, addressing all objections in detail, then I would be very happy to post it up here in the general articles section of interfaith.org, to serve as a balanced argument.
Thomas