Knowledge of Good and Evil

Juantoo3:
Dear friend, the letters after my name are as lengthy as your own. I am no academician nor do I owe my knowledge to any other than the Holy Spirit and a calling of G-d to honor His name and worship him! In fact, we are of the same school; of the general congregation struggling to determine what happened two thousand years ago. I understand that you have many responsibilities to attend and I certainly do not deny you that.

I, however, was of an age and a mind when I was called out of the church to take care of my family, a wife and two young sons, manage a large office which dealt with attorneys and large corporations all over this world, and yet study every night and weekend with two hours sleep a night or less, and none on holidays or weekends for a period of over two years!

When it came time to write the three thesis, I had been studying for more than twenty-one years and was of an age where I could work part time, and then finally retire to complete the work that took another five years plus! I am penniless save for Social Security, I have no letters after my name, I have spent so much time alone with no friends and no social life that I have tremendous difficulty around people and prefer total seclusion. All this done with great pain, often agonizing deep into the night, forcing myself into a renewed life in the church from which I suffer endlessly, (and which is not working out except for my Sunday class), but all by my own choice to serve God in a manner I can understand!

Now, I would consider my vision of the Christ much as Islam and the Holy Qu’ran. A human being, yes, but divine by nature as signified by the Apostle’s Creed. This is also the Lutheran determination, so I can never be charged with saying that he is merely a human being and nothing more. I probably am less willing to admit the depth of my belief in the Lutheran path, and that of my Catholic relatives, than I should.

Toward the third century there was a drifting toward a 'divine' Christ within the Judaic movement, the big hangup being a long debate concerning the, Incarnation. I believe that a Divine Christ was inevitable in any movement be it Jewish or Gentile.

As to the Judao-Christian church, when you have time, you should read the extant writings of Theophilus of Antioch, Athenagoras, Arias, James; in other words, the Apologists of the Judao-Christian movement, for that body of believers were still active and fighting for their theological and community lives well into the third century! It is not a matter of the church trying to destroy them as they did the Gnostics, but rather a choice that was made to take one side and ignore the other. The strength of Paul’s work, and his followers, was surely a deciding factor in this lengthy struggle. We have little of their works left but sufficient to note their state of affairs until their disappearance. Note, I do not say their demise, but rather their disappearance.

As for you and I personally, I believe our discussion is absolutely essential! Perhaps it is even a model for others. I pray you have success in being heard by the world for much that you have to say has merit. For myself, my position leaves room for little more than a squeak, and for that I am thankful. I think that any public display would probably destroy what may be left of my character.

VIRTUAL CLIFF, I would suggest, for a synopsis that you read the last Chapter of the thesis, Summation, and my post above. The remainder would be a repetition of the entire thesis for I have used Paul’s own written word and those of his ‘disciples’.

As to the church today, I can only quote Juantoo3: “Thank you for the glaring reminder of why I remain a solitary in my walk.”

For both of you I offer this, and I am not unmindful of Juantoo3’s time spent in his replies to this string, is not life among us humans such that at times we must contract ‘evil’ to fight ‘evil’? It took Wyatt Earp and Doc Holiday to undertake the fight at the O.K. Corral, and they were just as much murderer’s, hired guns, as those they fought. Yet today they are ‘heroes’ of a kind. Many question the motives and the actions of the Big Three during the Second World War, yet today, despite their collective history they are ‘heroes’ of a kind. (I belittle none of them, especially Sir Winston!)

Was Paul a necessary evil in a fight against paganism? You must judge. A look at the church today seems to cause Virtual Cliff AND juantoo3 some consternation. I know it does me, but as the writer of Hebrews points out, the priesthood we have of old is a mere reflection of the true priesthood. Such is the church today, a mere shadow of that which is real and eternal. And if Melchisedek is G-d’s High holy priest, Christ is more because he not only attended to the sacrificial office, he was himself the sacrifice. And to the writer of Hebrews, who was assaulting the Judao-Christian church at the start of the second century as one of the Protagonists, “Without an offering of blood, there is no forgiveness of sin.”

I will give you this… if we must continually protect ourselves against ‘evil’ by contracting ‘hired guns’, Paul may well have been a ‘necessary evil.’ Would Christianity have survived under a totally Jewish background? G-d alone knows the answer to that one.

To close, no one here is below me; no one here is below any other here or in the world. We are all servants to one another. We are judged by One, not by each other, and that which we offer is offered on an equal ‘plate’.

I Am, as always;
Victor G
 
Kindest Regards, Victor!

Thank you for your heartfelt reply!
Victor said:
It is not a matter of the church trying to destroy them as they did the Gnostics, but rather a choice that was made to take one side and ignore the other.
Agreed.

As for you and I personally, I believe our discussion is absolutely essential! Perhaps it is even a model for others. I pray you have success in being heard by the world for much that you have to say has merit. For myself, my position leaves room for little more than a squeak, and for that I am thankful. I think that any public display would probably destroy what may be left of my character.
While I agree our respectful dialogue may help serve as an example for others, I fail to see how your contribution is but "a squeak." You are probably the first to raise this issue here, and certainly the most eloquent and studied, but you are not the only person to raise the issue of Paul's methods. Sadly, in trying to draw the other contributors into explanation of their reasoning, most just tucked tail and ran, not to be seen here again. This signifies to me an incomplete understanding of their point of view. It also signifies to me what I alluded to concerning my traveling companion at the time I looked into this some years back. To this day, He is still a very embittered and judgemental person, finding fault with everyone. And he's a dimestore excuse for a preacher!

Perhaps it would serve you well, and the greater community here, to describe a Christianity without the influence of Pauline doctrine. What unnecessary trappings are unloaded? What doctrines and dogmas are shed? What is such a Christian liberated from? What does such a path look like, and what value does it hold?

I ask in the interest of showing what is another path, perhaps another valid path, a supplemental path in Christianity. I believe it would be better to focus on the positive aspects of such a view towards a faith-walk, rather than accentuating the negative reasoning behind such a path. Just a friendly suggestion...

is not life among us humans such that at times we must contract ‘evil’ to fight ‘evil’?
If I may wax philosophical for a moment, what is "evil?" If we fight fire with fire, is fire evil?

Was Paul a necessary evil in a fight against paganism? You must judge.
Yet, the question arises, is Paganism evil? Is a Pagan automatically condemned by no more than an accident of birth? This is a judgement I would rather not make, that I be not judged.

the priesthood we have of old is a mere reflection of the true priesthood. Such is the church today, a mere shadow of that which is real and eternal. And if Melchisedek is G-d’s High holy priest, Christ is more because he not only attended to the sacrificial office, he was himself the sacrifice.
Agreed.

“Without an offering of blood, there is no forgiveness of sin.”
I am confused by your application. It seems to me you suggest this is inappropriate. Yet this is a ritual tradition dating into the Tabernacle period, formulated from events that transpired just outside of Eden. It is a delicate subject, one I could get few others to discuss, but blood sacrifice is extremely relevant to so many of the religions of antiquity, not solely Judaism. And while I hear condescending remarks from time to time pertaining to Christian "sacrifice," that is, how could we dare sacrifice a human being, it was a one time for all event, unlike other traditions who continue, some to this very day, to use blood sacrifice in their ritual and tradition! I mean, were it not that the Jews were forcibly required to stop sacrificing because of the destruction of the Temple, they would likely still be offering sacrifice today. Some things I have read speak to this very thing, suggesting that there are those who look to a third building of the Temple, who are actively engaged in reconstructing Temple implements such as musical instruments and robes and curtains and menorahs. And even sacrificial implements. Further, I hear the whereabouts of the ashes of the Red Heiffer are known, and it is a matter of timing as to when the traditional rituals are to be reinstated. There are people who fervently believe in this effort, to whom in their minds and faith-walk it is entirely appropriate to offer blood sacrifice to the G-d of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and who are just waiting for the opportunity to begin once again. In light of Old Tesatament passages speaking of the Millenial Rule, I sometimes wonder if there is merit...

if we must continually protect ourselves against ‘evil’ by contracting ‘hired guns’, Paul may well have been a ‘necessary evil.’ Would Christianity have survived under a totally Jewish background? G-d alone knows the answer to that one.
Agreed. I am familiar with Messianic Judaism. If it is this to which you allude by negating Paul, then I understand. As long as one realizes the implications, that is, one is no longer bound solely by the Noahide Laws, but instead is bound by the 600 odd Levitical Laws. Afterall, Jesus did not come to do away with the Law...and Jesus was a Jew.

To close, no one here is below me; no one here is below any other here or in the world. We are all servants to one another. We are judged by One, not by each other, and that which we offer is offered on an equal ‘plate’.
Not only do I agree, I think this is the most profound and important statement thus far in our dialogue.

I wish you well, and hope for a continued discussion.

I remain respectfully yours,
Juantoo3
 
Juantoo3:
A quickie here. Since we are repeating our discussion at church this Sunday, I have the time to write and send you a ‘positive’ example of what the church would be like without Paul’s influence in today’s church, this person’s, ideal!

This will include the remark I made concerning the ‘blood offering’ for the remission of sin, which is absolutely necessary to this discussion. Then you and the others who have contributed may ascertain whether it would be valid for you.

It is, in fact, the path that I currently follow, or at least attempt to follow. It is the reason I am in ‘deep water’ with our church council and the Pastor. It is the reason that foreign influences are slipping into the ‘church’ today which will eventually bring about its demise! At least change it to a point where it will be unrecognizable within the next fifty years!

I Am, as always;
Victor G
 
Kindest Regards, Victor!

In the interim, while awaiting your response, I composed a brief "apology" of the summary of your thesis. You will find the points are effectively the same, simply placed where relevant to the text.

Response to Summary of Pauline Controversy

SUMMATION said:
It is also a given fact that the religion practiced as Christianity is Pauline Christianity and not the faith or religion of Jesus' disciples. That is the Church that Jesus ordained, not Paul's.
In essence I agree, contingent upon the conclusion that were it not for Paul carrying the message beyond the Jews of Palestine (a very significant contribution to the organization called Christianity), the fledgling Christianity as practiced by the Apostles in Palestine would have been obliterated by the Roman onslaught when the Temple was destroyed and after. In carrying the message of Jesus beyond the initial Jewish converts, the message was made available to any person in the world who cared to hear. This is crucial to understanding the growth and spread of Christianity, without which the fate of Christianity is tied directly to that of Judaism. As a lesser and recent sect of Judaism, Christianity would most likely have suffered a fate not unlike that of Qumran or Masada.

When Saul is first mentioned we know only that he was a student in the Rabbinical school of Gameleil,
Which Gamaliel? Having asked this question of a Jewish student of the Torah whose knowledge I hold in high esteem, I learned that there are several Rabbis with that given name.

But the names that resound from his inner circle are loud in the history of the Church.
John Mark, Barnabas, Timothy, Titus, Apollos, Silas, and Luke.
These facts are not disputed, for they are the means with which he was able to capture the future of the Christian movement. They were the means through which he managed victory over another list of names which should have been even more prominent in religious history.
Peter, James the Lord's brother, John the son of Zebedee, and the living Jesus who was called the Christ.
So that I am certain my understanding is in line with this, this is the same Luke who wrote the Acts of the Apostles and the Gospel of Luke, and this is the same John Mark who wrote the Gospel of Mark? As "hired hands" (to be polite) of Paul, surely these works also come into question…and since Matthew was a tax collector, and we all know tax collectors cannot be trusted to tell the truth…
This is the slippery slope I alluded to earlier. Are we to selectively edit the New Testament, and if so, where do we draw the line and by what justification? In condemning one writer by a set of standards, do we ignore those same standards when applied to other writers?

The depth of Paul's organization made it possible for him to take his gospel into the world and thus, to dominate the very essence of the Church as it exists today.
"Paul's" domination is twofold. First, the message of Jesus was carried beyond the confines of Judaism. Second, the "firstborn" church of Christianity was laid waste by the Roman military. Ah! Seeing it now in this manner, how often in the Old Testament is the younger son set above the older son? Jacob and Esau leap to mind, and Ephraim and Manasseh come to mind as well. Further, had Paul not carried the message of Jesus beyond the confines of Judaism, then it would still be requisite to be Jewish before one could be Christian!

We stipulate to these things because they are fact, but the other side of the coin is a different story. We could, as others have done, draw assumptions concerning the man and his activities. We might make conjectures about the meaning of his statements just to place Paul in the best light possible. Then we would be as guilty as those who constantly applaud him.
Is this a nice way of silencing critics? Yes, we might "draw assumptions." We might also base those "assumptions" on known history, rather than selective interpretation of texts that have long drawn criticism from scholars. We might take a bigger picture view of the affair, looking at the political climate of the region as a whole, in drawing our assessment. And we might, considering this is a subject related to the growth and promotion of a monotheistic faith in One Creator G-d, consider that that Creator G-d might have actually had some hand in the growth and promotion of that monotheistic faith. This is appeal to authority, true, but an authority without which this entire discussion is meaningless.

Paul drew from hearsay information, the myriad cult myths that abounded in his world, his Jewish education, his understanding of Hellenistic philosophies, and his consummate creative imagination.
To paraphrase Paul, did he not say something to the effect of: "To the Romans I am a Roman, to the Greeks I am a Greek, to the Jews I am a Jew." Yes, Paul was a political and cultural chameleon. And I do wonder how much of the misgivings over his works are misunderstandings or misinterpretations cross-culturally. And politically motivated. Personally, I find it impressive that he was able to translate a radically Jewish concept into Greek and Roman terms, that is, present Jesus' message in a meaningful way to non-Jews. Perhaps this "poetic license" of Paul was later abused, it remains to be seen. Paul's cultural chameleon methods are certainly the same methods historically used by the Catholic institution in its missionary spread throughout the world.

And that which he drew upon from God's Holy Scriptures, he manipulated and misquoted.
Personally, I think Paul brought a rather deep understanding to some OT teachings, if one can get past the fluff usually taught in a typical church today.

If Jesus' word contradicted Paul's gospel and his Hellenistic theology he would have disregarded Jesus' words at once.
We do not know this.

Luke is discredited by professional Christian theologians. They tell us that where Paul contradicts writing, such as Luke, Paul is to be taken as correct. This is to say that the Bible is something less than inspired by God. (The Interpreter's Bible; Volume 9: Page 126)
Poor Luke can't catch a break, he's damned if he does and damned if he don't…"the Bible is something less than inspired by God" either way...regardless of how Luke is discounted, it further erodes the value of the Gospels and the Acts, and the New Testament by extension. Do we keep the Gospel and trash the Acts, when they are effectively the first and second halves of the same narrative?

Besides, depending which professional Christian theologian you are speaking of, any part of the entire Bible can be brought into serious question.

We have shown Paul's theology, repeating it time and again. His basic concept of redemption hinges on one act. And upon the blood offering of a human sacrifice, depends salvation for the entire human race.
Considering, if Paul was a Jew of the Pharisaic tradition having learned at the feet of Gamaliel, living during the time when animal sacrifice was practiced on a factory scale by the Jews at the Temple, and blood sacrifice was practiced by virtually every surrounding culture, I fail to see why one should be shocked at this. The Jewish Temple is usually thought of by Christians today as if it were some kind of Church or Cathedral. It was not. The inner sanctuaries were reserved solely for devout Jews born into the faith, and the inner most sanctuary was reserved solely for the High Priest on one specific day of the year. The outer court, where everybody did their religious business, going about seeking absolution of sin, was a marvel of engineering for the sole purpose of slaughter and butchering and burning the sacrifices. That is why the sellers of doves and money changers were in the outermost courtyard, offering their wares in what, IMHO, had become a mindless ritual devoid of any meaning any more. The people no longer offered sacrifice out of a sense of duty, it was something you just did because it was expected of you. Hence, a portion of the motivations that lay behind the rage behind Jesus' cleansing of the Temple courtyard.

The nature of Paul's theology is speculative. It is based on conjecture.
Is not your theology, mine, everybody's, if we really get truthful with ourselves?

Paul seems to be rationalizing his prejudices.
Don't we all?

and claims that his eyes are practically useless, which makes the first two visions highly suspicious.
Why? 14 years ago my eyes were much better than they are now, it troubles me greatly to watch as my vision deteriorates.

and he denied God's Commandments (i.e., the Law).
I missed this part. Are you saying a student the likes of Paul, duly trained in the Pharisaic tradition, denied the Ten Commandments? Now, I can see a lot of wiggle room pertaining to the 600 other Levitical laws, which IMHO would seem necessary in order to translate what is effectively a Jewish cultural thing into a more Greek / Roman / Pagan cultural thing. But he still remained, as far as I can see, within the confines of the Ten Commandments and The Noahide Laws, particularly once his ministry started.

Now, I can understand and sympathize with the conclusion that Paul places an inordinate emphasis on faith over works. In this I am more inclined towards the teaching of James, and the words of Jesus. Show me your faith without your works, and I will show you my faith by my works.

Since Christianity today insists that even the Holy Scriptures as revealed to Judaism speak of Jesus, let us openly pursue that reference in denial of Paul's Hellenistic theology.(emphasis mine, -jt3)

"Then he said to them, 'These are my words which I spoke to you, while I was still with you, that everything written about me in the law of Moses and the prophets and the psalms must be fulfilled. '" (The New Testament: Revised Standard Version: Luke 24:44)
"Philip found Nathanael, and said to him, 'We have found him of whom Moses in the law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph."
Not only does the evangelist of John contradict his own opening statement as to Jesus' sonship, here indicating the he is the, "...son of Joseph...", but he insists that it is the law through which Jesus comes to us. Jesus himself indicates that the law and the prophets give us a knowledge of him.
Therefore I remark that if the law gives us a knowledge and understanding of the Christ, then how can the law be denied? To deny the law is to deny Jesus. And if the Living Christ comes to us through the law, who is to be our salvation, then how can the law be corrupt? For if the law is corrupt, so is Messiah, and there is no redemption.
In truth, the way of our salvation is through the law, and in the words of scripture which men consider 'holy', those things on which we will be judged are of the law. Does not James, Jesus' brother, agree with this logic?
Ummm, no. This is circular logic. You allude to laws speaking of Jesus, yet provide no support, at least not here. And I know from previous experience, in asking Jewish scholars about prophecy pertaining to Messiah, even the prophecies typically raised by Christians from the OT, (Isaiah comes to mind). The Jewish interpretation is quite different. In their view, Jesus did not fulfill prophecy, let alone law. It is not denial of law if the law cannot be produced. This challenge has been laid before Christians here in times past, with nothing definitive ever coming from it. In short, this is a circular supposition. How can a law that doesn't exist be denied? How can one point to a law that doesn't exist as proof, and then accuse those who don't accept a blind supposition without evidence?

*continued*
 
Jesus is very distinct when it comes to validating the Law, and pronouncing the punishment for those who teach others to ignore God's commandments.
"For verily I say unto you, Til heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven..." (The Authorized Version of King James: Matthew 5:18-19)
OK, which law? Paul did not teach against Noahide Law. Paul did not teach against the Ten Commandments. That leaves the Levitical Law. So, if no part of the 617 or so Levitical Laws (not a jot or tittle!) passes, then how come Christians often eat pork? How come Christians are often uncircumcised? My suggestion would be because they never were bound by Levitical Law to begin with, coming from the pagan backgrounds that they did. Of course, others are welcome to guide their Christian faith-walk by a different set of parameters if they wish, but if one carries this line of reasoning to its natural conclusions, circumcision is a must, no unclean meats may be eaten, linsey/woolsey must be observed, the Jewish Holy Days must be observed in propriety…in effect, one must be a Jew in all aspects who also happens to believe Jesus is Messiah. Monumental undertaking, especially since one is not likely to gain much sympathy or assistance from the Jewish community, who view Jesus at worst as a traitor to the faith, and at best as a misguided rabbi.

And then Paul had the audacity, the impudence, to teach that, "Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord... For any one who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment upon himself."
This student has come to believe that it was all done out of Paul's contempt, his hatred, for the Apostles, the Twelve.
Just want to be certain I am on the same page…this is after having rebuked Paul for disregarding the Law? What is contemptible about saying that something as sacrosanct as Communion to a Christian should be done in the reverent and contrite (read that: correct) attitude it was intended? Indeed, considering the direct connotation between Jesus' sacrifice (of which Communion is the symbol) and the blood sacrifice of the Jewish Temple, and what was brought to light earlier about how the sacrifice had become a mindless habit, Paul was (in my view) forewarning against the same mindless disrespect following onto the Christian symbol of remembrance. Bearing in mind this same mindlessness was a contributing factor to the only time written that Jesus actually showed righteous indignation.

Our problem lies in the fact that it is too late to erase the false path upon which the Church has been led. To do so now would mean the total collapse of Christianity as we have known it for two thousand years, for every doctrine the religion holds to is from Paul.
I don't know that I would use the term "false." That one sees an alternate path does not inherently presume that G-d has chosen only one path back to Him. (Let alone, that one is specifically on that singular correct path)

The sacrament of Communion is from Paul.
Paul would have us believe that he received the custom from the Lord. It is agreed that he had not been present at the Last Supper. Professional theologians insist that if we take Paul's words literally, we would have to believe with that Paul received his instructions in a vision from the risen Lord. For a more pointed statement one must read the following notations from professional theologians.
"...and when he had given thanks, he broke it, and said, "This is my body which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me." (I Corinthians 11:25; RSV)
Mark's Gospel has no way to verbalize this is my body, but he does have the invitation to eat. That is lacking in Paul, and in its place there stands an order to repeat the act in remembrance of Christ. Professional interpreter's and theologians tell us that no Gospel contains this; the text of Luke (22:19b-20) is believed to be a later insertion based on I Corinthians. (The Interpreter's Bible; Volume 10: Page 137)
The body of Christ, the body of believers, God incarnate, the pre-existence of Jesus, that Jesus is human yet divine, that his spilled blood is the means of our salvation, all of this is from Paul. To admit to this fraud at such a late date would be disastrous. So in order to defend its indefensible position, the ministry, the priesthood, does not teach those portions of Paul's letters that we have critiqued. Their inept response is that if Paul wrote a letter addressed as an apostle, then he was an apostle.
I do not speak for the church, any church, but as a humble student finding his way along the path back home to my Father. On this issue we will simply have to agree to disagree. I do not take my value of Communion from Paul, but from Jesus in the role of Christ. Perhaps one must see and understand the value of the Jewish Holy Days, specifically the High Holy Day of Passover, and the timing of Jesus' sacrifice (when He "gave up the ghost") in order to fully appreciate the symbolic meaning and the reverence with which it should be rendered, if it is to be rendered properly in my view. Better not to partake of Communion or the Passover meal at all, than to do so improperly.

Has any Christian ever heard a sermon preached on any of the subjects we have mentioned herein? Has any Christian ever heard a position taken by the clergy which would openly force a decision between, Jesus and Paul? Paul and the Apostles? Paul or God?
Ah, but this presumes people think for themselves! How few really do? The rest, as the famous atheist Neitzsche reminds us, are "cattle." Wherein lies the fault, on the cattle, or the cattle herders?

(Just put your indulgence money in the coffers, and all will be forgiven…:D…can't blame that on Paul)

The results of Paul's activities on this earth have caused the disappearance of the Jerusalem Church and the religion practiced by Jesus' chosen Apostles.
Paul's activities are *not* the singular cause of the disappearance of the Jerusalem church. If we must seek one singular cause, then it is the Roman army and the Roman government. From the sack of Jerusalem, the Diaspora brought on by the Bar Kochba revolt, at least 4 "great" persecutions of the Christians in the interim leading up to Emperor Constantine, and under Constantine the consolidation by the first great Council (Nicea?). It would be interesting to learn more of the British Christians of the time of Constantius (Constantine's daddy), what their views towards Paul were, considering it was a favor to them specifically that Christianity was removed from the roles of outlawed religions in the Roman Empire. This is not relying on circular reasoning, or questionable interpretation; this is historically known and accepted by any reputable scholar of history of the time.

It seemed strange to this student that even the gospels could be corrupted by Paul's touch, as indeed they have. But to see two thousand years of the generations of mankind who have suffered due to the results of his work, is devastating.
If this is so, then we are back to denuding the New Testament. In effect, the end result is that none of the material is reliable, ergo, trash it all. Why be a Christian? Just be a Jew and be done with it. Or a Deist, if one still prefers to eat ham and pork chops.

His desire for power, authoritative dominion, and his decisions under the pretense of that absolute control, have led the Church to practice excommunication, genocide, imprisonment, and death for unbelievers.
Seems a lot to lay at the feet of Paul. He alone is responsible for all of these things? Hmmm, maybe he is responsible for my ingrown toenails too. :D

I can understand "blaming" Paul for things He did directly, and how one may not agree with his methods and style. But it hardly seems fair, or accurate, to lay blame upon him for things that transpire hundreds of years after the man has been laid to rest!

"...each man's work will become manifest; for the Day will disclose it, because it will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test what sort of work each one has done.... If any man's work is burned up, he will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through the fire." (I Corinthians 2:13-15; RSV)
The 'fire' that he lit burned innocents at the stake; they were hanged, strangled, impaled, beheaded, and stoned to death... so easily misled, so many died, all for the desires of one man.
Caesar, of course, had absolutely nothing to do with any of this…?

And of the power that led him? It must be considered Satan's greatest victory since Adam and Eve were banished from the garden.
"Refrain from these men, and let them alone: for if this counsel or this work be of men, it will come to nought, But if it be of G-d, ye cannot overthrow it: lest haply ye be found even to fight against G-d." -Acts 5:38-39

Of course, I suppose one could claim that since Luke was a dupe of Paul, that Paul had Luke write that just to cover his hiney…

The test is in the doing of the work, and in the doing of the work a decision has been made. For this student, he chooses the faith of the Twelve and Jesus of Nazareth, who is the Living Christ!
I have no argument with this assessment. It does not require undermining Paul to achieve it. Just remember, Jesus was a Jew. To properly follow this specific path will require becoming observant of the Levitical Laws, while simultaneously being ostracized by Judaism proper. Tough task. A noble aspiration. Best of wishes.
 
Anyone who finds it difficult to believe in the redemptive power of Jesus's death will find they are in good company. To me this is no big deal. I follow the message of Matthew 25 as well as I can.

As for the corruption of the Church, well this is the fate of all organisations in the course of time. And as they slide downward they always find someone to blame for everything. The only way to avoid this seems to be continuous revolution. Without death there can be no life. True for political parties, religious organisations, scientific theories, the longer they hang around the more out of touch they get.

As soon as you find one person to blame, the next thing is to assassinate them. Whether it's Osama bin Laden, Saddam Hussain, Hitler, whoever... blam blam and that makes everything fine. This is what Walter wink calls the doctrine of redemptive violence, and it is what Jesus preached against. Anyone who truly follows his teaching will remember the plank and splinter parable and dedicate their lives to the service of their Maker.
 
Kindest Regards, Virtual Cliff!
Virtual_Cliff said:
Anyone who finds it difficult to believe in the redemptive power of Jesus's death will find they are in good company. To me this is no big deal.
No problem. While I realize the inherent problems associated with "labels," it just seems to me that a Christianity without a Divine Messiah is not Christianity. Deism perhaps, as alluded to by both Sir Isaac Newton and Thomas Jefferson, and what seems to me the underlying premise of Freemasonry. But minus the redemptive sacrifice of Jesus, Christianity is hardly a worthwhile, or even separate and distinct, religion. It becomes, as I suggested earlier, either a branch of Judaism begun by a renegade rabbi, or it becomes a Deistic faith acknowledging "our Creator" who endowed us with inalienable rights.

I follow the message of Matthew 25 as well as I can.
Thank you for the reminder. The parable of the ten virgins, the parable of the talents, and the separation of the goats and sheep, for treating "the least of these" you have done so to me. Good lessons, all. And there is so much more.

As for the corruption of the Church, well this is the fate of all organisations in the course of time. And as they slide downward they always find someone to blame for everything.
I think I understand to what you are pointing, but how can this be the direct fault of Paul? This is human nature, not any conspiracy begun in absentia by a dead Paul.

The only way to avoid this seems to be continuous revolution. Without death there can be no life.
I agree that without death there can be no life, yet I cannot help but question this conclusion.

True for political parties, religious organisations, scientific theories, the longer they hang around the more out of touch they get.
While there is something to be said for tradition, the only thing that remains the same is change. This is no fault of Paul.

As soon as you find one person to blame, the next thing is to assassinate them. Whether it's Osama bin Laden, Saddam Hussain, Hitler, whoever... blam blam and that makes everything fine. This is what Walter wink calls the doctrine of redemptive violence, and it is what Jesus preached against.
You mean like the accusation by Baigent, et al, in HBHG that Judas Iscariot was a Hebrew Zealot assassin (sicarii)? Redemptive violence would seem to me a rather recent creation, like around 1963, + / -. Of course, in response to something like apartheid or Jim Crow segregation, I suppose it is just about inevitable.

Anyone who truly follows his teaching will remember the plank and splinter parable and dedicate their lives to the service of their Maker.
Yes, but it makes a HUGE difference whether or not this teaching is coming from "the Son of G-d," or just another rabbi.
 
Originally Posted by Virtual_Cliff
Anyone who finds it difficult to believe in the redemptive power of Jesus's death will find they are in good company. To me this is no big deal.

juantoo3 said:
No problem. While I realize the inherent problems associated with "labels," it just seems to me that a Christianity without a Divine Messiah is not Christianity. Deism perhaps, as alluded to by both Sir Isaac Newton and Thomas Jefferson, and what seems to me the underlying premise of Freemasonry. But minus the redemptive sacrifice of Jesus, Christianity is hardly a worthwhile, or even separate and distinct, religion. It becomes, as I suggested earlier, either a branch of Judaism begun by a renegade rabbi, or it becomes a Deistic faith acknowledging "our Creator" who endowed us with inalienable rights.
Here, of course, juantoo3 you make a statement of belief and provide an opinion. The idea that the sacrifice of Christ Jesus was somehow necessary in a metaphysical or ontological sense for our own individual salvation ... is not universally held by Christians. I believe it is quite enough to have faith in the Teaching example of Jesus of Nazareth, and the Compassionate Love demonstrated by the Christ Aspect working through Him. Assuming, of course, that we also are willing to do as Jesus did (WWJD!!!) ... and work out our own Salvation with diligence!

None of this makes one a Deist, or any less a Christian. But then, there are undoubtedly two types of Christians in this world, as anyone with discernment can observe. The one, does little and makes much of it. The other, just the opposite. ;)

Namaskar,

taijasi
 
Kindest Regards, Taijasi!

Here, of course, juantoo3 you make a statement of belief and provide an opinion. The idea that the sacrifice of Christ Jesus was somehow necessary in a metaphysical or ontological sense for our own individual salvation ... is not universally held by Christians.
Herein is your statement of belief and opinion. What I have pointed to in my recent posts is that the sacrifice of Jesus served, even fulfilled, a specific purpose in accord with the office of sacrifice per the parental religion from which Christianity sprang. Modern interpretations are moot when considering the historic foundation. The reality is, sacrifice was an integral part of Jewish life in the day and time of Jesus, not only in Palestine but in surrounding cultures as well. To look with a queasy stomach today and imply that it was somehow not so is to ignore historic fact and reality. Nay, I will step a bit further and say that to imply sacrifice is somehow improper is to deny G-d's direct command! So, in short, I do make the statement that sacrifice is necessary in a metaphysical and ontological sense in accord with the command of G-d, and that for Christians that necessity is fulfilled in the personal sacrifice of our redeeming Messiah.

I believe it is quite enough to have faith in the Teaching example of Jesus of Nazareth, and the Compassionate Love demonstrated by the Christ Aspect working through Him. Assuming, of course, that we also are willing to do as Jesus did (WWJD!!!) ... and work out our own Salvation with diligence!
This is your belief, and I do not disagree, however, it is incomplete.

Indeed. What precisely did Jesus do? Specifically, on Golgotha? Hint: it has to do with sacrifice...

None of this makes one a Deist, or any less a Christian.
A Christ who is not Divine, is to Christianity as no Christ. Without a Divine Christ, Christianity is no more than a collection of nice little platitudes to sooth hysterical women. There is no meat, there is no substance, there is no hope, there is no promise, there is no sacrifice, there is no resurrection, there is no religion. Oh ye of the esoteric library of occult and mundane knowledge should understand I speak truly. Without Christ, there is no Christianity. Without Christ, or Christianity, one may as well be either a Jew or a Deist, depending (from my perspective) on how much one enjoys eating pork.
One may call oneself whatever one wishes, but without a Divine Christ there is no Christianity.
 
juantoo3 said:
A Christ who is not Divine, is to Christianity as no Christ. Without a Divine Christ, Christianity is no more than a collection of nice little platitudes to sooth hysterical women. There is no meat, there is no substance, there is no hope, there is no promise, there is no sacrifice, there is no resurrection, there is no religion. Oh ye of the esoteric library of occult and mundane knowledge should understand I speak truly. Without Christ, there is no Christianity. Without Christ, or Christianity, one may as well be either a Jew or a Deist, depending (from my perspective) on how much one enjoys eating pork.
One may call oneself whatever one wishes, but without a Divine Christ there is no Christianity.

As I often say, Christ did not come to earth just to found a new religion. What he mainly tried to do was to call the Jews of the time back to the roots of their faith, away from the rather corrupt state it had fallen into. Although of course he had a few added insights of his own.

It all depends on what you want from a religion. If you want elephants or child-eating goddesses, or over-sexed gods chasing after mortal women disguised as animals - any of this heady stuff - then fine, it's all out there somewhere.

If you are hoping for an underlying Truth that brings all people and all creation together into a perfect whole, a Truth too big for anyone to fully grasp but one that people have reached for for thousands of years, then forms of belief fall away.

Was Christ the Son of God? I have never heard a satisfactory explanation of what that means, unless it is in the mundane sense that his birth was instigated without a male partner. Why even discuss this? If we could travel back in time and prove that Christ was conceived in this way, would it make us any wiser or advance our faith in any way?

Sacrifice? Even in Jesus's time, the full system laid down by Moses had been reduced to a token - a couple of doves for example. In modern jewish practice it has gone altogether. The purpose of sacrifice is to take something out of the material system, the Sabbath, the edge of the field, and dedicate it to God, to show that God is more important than commercial gain or material well-being. There is no mystery, no magic.

But for some, the forms of religion are all that makes sense. For others, they are like puzzles that are always begging to be solved, like a voice always calling, that you can never find.
 
Virtual_Cliff said:
The only way to avoid this seems to be continuous revolution. Without death there can be no life. True for political parties, religious organisations, scientific theories, the longer they hang around the more out of touch they get.

For the most part (say around 99% ;)), I agree. However, I am continually impressed by one religious organization's attempt to remain "in touch." So much so, that for the same reason many Christians consider them to be corrupt and "Satanic," I think just the opposite. That is the Anglican/Episcopal church. And I'm not even a member. :)

This is what Walter wink calls the doctrine of redemptive violence, and it is what Jesus preached against. Anyone who truly follows his teaching will remember the plank and splinter parable and dedicate their lives to the service of their Maker.

I really must get around to reading Walter Wink. "The Powers that Be" has been on my amazon wish list for some time now.

Have you read anything (online article or book) by J. Dennis Weaver? He seems to hold similar views to Wink.
 
Virtual Cliff said:
The purpose of sacrifice is to take something out of the material system, the Sabbath, the edge of the field, and dedicate it to God, to show that God is more important than commercial gain or material well-being.

Very well put. :)
 
Virtual Cliff:

I applaud your wisdom and truth-seeking ability. Like you I believe that Jesus' truths were pretty simple, if somewhat mystical. But people just seem bound and determined to argue and fight about their meanings.

Love G-d. Love your neighbor as yourself. Love your enemies. Render the things of governance to governance, and the things of G-d to G-d. Renounce privilege, help the poor, heal the sick, cure the demonaic. So simple and yet so difficult.

flow....:)
 
AletheiaRivers said:
For the most part (say around 99% ;)), I agree. However, I am continually impressed by one religious organization's attempt to remain "in touch." So much so, that for the same reason many Christians consider them to be corrupt and "Satanic," I think just the opposite. That is the Anglican/Episcopal church. And I'm not even a member. :)

I really must get around to reading Walter Wink. "The Powers that Be" has been on my amazon wish list for some time now.

Have you read anything (online article or book) by J. Dennis Weaver? He seems to hold similar views to Wink.

I'm touched by your hope in the Anglican church. This is the one I grew up in and still feel a part of, even though I seldom attend these days. It is a church full of heroes and wisdom and equally full of pusilanimous jobsworths IMHO. I still have an affection for them though.

Perhaps you could PM me with a title by Weaver that you would recommend?
 
flowperson said:
Virtual Cliff:

I applaud your wisdom and truth-seeking ability. Like you I believe that Jesus' truths were pretty simple, if somewhat mystical. But people just seem bound and determined to argue and fight about their meanings.

Love G-d. Love your neighbor as yourself. Love your enemies. Render the things of governance to governance, and the things of G-d to G-d. Renounce privilege, help the poor, heal the sick, cure the demonaic. So simple and yet so difficult.

flow....:)

Thanks Flowperson. People love to make things difficult - that lets them off not doing them.

There's a story about some monks who kept being distracted during their worhip by the monastry cat, so they decided to tie the cat up while they worshipped. Time passed. Eventually the cat died. By now the monks had forgotten how it all began, and obtained another cat so that they could tie it up while they worshipped.:D VC
 
Good and Evil is subjective to so many variables.

Example: If a murderer kills a child molester. Has he done good or evil?

Is the death penalty Good or Evil?

Any thoughts?
 
Is this a wind-up?

Do you seriously want the land to be terrorised by self-appointed vigilantes slaughtering anyone they don't approve of?

We blame others for the evil we dare not admit is in us too. I campaigned against the death penalty. I think the state should lead by example.
 
Anything that coerces me into involuntarlily participating in the death of innocents, whether it is a misguided set of governmental policies for imposing the death penalty, or going to war based upon unjustified and/or mendaciously constructed reasoning, is manipulative and evil. It is an anti-life activity, and in my compendium of life values goes againt G-d's prime directive of choosing life over death, as long as one has that choice.

So eleven-11, I guess I would say that to the extent that government forces me to live this way, the only choice that I can have is not to actively participate in its activities and resist somehow the policies that I have objections to. I believe that this is my personal right and duty as a citizen in a democracy that as part of its foundation professes and upholds my right(s) to do so, although that seems to be open to much doubt and debate these days.

flow....:cool:
 
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