andteater wrote:but in the same sense that you can applaud the authors of the bible for creating this amazing character, Jesus...
how much can you dislike them for being responsible for the church, encouraging anti-semitism and the like...
The writers of the New Testament are not one and the same as some of the nitwits that followed. I would hesitate before holding them responsible for others' later actions.
i've mentioned the book before , but its called "the mythmaker - paul and the invention of christianity"....
basically - the theory exists that paul took what he learned of the historical anti-roman occupater message and mixed it with the myths of his early life as a pagan (mentioned in the thread - the many god's who were born of a virgin, resurrected after three days, etc).
From my understanding, Paul was Greek, but Jewish. Was he pagan before? (I can't completely remember but I don't think so.) I do remember his being a mystic/ecstatic sort of religious person.
(EDIT: Yup, he was never pagan.)
For a long time, the anti-Paul stance has held strong ground. Geez, I've been bitching about Paul since I was 18 or so.
There are some new books out about Paul that look really interesting. One is
In Search of Paul: How Jesus' Apostle Opposed Rome's Empire with God's Kingdom by John Dominic Crossan. I heard an interview with him, and he definitely feels like Paul has been misunderstood. I found Crossan warm and smart as a whip. As a linguist, he challenges a lot of what has been attributed to Paul.
I haven't had time to read his book (schoolwork before fun); has anyone else? I think challenging bad feelings about Paul can only be worthwhile.