42.
Pauline Theology
Description:
The teachings of Paul in contrast with those of Jesus,
and the statements of Christian scholars on this
subject.
In the midst of the growing
19th and 20th century awareness of
the differences between Trinitarian doctrine and the
period of origins, a person might be surprised to find
one group who claim to be followers of Christ Jesus
reading the following in the Holy Quran:
“O
People of the Book! Commit no excesses in your
religion: nor say of God anything but the truth. Christ
Jesus the son of Mary was (no more than) a Messenger of
God, and His Word, which He bestowed on Mary, and a
Spirit proceeding from Him: so believe in God and His
Messengers. Do not say “Trinity”: desist: it will be
better for you: for God is One God: glory be to Him:
(far Exalted is He) above having a son. To Him belong
all things in the heavens and on earth. And enough is
God as a Disposer of affairs” (Quran 4:171)
And
warning:
“O
People of the Book! Exceed not in your religion the
bounds (of what is proper), trespassing beyond the
truth, nor follow the vain desires of people who went
wrong in times gone by – who misled many, and strayed
(themselves) from the even Way.” (TMQ 5:77)
One
may wonder what, from the New Testament, separates these
two groups by such a vast expanse of understanding. No
doubt the key difference which divides Trinitarians from
Unitarians, and Christians from Muslims, is Pauline
theology. For centuries the argument has been put forth
that Trinitarian Christians largely follow Pauline
theology more than that of Jesus. This charge is
difficult to deny, for Jesus taught the Law of the Old
Testament, whereas Paul preached mysteries of faith, in
denial of the Law which the prophets had suffered and
struggled to convey. In disrespect to thousands of
years of revelation conveyed through a long chain of
esteemed prophets, and contrary to the teachings of the
rabbi Jesus himself, Paul focused not on the life and
teachings of Jesus, but upon his death. As Lehmann put
it:
“The only thing which
Paul considers important is the Jew Jesus’ death, which
destroyed all hopes of liberation by a Messiah. He
makes the victorious Christ out of the failed Jewish
Messiah, the living out of the dead, the son of God out
of the son of man.”
More than a few scholars consider Paul the main
corrupter of Apostolic Christianity and of the teachings
of Jesus:
“What Paul proclaimed as
‘Christianity’ was sheer heresy which could not be based
on the Jewish or Essene faith, or on the teaching of
Rabbi Jesus. But, as Schonfield says, ‘The Pauline
heresy became the foundation of Christian orthodoxy and
the legitimate church was disowned as heretical.’”
Lehmann continues:
“Paul did something that
Rabbi Jesus never did and refused to do. He extended
God’s promise of salvation to the Gentiles; he abolished
the law of Moses, and he prevented direct access to God
by introducing an intermediary.”
Others elevate Paul to sainthood. Joel Carmichael, who
commented as follows, very clearly is not one of them:
“We are
a universe away from Jesus. If Jesus came “only to
fulfill” the Law and the Prophets;
If he thought that “not an iota, not a dot” would “pass
from the Law,” that the cardinal commandment was “Hear,
O Israel, the Lord Our God, the Lord is one,” and that
“no one was good but God”….What would he have thought of
Paul’s handiwork! Paul’s triumph meant the final
obliteration of the historic Jesus; he comes to us
embalmed in Christianity like a fly in amber.”
Many authors have pointed out the disparity in the
teachings of Paul and Jesus; the best of them have
avoided opinionated commentary and concentrated on
simply exposing the elements of difference. Dr. Wrede
comments:
“In Paul the central point
is a divine act, in history but transcending history, or
a complex of such acts, which impart to all mankind a
ready-made salvation. Whoever believes in these divine
acts – the incarnation, death, and resurrection of a
celestial being, receives salvation.
“And this, which to Paul is
the sum of religion – the skeleton of the fabric of his
piety, without which it would collapse – can this be a
continuation or a remoulding of the gospel of Jesus?
Where, in all this, is that gospel to be found, which
Paul is said to have understood?
“Of that which is to Paul
all and everything, how much does Jesus know? Nothing
whatever.”
And
Dr. Johannes Weiss contributes:
“Hence the faith in Christ
as held by the primitive churches and by Paul was
something new in comparison with the preaching of Jesus;
it was a new type of religion.”
Which theology won the day, and why, and how, are
questions left to the analyses of the above authors.
Should a person come to recognize that the teachings of
Paul and those of Jesus oppose one another,
consideration should be given to the question: “If I had
to choose between the two, to whom should I give
priority -- Jesus or Paul?” The question is so relevant
that Michael Hart had the following to say in his
scholastic tome, in which he ranks the 100 most
influential men of history:
“Although Jesus was
responsible for the main ethical and moral precepts of
Christianity (insofar as these differed from Judaism),
St. Paul was the main developer of Christian theology,
its principal proselytizer, and the author of a large
portion of the New Testament.”
With regard to Paul’s perspective:
“He does not ask what led
to Jesus’ death, he only sees what it means to him
personally. He turns a man who summoned people to
reconciliation with God into the savior. He turns an
orthodox Jewish movement into a universal religion which
ultimately clashed with Judaism.”
The
three main points where Pauline theology conflicts with
that of Jesus are critical -- elements so crucial that
deviation from the truth threatens a person’s
salvation. In order of importance they rank:
1) The divinity of Jesus
alleged by Pauline theology versus the oneness of God
taught by Christ Jesus;
2) Justification by
faith, as proposed by Paul, versus Old Testament law, as
endorsed by Christ Jesus;
3) Jesus having been a
universal prophet, as per Paul, versus an ethnic
prophet, as per the teachings of Christ Jesus.
Interestingly enough, these three points constitute the
greatest doctrinal differences separating Christianity
not only from Judaism, but also from Islam. Running a
theological finger down the backbone of revealed
monotheism, Trinitarian Christianity seems to stand out
of joint.
To
address the first of these points, Jesus is recorded as
having taught the oneness of God, as in Mark 12:29:
“Jesus answered
him, ‘The first of all the commandments is: “Hear, O
Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one.”
Jesus reportedly continued with
“And you shall love
the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your
soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength,”
finishing with emphasis upon the initial claim,
“This is the first
commandment.” (Mark 12:30). Not only did Jesus
stress importance by sandwiching his statement between
the repeated and emphatic
“This is the first
commandment,” but the importance of this teaching
is equally stressed in Matthew 22:37 and Luke 10:27, and
further complemented by the first commandment as
recorded in Exodus 20:3 --
“You shall have no
other gods before Me.” Jesus conveyed the above
teaching from Deuteronomy 6:4-5 (as acknowledged in all
reputable Biblical commentaries), yet Pauline theology
somehow arrived at concepts which have been extrapolated
to support what is now known as the Trinity. One
wonders how. Jesus referred to the Old Testament --
what did the Pauline theologians refer to?
Significantly absent from the above teaching of Jesus is
the association of himself with God. There never was a
better time or place, throughout the New Testament, for
Jesus to have claimed partnership in divinity, were it
true. But he didn’t. He didn’t say,
“Hear, O Israel,
the Lord our God, the Lord is one -- but it’s not quite
that simple, so let me explain…”
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