The first long conversation Paul reports having had with any of them was three years afterwards. Paul says nothing about them having or not having visionary experiences at that time.
So, you and I seem to be in agreement that Paul's letters cite reliance on three sources of ideas and information: the two you mentoned, his own visonary expereince (extent and quality unspecified), the scriptures and his interpretation of them (self-assessed as expert), and one that you neglected to include earlier, contacts with other members of the Jesus-following community.
Now period.
Well that is not actually correct, is it.
Paul does
not cite reliance on three sources. He only cites the
two sources that
proudfootz and I have repeatedly stressed, i.e. visionary revelation and scripture. He specifically and very conspicuously does not cite
“contacts with other members of the Jesus-following community“ as people who told him a single thing about Jesus. On the contrary, Paul insists he got no such Jesus belief from any other man.
proudfootz
Paul reports that they had what Paul described as Jesus "seen by" them a few times apiece shortly after Jesus died. Surely it isn't news to anybody here that that kind of experience is a common feature of healthy human grief.
As a religious visionary experience, which is what we are definitely talking about here (i.e. Paul thought Jesus was the promised messiah of God), it's vastly more common, not as grieving for any real human death, but as a delusion born of extreme religious belief.
In the famous sentence from 1 Cor. 15:3–8, Paul does not actually say the vision of these other people was that of Jesus. He says that the “Christ” died according to scripture and the rose from death according to scripture … and then his letter adds that this “Christ” appeared to various people, and last of all appeared to himself.
This is something I alluded to in an earlier post - the word “Christ” only means “messiah”. So strictly speaking, in that paragraph from 1 Cor. 15:3–8, Paul only says that others before him had claimed to see a vision of the long awaited messiah prophesised throughout the ancient OT. He does not say that any of these other people had called this visionary spirit “Jesus”.
If these others did ever say they had seen religious visions of the promised messiah, which would hardly be a surprise because religious people in their millions throughout history have always claimed to see visions of their religious deities, then they may have been saying no more than that. I.e., no more than claiming that they had once had religious visions of the promised messiah. But who they thought the messiah was, they don’t say. And in that passage from Corinthians, Paul only says it was the messiah (i.e. the “Christ”). He does not say that anyone except himself claimed to identify the messiah as Jesus.
In fact it seems to me that in Paul’s letters (and I have not checked every mention of the words “Christ”, "Jesus", “Lord”, in all of Paul’s 13 letters) he rarely seems to use the specific name/word “Jesus”. Instead far more often he seems just to call this visionary figure “Christ” or “the Lord”. I should note here that
dejudge said above that Paul mentioned “Jesus” over 200 times in those letters … but I’m not sure that is correct, and dejudge may actually mean 200 mentions of the words “Christ”, “Lord” and only occasionally the specific word/name “Jesus”.
The point is, and this may seem like suggesting a conspiracy theory which will precipitate the usual abuse and childish remarks from certain HJ people here, that if it’s true that Paul’s letters hardly ever use the specific word “Jesus”, then I wonder if that name may have only been a later insertion by copyists who centuries later came to believe that the “Christ” who Paul referred to was actually a past preacher known as “Jesus”.
And the justification for considering that, is that as we know, around half of the 13 letters are now thought to be “fakes” and not written by “Paul” at all. Added to which, we have no idea what Paul ever really wrote in any of these letters (or indeed if anyone called “Paul” ever wrote any letters), because all we have is what copyists wrote under the name of “Paul” some centuries later.