GDon
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2013
- Messages
- 1,567
I'm sorry but doesn't that example actually support me? A man who starts off on earth and (it is claimed) ascends to heaven.Yes, I agree that Paul saw Jesus Christ as :But consider the comparand Enoch.
- a man
- a Jewish man
- the Sperm of David
- the Sperm of Abraham
A real Jewish man, all of the above, but not a physical man - rather a heavenly man (presumably with a new heavenly body) although he started on Earth.
But what is your evidence for that? The problem I have with Dr Carrier's and Doherty's theories is that they either had no evidence to back up their assertions about what the people of Paul's time believed, or the evidence they presented was wrong.I just do not agree that a listener of Paul would assume that a 'man' who was also the son of God, who was crucified for our salvation etc., necessarily meant a physical man on Earth.
The only example you've given is Enoch, who started as a man on earth but was thought to have gone to heaven. Julius Caesar is another example. What I'd be interested to see are examples from that time of a claimed 'man' who was never on earth. It simply seems a foreign idea to the thinking of that time.
There is no clear description of a change in location, certainly. But there are indications of a change of state, i.e. from "fleshly" to "spiritual". To my mind, the usage of "flesh", "seed" and "man" would signify to the readers of Paul's time that Jesus was a man on earth.BTW: Enoch clearly started on Earth, but is now in Heaven. You agree that (Paul thought) Jesus Christ was now in heaven, but suggest that before the resurrection/ascension he was on Earth. Where does Paul give any clear description of a change of location ? From Earth to Heaven ?
The idea of being a "fleshly" man, etc, who was never on earth is unprecedented for the people of that time AFAIK. That to me is the sticking point of your reading.
This is all kind of irrelevant to the point of what the people of Paul's time would have made of the passages I identified above.Furthermore - I think we have to address your obvious bias on this issue
Paul went OOB, he rose to Pi3H, he met a supernatural being, he learned divine secrets. Have you done that GDon ? Do you believe such things are genuine ? (I suggest we avoid that slippery word 'real'.)
My point being that your view (like everyone else's) on Paul's view is skewed by the big difference in our society's views on heavenly beings. Paul's listeners were clearly far more likely to consider and accept a heavenly being, because they actually believed in such things.
Of course, that leads to the interesting question :
If I personally claimed to have risen to Paradise in the Third Heaven and met heavenly beings - would that make me more or less credible ?
Funny how things change - it sounds like Paul's own claim to fame.
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