David Mo
Philosopher
You are just preaching your views, not engaging in debate and discussion.
Then you can close the discussion and stop to repeat the same comment.
It was a pleasure discussing wiith you Mr. Kapyong.
You are just preaching your views, not engaging in debate and discussion.
My point has been to argue that the context leaves the "woman" reference out of kilter, an irrelevant intrusion.
No-one disputes that Jesus was believed to have been a man. (At least no-one that I know of disputes that.)
Here or on another thread I posted the evidence that there were beliefs among Second Temple Jews that the men Moses, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were also heavenly beings. For generations the Son of Man was believed to be exclusively a heavenly being. One does not preclude the other.
As for the opening verses of Romans, we have the curious counter-claim by Jesus when he rhetorically responded to those who called him the son of David, "How can David call him Lord if he is his son?" So which is it? Either way it is not so clear cut.
But there is nothing in those verses -- even if they are originally by Paul -- that establishes historicity at all that I can see. Or am I missing something?
Hebrews 2
17 For this reason he had to be made like them, fully human in every way, in order that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in service to God, and that he might make atonement for the sins of the people.
Here or on another thread I posted the evidence that there were beliefs among Second Temple Jews that the men Moses, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were also heavenly beings. For generations the Son of Man was believed to be exclusively a heavenly being. One does not preclude the other.
Hebrews 2..the author says that Jesus was made "fully human".
Hebrews 2
17 "For this reason he had to be made, like them, 'fully human in every way', in order that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in service to God, and that he might make atonement for the sins of the people."
It is clearly a construction of a literary character to appear 'human'.
This is what Irenaeus discusses in Adv Haers. - He had to be described as human to provide future atonement to real humans.
Because you saidHow do you know this if I have not mentioned these sources?
You are dismissing one of the options provided by the sources you have consulted in order to confirm the option you prefer.Most sources that I have consulted say [x &/or y] The first meaning is dismissed in this context by the reasons I have stated above.
Hebrews 2
17 "For this reason he had to be made, like them, 'fully human in every way', in order that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in service to God, and that he might make atonement for the sins of the people."
It is clearly a construction of a literary character to appear 'human'.
They are clearly fleshing out the theological character ie. Jesus Christ.
He had to be portrayed in the flesh to die in the flesh, and to give hope beyond the flesh -
Romans 8:13 ESV
For if you live according to the flesh you will die
That is confused and ambiguous. Are you saying: that is a prophecy of the messiah generally recognised as such by Jewish readers of Isaiah, and that Paul knew it and also took it to be a messianic prophecy?... But not only does Paul say that he has understood his belief in the messiah from scripture (by which he means the OT), it is of course very easy to find that belief stated explicitly from 500 to 800 years BC in the book of Isaiah, where it says -
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Isaiah+7:14
Isaiah 7:14New International Version (NIV)
14 Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign:The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel.
Finally on that point about "born of a woman" - there a well known film on YouTube (link below), where Richard Dawkins is interviewing a US bible studies professor named John Huddlestun, and where Huddlestun himself emphasises that in biblical times (1000 BC all through the NT period) it was the case that any important figure (real or mythical) was always automatically said to be born of a woman but with a god as the father.
(...)
On a separate note - I pointed out way back on page 2, that in Paul's letter to the Phillipians, Paul makes very clear that he thought Jesus was a spiritual God anyway. Here is that same passage again -
Philipians 2; 5-11 (quoted from Carrier on-the-H-of-J, page 533)
Have this in mind (of humble love) in you, which was also in Christ Jesus, who, existing in the form of God, did not decide to seize equality with God, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being made in the likeness of men, and being discovered as a man in outward form, he humbled himself, becoming obedient to the point of death, a death of a cross.
Apparently Christians (and others?) have since tried to argue that this passage may be either an interpolation or that it is in any case some sort of hymn or such-like.

But you're telling us that Paul never existed and his "corpus" is a third century invention. In these circumstances it is of no importance what words are found in any part of that corpus.The most significant evidence that the Pauline Corpus are non-contemporary fabrications is the fact that the earliest christian writers showed zero influence by the so-called Pauline letters, teachings and did not even acknowledge any person called Paul who started Churches in the Roman Empire.
Christian writers like Aristides, Justin Martyr, Tatian, Municius Felix and the non-apologetic skeptic Celsus wrote nothing of Paul, Pauline Churches, Pauline letters or teachings.
The entire Pauline Corpus are all non-contemporary writings invented no earlier than after "True Discourse" attributed to Celsus or no earlier than c 175-180.
The character called Jesus in the Pauline Corpus never ever existed.
Moses et alia were humans raised to the heaven. Not only "heavenly men" not "angel men" as a distinct category among other heavenly entities.
[1] "I, Jacob, who is speaking to you, am also Israel, an angel of God and a ruling spirit.
[2] Abraham and Isaac were created before any work.
[3] But, I, Jacob, who men call Jacob but whose name is Israel am he who God called Israel which means, a man seeing God, because I am the firstborn of every living thing to whom God gives life.
[4] And when I was coming up from Syrian Mesopotamia, Unel, the angel of God, came forth and said that I had descended to earth and I had tabernacled among men and that I had been called by the name of Jacob.
[5] He envied me and fought with me and wrestled with me saying that his name and the name that is before every angel was to be above mine.
[6] I told him his name and what rank he held among the sons of God.
[7] 'Are you not Uriel, the eighth after me? and I, Israel, the archangel of the Power of the Lord and the chief captain among the sons of God?
[8] Am I not Israel, the first minister before the face of God?'
[9] And I called upon my God by the Inextinguishable Name."
In the treatise on the sacrifices Philo discusses the ascension of Moses and his superior station beside God as the perfect man, the sophos whom God prizes as he does the world. Then he continues:
And even when He sent him as a loan to the earthly sphere and suffered him to dwell therein, He gifted him with no ordinary excellence, such as that which kings and rulers have . . . but he appointed him as god . . . 'I give thee,' He says, 'as god to Pharaoh' (Exod 7:1 ); but God is not susceptible of addition or diminution, being fully and unchangeably himself. And therefore we are told that no man knows his grave (Deut 34:6). For who has powers such that he could perceive the passing of a perfect soul to Him that is?78
The statement that Moses was sent to the earthly sphere is most interesting in light of the fact that for Philo, with two notable exceptions, the things which descend from God are usually not thought of as anthropological figures, but as powers, gifts, or virtues of God. The notable exceptions are the logos and some difficult statements about the sophos who sojourns on earth while dwelling in heaven. One can hardly escape the inference that the descensus Mosis reflects a logos motif and that the cosmic destiny of the logos has become a pattern according to which the figure of Moses is understood. It is important to note that this is not the only passage in Philo which speaks of Moses' descent. 81
Meeks, Prophet-King. 104-05, sees this passage (Sacr 9) as unique in Philo - the "only one" which seems to reflect a "pattern of myth in which a heavenly redeemer is essential." The present study would not be rendered improbable if Meek's judgment about this passage were true, since its thesis is that the "pattern of myth" is there prior to its application to Moses, in the logos mythology which informs both Philo's cosmology and his anthropology. But Meeks is certainly wrong in the judgment that this passage is unique, even though he is right about its being the most explicit statement of the descensus of Moses. One should compare Ebr 100 where Moses is identified with the sophos - a pilgrim who travels from peace to war, and from the camp of mortality and confusion to the divine life of peace where strife is not. Since the metaphors of peace and war refer in Philo to the two spheres of existence (worlds), it is significant that the movement of ascent is prefaced by that of descent. In Heres 205-06 Philo describes the logos,''God's messenger" and "harbinger of peace to creation from that God whose will it is to bring wars to an end." This logos has received from the Father of all the prerogative to stand on the border and separate the creature from the creator, pleading with the immortal as suppliant for afflicted mortality and acting as ambassador of the ruler to the subject. The passage is an interpretation of Deut 5:5 - Moses' statement that "I stood between the Lord and you!" According to Conf 106 Moses is [asteios apo geuesews arches] which could simply be a [theios aner] motif. But the description continues that he "took the world for his township and country, and weeps bitterly in days when he is imprisoned in the ark of the body . . . weeps for his captivity . . . weeps also for the mind of the multitude." The passage can hardly be understood otherwise than as a reference to descensus. In another context, that of the Sinai story, Philo dramatizes the moment when Moses learns that the people have fashioned a golden calf: "This divine message came. 'Go quickly hence. Descend. The people have run after lawlessness'" (Vita Mos II 165). One is also justified in asking whether numerous other references to the "sending" "coming" or "appearing" of other figures [sophos, dunamis, theos, logos) in contexts not governed by explicit reference to Moses may not indeed have him in mind.
I thought that the mythicist theory (some mythicists at least) claims that Paul didn't believe in Jesus Christ as an earthly man. Kapyong is maintaining here that birth, seed, man, crucifixion, etc. were "heavenly" events. If everybody agree that Jesus Christ previously existed "in the form of God" in the heaven and then adopted "the appearance of a man" in the earth, according to Paul (Philippians 2:6-9), I don't know what we are debating now. (Whatever "form" and "likeness" can mean).
“While undergoing his punishment he was seen by all men, but after his resurrection by one, whereas the opposite ought to have happened.”
5 And they entered the sepulcher and saw a young man, sitting at the right side, clothed in a white robe; and they were amazed.
6 But he says to them: Be not amazed. You seek Jesus the Nazarene who was crucified; he has risen, he is not here: see the place where they laid him..
So there! What have you Third Heaven dudes got to say about that?The so-called Pauline Corpus played no role in the early development of the Jesus story
The so-called Pauline Corpus played no role in the early development of the Jesus story
I agree with dejudge in the sense that I think the Pauline theology & its texts were about a celestial Christ, or some such entity, and references to Jesus were added to the Pauline narratives after they were merged with primarily the Jesus texts (the Synoptics +/- others).So there! What have you Third Heaven dudes got to say about that?