As well, you cannot assume that they were not Christians who believed in Jesus. Yet, you have done so.
I assume nothing. I merely showed you what is written in writings attributed to Justin Martyr that there were followers of magicians like Simon and Menander who were called Christians.
I have even showed that there are writings attributed to 2nd century Christians who did not believe the Jesus and did not acknowledge Jesus, did NOT acknowledge Jesus as Christ, Savior and Lord.
Please refer to "To Autolycus" attributed to Theophilus of Antioch and "Plea for the Christians" attributed to Athenagoras.
Those writings are evidence that there were 2nd century Christians who did not acknowledge Jesus Christ at all which CORROBORATE Justin Martyr.
Tim Callahan said:
Okay, so why were the Jews persecuting them? They certainly were not persecuting the pagans who lived in their midst. The Romans wouldn't have put up with that. They could only have been persecuting deviant religious views within their own belief system.
Now, was Justin a Jew? Where is it stated that all Christians were Jews? Were there not people called Samaritans in the 2nd century?
Justin was the son and Grandson of Palestinians.
Examine "First Apology" attributed to Justin Martyr .
Justin's First Apology
......I, Justin, the son of Priscus and grandson of Bacchius, natives of Flavia Neapolis in Palestine, present this address and petition in behalf of those of all nations who are unjustly hated and wantonly abused, myself being one of them.
Justin Martyr claimed he and those from OTHER Nations were wantonly abused and hated..
Tim Callahan said:
Actually, I have supported my arguments. You have rejected them anyway.
You have not supported your take with supporting evidence but merely with speculation and assumptions.
Tim Callahan said:
My point, which you have ignored, is that you asserted the Pauline epistles chronologically followed and were to some degree even based on Luke / Acts. Logically, then, we would expect the author of those letters - and those letters considered genuinely Pauline do show signs of common authorship - to have used Luke / Acts as the basis for his version of the post-resurrection appearances of Jesus. Yet, he did not.
You must have forgotten that I have shown you that it was Christian writers who stated that Paul was AWARE of gLuke and commended it.
Origen and Eusebius did state that the Third Gospel, gLuke, was known to Paul. See Origen's Commentary on Matthew 1 and Eusebius' Church History 6.25.
Whether Paul followed gLuke is irrelevant because I have sources of antiquity that show he was aware of gLuke.
Tim Callahan said:
...JaysonR has also pointed out that the story of Judas' betrayal of Jesus is lacking from the Pauline epistles. Had the Pauline letters been written after the gospels, they should have included that particular myth.
Well, the Pauline Corpus is lacking in Acts.
If Acts was written after the Pauline Corpus it should have mentioned that Paul not only preached and evangelized many parts of the Roman Empire but that Paul documented his teachings in letters to the Churches.
The author of Acts wrote about virtually everything about Paul except the Letters.
How can it be explained that in the NT, Paul is mentioned ONCE in 2nd Peter and it is immediately claimed Paul wrote letters yet in Acts Saul/Paul is mentioned over 130 times in what appears to be a post persecution biography of Paul and nothing at all is even hinted that he wrote letters to Churches?
The answer is extremely easy---the author of Acts knew nothing at all of the Pauline Corpus.
There is NO Apologetic writer who mentioned Paul and did not acknowledge his supposed letters EXCEPT the author of Acts.
1. 2nd Peter mentioned Paul once and claimed he wrote letters.
2. Clement First Epistle mentions Paul TWICE and claimed he wrote an Epistle.
Tim Callahan said:
Now, at this point, I suppose you will raise the objection that 1 Cor. 11:23 says:
For I have received of the Lord what I also delivered unto you, that the Lord Jesus, on the night he was betrayed, took bread:
This would indeed seem to show that Paul was acquainted with the story of the betrayal by Judas. However, both the the word translated into English as "delivered" and the word translated as "betrayed" are forms of the Greek verb paradidomi, a word that simply means "deliver over."
The Christian believers who translated 1 Corinthinas into English already believed in the betrayal of Jesus by Judas. So, they naturally translated "delivered over" as "betrayed". In any case, Paul later has the risen Jesus appear to "the twelve."
You keep forgetting that the Pauline writers knew of gLuke.
The Pauline writers knew the story of Jesus from Conception to Ascension.
Please, it is documented in writings attributed to Christian writers Origen and Eusebius.
Origen's Commentary on Matthew 1
... And third, was that according to Luke, the Gospel commended by Paul, which he composed for the converts from the Gentiles...
Eusebius' Church History 6.25.6.
And the third by Luke, the Gospel commended by Paul, and composed for Gentile converts.
The Pauline writers knew the Latest version of the Synoptics based on Origen and Eusebius.
dejudge said:
Celsus did not mention only what the supposed Jesus said and did in the Gospel. Celsus also mentioned what the supposed disciples said and did in the Gospel.
In fact, Justin mentioned the Revelation of John and wrote what John said in Revelation.
Tim Callahan said:
And, once again, this has nothing to do with the Pauline epistles.
Justin Martyr's writings have nothing about Paul, the Pauline Corpus, the Pauline Teachings , the Pauline Churches---Nothing to do with the Pauline Revelations and Resurrection story
Justin Martyr's writings have something to do with John's Revelation--Christians will live one thousand years in the new Jerusalem BEFORE the final resurrection.
Tim Callahan said:
And you actually think that Justin's view is authoritative? And you think this despite the fact that John of Patmos most likely wrote the Book of Revelation ca. CE 90 or later and, thus, could not have been the disciple of any Jesus - whose existence you, in any case, deem a myth. Even had Jesus been crucified in CE 50, rather than ca. CE 30. the author of Revelation is unlikely to have known Jesus.
Many events in writings attributed to Justin are corroborated unlike the Pauline Corpus.
Who told you John of Patmos wrote Revelation? Where are your sources? Did you use Eusebius or Irenaeus?
Tim Callahan said:
As to the Pauline view of the resurrection at the end-time, it doesn't really directly contradict Revelation and, in fact, is rather vague.
Why are the Pauline writings so vague? Justin identified the name of his father and grandfather, stated that they originated from Palestine and his First Apology is addressed to Antoninus.
We know nothing of Paul except he claimed to be a Pharisee but there is no evidence that Pharisees worshiped men as Gods.
The Pauline Corpus do not make sense. Jesus hated the Pharisees and they delivered him up to be killed.
Jesus used to curse the Pharisees and Jews and claimed their father was the Devil in gJohn.
Why would a Pharisee called worship the same Jesus as a God whom the Pharisees wanted dead in the first place??
Why would a Pharisee tell Roman citizens and people of the Roman Empire to worship a dead and resurrected man as a God whom the Romans killed??
Tim Callahan said:
Now, can you answer the question I asked about your view of how the Christian sect arose in Egypt? Was it a creation of Hellenized Diaspora Jews, or was it entirely Gentile in origin?
The Jesus story and cult appear to have originated from non-Jews because even Christian writers admit that the Jews did not agree that the Christ had already come since the time of Pilate.
Even up to c 133 CE, the Jews were claiming that Simon Bar Kosiba was the Messiah.