Preface
As a Talmudic scholar, I have found that knowledge of the Talmud and
other rabbinical works has opened up the meaning of many puzzling
passages in the New Testament. In my earlier book on Jesus, Revolution
in Judaea, I showed how, in the Synoptic Gospels, Jesus speaks and acts
as a Pharisee, though the Gospel editors have attempted to conceal this
by representing him as opposing Pharisaism even when his sayings were
most in accordance with Pharisee teaching. In the present book, I have
used the rabbinical evidence to establish an opposite contention: that
Paul, whom the New Testament wishes to portray as having been a trained
Pharisee, never was one. The consequences of this for the understanding
of early Christianity are immense.
In addition to the rabbinical writings, I have made great use of the
ancient historians, especially Josephus, Epiphanius and Eusebius. Their
statements must be weighed in relation to their particular interests and
bias; but when such bias has been identified and discounted, there
remains a residue of valuable information. Exactly the same applies to
the New Testament itself. Its information is often distorted by the bias
of the author or editor, but a knowledge of the nature of this bias
makes possible the emergence of the true shape of events.
In using the Epistles as evidence of Paul’s life, views and
‘mythology’, I have confined myself to those Epistles which are accepted
by the great majority of New Testament scholars as the genuine work of
Paul. Disputed Epistles, such as Colossians, however pertinent to my
argument, have been ignored.
When quoting from the New Testament, I have usually used the New
English Bible version, but, from time to time, I have used the
Authorized Version or the Revised Version, when I thought them
preferable in faithfulness to the original. While the New English Bible
is in general more intelligible to modern readers than the older
versions, its concern for modern English idiom sometimes obscures
important features of the original Greek; and its readiness to
paraphrase sometimes allows the translator’s presuppositions to colour
his translation. I have pointed out several examples of this in the
text.
In considering the background of Paul, I have returned to one of the
earliest accounts of Paul in existence, that given by the Ebionites, as
reported by Epiphanius. This account has been neglected by scholars for
quite inadequate and tendentious reasons. Robert Graves and Joshua Podro
in The Nazarene Gospel Restored did take the Ebionite account
seriously; but, though they made some cogent remarks about it, their
treatment of the matter was brief. I hope that the present book will do
more to alter the prevailing dismissive attitude towards the evidence of
this fascinating and important ancient community.
Part I Saul:Chapter 1 The Problem of Paul
At the beginning of Christianity stand two figures: Jesus and Paul.
Jesus is regarded by Christians as the founder of their religion, in
that the events of his life comprise the foundation story of
Christianity; but Paul is regarded as the great interpreter of Jesus’
mission, who explained, in a way that Jesus himself never did, how
Jesus’ life and death fitted into a cosmic scheme of salvation,
stretching from the creation of Adam to the end of time.
How should we understand the relationship between Jesus and Paul? We
shall be approaching this question not from the standpoint of faith, but
from that of historians, who regard the Gospels and the rest of the New
Testament as an important source of evidence requiring careful sifting
and criticism, since their authors were propagating religious beliefs
rather than conveying dispassionate historical information. We shall
also be taking into account all relevant evidence from other sources,
such as Josephus, the Talmud, the Church historians and the Gnostic
writings.
What would Jesus himself have thought of Paul? We must remember that
Jesus never knew Paul; the two men never once met. The disciples who
knew Jesus best, such as Peter, James and John, have left no writings
behind them explaining how Jesus seemed to them or what they considered
his mission to have been. Did they agree with the interpretations
disseminated by Paul in his fluent, articulate writings? Or did they
perhaps think that this newcomer to the scene, spinning complicated
theories about the place of Jesus in the scheme of things, was getting
everything wrong? Paul claimed that his interpretations were not just
his own invention, but had come to him by personal inspiration; he
claimed that he had personal acquaintance with the resurrected Jesus,
even though he had never met him during his lifetime. Such acquaintance,
he claimed, gained through visions and transports, was actually
superior to acquaintance with Jesus during his lifetime, when Jesus was
much more reticent about his purposes.
We know about Paul not only from his own letters but also from the
book of Acts, which gives a full account of his life. Paul, in fact, is
the hero of Acts, which was written by an admirer and follower of his,
namely, Luke, who was also the author of the Gospel of that name. From
Acts, it would appear that there was some friction between Paul and the
leaders of the ‘Jerusalem Church’, the surviving companions of Jesus;
but this friction was resolved, and they all became the best of friends,
with common aims and purposes. From certain of Paul’s letters,
particularly Galatians, it seems that the friction was more serious than
in the picture given in Acts, which thus appears to be partly a
propaganda exercise, intended to portray unity in the early Church. The
question recurs: what would Jesus have thought of Paul, and what did the
Apostles think of him?
We should remember that the New Testament, as we have it, is much more
dominated by Paul than appears at first sight. As we read it, we come
across the Four Gospels, of which Jesus is the hero, and do not
encounter Paul as a character until we embark on the post-Jesus
narrative of Acts. Then we finally come into contact with Paul himself,
in his letters. But this impression is misleading, for the earliest
writings in the New Testament are actually Paul’s letters, which were
written about AD 50-60, while the Gospels were not written until the
period AD 70-110. This means that the theories of Paul were already
before the writers of the Gospels and coloured their interpretations of
Jesus’ activities. Paul is, in a sense, present from the very first word
of the New Testament. This is, of course, not the whole story, for the
Gospels are based on traditions and even written sources which go back
to a time before the impact of Paul, and these early traditions and
sources are not entirely obliterated in the final version and give
valuable indications of what the story was like before Paulinist editors
pulled it into final shape. However, the dominant outlook and shaping
perspective of the Gospels is that of Paul, for the simple reason that
it was the Paulinist view of what Jesus’ sojourn on Earth had been about
that was triumphant in the Church as it developed in history. Rival
interpretations, which at one time had been orthodox, opposed to Paul’s
very individual views, now became heretical and were crowded out of the
final version of the writings adopted by the Pauline Church as the
inspired canon of the New Testament.
This explains the puzzling and ambiguous role given in the Gospels to
the companions of Jesus, the twelve disciples. They are shadowy
figures, who are allowed little personality, except of a schematic kind.
They are also portrayed as stupid; they never quite understand what
Jesus is up to. Their importance in the origins of Christianity is
played down in a remarkable way. For example, we find immediately after
Jesus’ death that the leader of the Jerusalem Church is Jesus’ brother
James. Yet in the Gospels, this James does not appear at all as having
anything to do with Jesus’ mission and story. Instead, he is given a
brief mention as one of the brothers of Jesus who allegedly opposed
Jesus during his lifetime and regarded him as mad. How it came about
that a brother who had been hostile to Jesus in his lifetime suddenly
became the revered leader of the Church immediately after Jesus’ death
is not explained, though one would have thought that some explanation
was called for. Later Church legends, of course, filled the gap with
stories of the miraculous conversion of James after the death of Jesus
and his development into a saint. But the most likely explanation is, as
will be argued later, that the erasure of Jesus’ brother dames (and his
other brothers) from any significant role in the Gospel story is part
of the denigration of the early leaders who had been in close contact
with Jesus and regarded with great suspicion and dismay the
Christological theories of the upstart Paul, flaunting his brand new
visions in interpretation of the Jesus whom he had never met in the
flesh.
Who, then, was Paul? Here we would seem to have a good deal of
information; but on closer examination, it will turn out to be full of
problems. We have the information given by Paul about himself in his
letters, which are far from impersonal and often take an
autobiographical turn. Also we have the information given in Acts, in
which Paul plays the chief role. But the information given by any person
about himself always has to be treated with a certain reserve, since
everyone has strong motives for putting himself in the best possible
light. And the information given about Paul in Acts also requires close
scrutiny, since this work was written by someone committed to the
Pauline cause. Have we any other sources for Paul’s biography? As a
matter of fact, we have, though they are scattered in various unexpected
places, which it will be our task to explore: in a fortuitously
preserved extract from the otherwise lost writings of the Ebionites, a
sect of great importance for our quest; in a disguised attack on Paul
included in a text of orthodox Christian authority; and in an Arabic
manuscript, in which a text of the early Jewish Christians, the
opponents of Paul, has been preserved by an unlikely chain of
circumstances.
Let us first survey the evidence found in the more obvious and
well-known sources. It appears from Acts that Paul was at first called
‘Saul’, and that his birthplace was Tarsus, a city in Asia Minor (Acts
9:11, and 21:39, and 22:3). Strangely enough, however, Paul himself, in
his letters, never mentions that he came from Tarsus, even when he is at
his most autobiographical. Instead, he gives the following information
about his origins: ‘I am an Israelite myself, of the stock of Abraham,
of the tribe of Benjamin’ (Romans 11:2); and ‘… circumcised on my eighth
day, Israelite by race, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew born and
bred; in my attitude to the law, a Pharisee….’ (Philippians 3:5). It
seems that Paul was not anxious to impart to the recipients of his
letters that he came from somewhere so remote as Tarsus from Jerusalem,
the powerhouse of Pharisaism. The impression he wished to give, of
coming from an unimpeachable Pharisaic background, would have been much
impaired by the admission that he in fact came from Tarsus, where there
were few, if any, Pharisee teachers and a Pharisee training would have
been hard to come by.
We encounter, then, right at the start of our enquiry into Paul’s
background, the question: was Paul really from a genuine Pharisaic
family, as he says to his correspondents, or was this just something
that he said to increase his status in their eyes? The fact that this
question is hardly ever asked shows how strong the influence of
traditional religious attitudes still is in Pauline studies. Scholars
feel that, however objective their enquiry is supposed to be, they must
always preserve an attitude of deep reverence towards Paul, and never
say anything to suggest that he may have bent the truth at times, though
the evidence is strong enough in various parts of his life-story that
he was not above deception when he felt it warranted by circumstances.
It should be noted (in advance of a full discussion of the subject) that
modern scholarship has shown that, at this time, the Pharisees were
held in high repute throughout the Roman and Parthian empires as a
dedicated group who upheld religious ideals in the face of tyranny,
supported leniency and mercy in the application of laws, and championed
the rights of the poor against the oppression of the rich. The
undeserved reputation for hypocrisy which is attached to the name
‘Pharisee’ in medieval and modern times is due to the campaign against
the Pharisees in the Gospels — a campaign dictated by politico-religious
considerations at the time when the Gospels were given their final
editing, about forty to eighty years after the death of Jesus. Paul’s
desire to be thought of as a person of Pharisee upbringing should thus
be understood in the light of the actual reputation of the Pharisees in
Paul’s lifetime; Paul was claiming a high honour, which would much
enhance his status in the eyes of his correspondents.
Before looking further into Paul’s claim to have come from a Pharisee
background, let us continue our survey of what we are told about Paul’s
career in the more accessible sources. The young Saul, we are told,
left Tarsus and came to the Land of Israel, where he studied in the
Pharisee academy of Gamaliel (Acts 22:3). We know from other sources
about Gamaliel, who is a highly respected figure in the rabbinical
writings such as the Mishnah, and was given the title ‘Rabban’, as the
leading sage of his day. That he was the leader of the whole Pharisee
party is attested also by the New Testament itself, for he plays a
prominent role in one scene in the book of Acts (chapter 5) — a role
that, as we shall see later, is hard to reconcile with the general
picture of the Pharisees given in the Gospels.
Yet Paul himself, in his letters, never mentions that he was a pupil
of Gamaliel, even when he is most concerned to stress his qualifications
as a Pharisee. Here again, then, the question has to be put: was Paul
ever really a pupil of Gamaliel or was this claim made by Luke as an
embellishment to his narrative? As we shall see later, there are certain
considerations which make it most unlikely, quite apart from Paul’s
significant omission to say anything about the matter, that Paul was
ever a pupil of Gamaliel’s.
We are also told of the young Saul that he was implicated, to some
extent, in the death of the martyr Stephen. The people who gave false
evidence against Stephen, we are told, and who also took the leading
part in the stoning of their innocent victim, ‘laid their coats at the
feet of a young man named Saul’. The death of Stephen is described, and
it is added, ‘And Saul was among those who approved of his murder’ (Acts
8:1). How much truth is there in this detail? Is it to be regarded as
historical fact or as dramatic embellishment, emphasizing the contrast
between Paul before and after conversion? The death of Stephen is itself
an episode that requires searching analysis, since it is full of
problems and contradictions. Until we have a better idea of why and by
whom Stephen was killed and what were the views for which he died, we
can only note the alleged implication of Saul in the matter as a subject
for further investigation. For the moment, we also note that the
alleged implication of Saul heightens the impression that adherence to
Pharisaism would mean violent hostility to the followers of Jesus.
The next thing we are told about Saul in Acts is that he was
‘harrying the Church; he entered house after house, seizing men and
women, and sending them to prison’ (Acts 8:3). We are not told at this
point by what authority or on whose orders he was carrying out this
persecution. It was clearly not a matter of merely individual action on
his part, for sending people to prison can only be done by some kind of
official. Saul must have been acting on behalf of some authority, and
who this authority was can be gleaned from later incidents in which Saul
was acting on behalf of the High Priest. Anyone with knowledge of the
religious and political scene at this time in Judaea feels the presence
of an important problem here: the High Priest was not a Pharisee, but a
Sadducee, and the Sadducees were bitterly opposed to the Pharisees. How
is it that Saul, allegedly an enthusiastic Pharisee (‘a Pharisee of the
Pharisees’), is acting hand in glove with the High Priest? The picture
we are given in our New Testament sources of Saul, in the days before
his conversion to Jesus, is contradictory and suspect.
The next we hear of Saul (Acts, chapter 9) is that he ‘was still
breathing murderous threats against the disciples of the Lord. He went
to the High Priest and applied for letters to the synagogues at Damascus
authorizing him to arrest anyone he found, men or women, who followed
the new way, and bring them to Jerusalem.’ This incident is full of
mystery. If Saul had his hands so full in ‘harrying the church’ in
Judaea, why did he suddenly have the idea of going off to Damascus to
harry the Church there? What was the special urgency of a visit to
Damascus? Further, what kind of jurisdiction did the Jewish High Priest
have over the non-Jewish city of Damascus that would enable him to
authorize arrests and extraditions in that city? There is, moreover,
something very puzzling about the way in which Saul’s relation to the
High Priest is described: as if he is a private citizen who wishes to
make citizen’s arrests according to some plan of his own, and approaches
the High Priest for the requisite authority. Surely there must have
been some much more definite official connection between the High Priest
and Saul, not merely that the High Priest was called upon to underwrite
Saul’s project. It seems more likely that the plan was the High
Priest’s and not Saul’s, and that Saul was acting as agent or emissary
of the High Priest. The whole incident needs to be considered in the
light of probabilities and current conditions.
The book of Acts then continues with the account of Saul’s conversion
on the road to Damascus through a vision of Jesus and the succeeding
events of his life as a follower of Jesus. The pre-Christian period of
Saul’s life, however, does receive further mention later in the book of
Acts, both in chapter 22 and chapter 26, where some interesting details
are added, and also some further puzzles.
In chapter 22, Saul (now called Paul), is shown giving his own
account of his early life in a speech to the people after the Roman
commandant had questioned him. Paul speaks as follows:
I am a true-born Jew, a native of Tarsus in Cilicia. I was brought up
in this city, and as a pupil of Gamaliel I was thoroughly trained in
every point of our ancestral law. I have always been ardent in God’s
service, as you all are today. And so I began to persecute this movement
to the death, arresting its followers, men and women alike, and putting
them in chains. For this I have as witnesses the High Priest and the
whole Council of Elders. I was given letters from them to our
fellow-Jews at Damascus, and had started out to bring the Christians
there to Jerusalem as prisoners for punishment; and this is what
happened….
Paul then goes on to describe his vision of Jesus on the road to
Damascus. Previously he had described himself to the commandant as ‘a
Jew, a Tarsian from Cilicia, a citizen of no mean city’. It is from this
passage that we learn of Paul’s native city, Tarsus, and of his alleged
studies under Gamaliel. Note that he says that, though born in Tarsus,
he was ‘brought up in this city’ (i.e. Jerusalem) which suggests that he
spent his childhood in Jerusalem. Does this mean that his parents moved
from Tarsus to Jerusalem? Or that the child was sent to Jerusalem on
his own, which seems unlikely? If Paul spent only a few childhood years
in Tarsus, he would hardly describe himself proudly as ‘a citizen of no
mean city’ (Tarsus). Jews who had spent most of their lives in Jerusalem
would be much more prone to describe themselves as citizens of
Jerusalem. The likelihood is that Paul moved to Jerusalem when he was
already a grown man, and he left his parents behind in Tarsus, which
seems all the more probable in that they receive no mention in any
account of Paul’s experiences in Jerusalem. As for Paul’s alleged period
of studies under Gamaliel, this would have had to be in adulthood, for
Gamaliel was a teacher of advanced studies, not a teacher of children.
He would accept as a pupil only someone well grounded and regarded as
suitable for the rabbinate. The question, then, is where and how Paul
received this thorough grounding, if at all. As pointed out above and
argued fully below, there are strong reasons to think that Paul never
was a pupil of Gamaliel.
An important question that also arises in this chapter of Acts is
that of Paul’s Roman citizenship. This is mentioned first in chapter 16.
Paul claims to have been born a Roman citizen, which would mean that
his father was a Roman citizen. There are many problems to be discussed
in this connection, and some of these questions impinge on Paul’s claim
to have had a Pharisaic background. A further account of Paul’s
pre-Christian life is found in chapter 26 of Acts, in a speech addressed
by Paul to King Agrippa. Paul says:
My life from my youth up, the life I led from the beginning among my
people and in Jerusalem, is familiar to all Jews. Indeed they have known
me long enough and could testify, if they only would, that I belonged
to the strictest group in our religion: I lived as a Pharisee. And it is
for a hope kindled by God’s promise to our forefathers that I stand in
the dock today. Our twelve tribes hope to see the fulfillment of that
promise…. I myself once thought it my duty to work actively against the
name of Jesus of Nazareth; and I did so in Jerusalem. It was I who
imprisoned many of God’s people by authority obtained from the chief
priests; and when they were condemned to death, my vote was cast against
them. In all the synagogues I tried by repeated punishment to make them
renounce their faith; indeed my fury rose to such a pitch that I
extended my persecution to foreign cities. On one such occasion I was
travelling to Damascus with authority and commission from the chief
priests….
Again the account continues with the vision on the road to Damascus.
This speech, of course, cannot be regarded as the authentic words
addressed by Paul to King Agrippa, but rather as a rhetorical speech
composed by Luke, the author of Acts, in the style of ancient
historians. Thus the claim made in the speech that Paul’s career as a
Pharisee of high standing was known to ‘all Jews’ cannot be taken at
face value. It is interesting that Paul is represented as saying that he
‘cast his vote’ against the followers of Jesus, thus helping to condemn
them to death. This can only refer to the voting of the Sanhedrin or
Council of Elders, which was convened to try capital cases; so what Luke
is claiming here for his hero Paul is that he was at one time a member
of the Sanhedrin. This is highly unlikely, for Paul would surely have
made this claim in his letters, when writing about his credentials as a
Pharisee, if it had been true. There is, however, some confusion both in
this account and in the accounts quoted above about whether the
Sanhedrin, as well as the High Priest or ‘chief priests’, was involved
in the persecution of the followers of Jesus. Sometimes the High Priest
alone is mentioned, sometimes the Sanhedrin is coupled with him, as if
the two are inseparable. But we see on two occasions cited in Acts that
the High Priest was outvoted by the Pharisees in the Sanhedrin; on both
occasions, the Pharisees were opposing an attempt to persecute the
followers of Jesus; so the representation of High Priest and Sanhedrin
as having identical aims is one of the suspect features of these
accounts.
It will be seen from the above collation of passages in the book of
Acts concerning Paul’s background and early life, together with Paul’s
own references to his background in his letters, that the same strong
picture emerges: that Paul was at first a highly trained Pharisee rabbi,
learned in all the intricacies of the rabbinical commentaries on
scripture and legal traditions (afterwards collected in the rabbinical
compilations, the Talmud and Midrash). As a Pharisee, Paul was strongly
opposed to the new sect which followed Jesus and which believed that he
had been resurrected after his crucifixion. So opposed was Paul to this
sect that he took violent action against it, dragging its adherents to
prison. Though this strong picture has emerged, some doubts have also
arisen, which, so far, have only been lightly sketched in: how is it,
for example, that Paul claims to have voted against Christians on trial
for their lives before the Sanhedrin, when in fact, in the graphically
described trial of Peter before the Sanhedrin (Acts 5), the Pharisees,
led by Gamaliel, voted for the release of Peter? What kind of Pharisee
was Paul, if he took an attitude towards the early Christians which, on
the evidence of the same book of Acts, was untypical of the Pharisees?
And how is it that this book of Acts is so inconsistent within itself
that it describes Paul as violently opposed to Christianitybecause of
his deep attachment to Pharisaism, and yet also describes the Pharisees
as being friendly towards the early Christians, standing up for them and
saving their lives?
It has been pointed out by many scholars that the book of Acts, on
the whole, contains a surprising amount of evidence favourable to the
Pharisees, showing them to have been tolerant and merciful. Some
scholars have even argued that the book of Acts is a pro-Pharisee work;
but this can hardly be maintained. For, outweighing all the evidence
favourable to the Pharisees is the material relating to Paul, which is,
in all its aspects, unfavourable to the Pharisees; not only is Paul
himself portrayed as being a virulent persecutor when he was a Pharisee,
but Paul declares that he himself was punished by flogging five times
(II Corinthians 11:24) by the ‘Jews’ (usually taken to mean the
Pharisees). So no one really comes away from reading Acts with any good
impression of the Pharisees, but rather with the negative impressions
derived from the Gospels reinforced.
Why, therefore, is Paul always so concerned to stress that he came
from a Pharisee background? A great many motives can be discerned, but
there is one that needs to be singled out here: the desire to stress the
alleged continuity between Judaism and Pauline Christianity. Paul
wishes to say that whereas, when he was a Pharisee, he mistakenly
regarded the early Christians as heretics who had departed from true
Judaism, after his conversion he took the opposite view, that
Christianity was the true Judaism. All his training as a Pharisee, he
wishes to say — all his study of scripture and tradition — really leads
to the acceptance of Jesus as the Messiah prophesied in the Old
Testament. So when Paul declares his Pharisee past, he is not merely
proclaiming his own sins — ‘See how I have changed, from being a
Pharisee persecutor to being a devoted follower of Jesus!’ — he is also
proclaiming his credentials — ‘If someone as learned as I can believe
that Jesus was the fulfilment of the Torah, who is there fearless enough
to disagree?’
On the face of it, Paul’s doctrine of Jesus is a daring departure
from Judaism. Paul was advocating a doctrine that seemed to have far
more in common with pagan myths than with Judaism: that Jesus was a
divine-human person who had descended to Earth from the heavens and
experienced death for the express purpose of saving mankind. The very
fact that the Jews found this doctrine new and shocking shows that it
plays no role in the Jewish scripture, at least not in any way easily
discernible. Yet Paul was not content to say that his doctrine was new;
on the contrary, he wished to say that every line of the Jewish
scripture was a foreshadowing of the Jesus-event as he understood it,
and that those who understood the scripture in any other way were
failing in comprehension of what Judaism had always been about. So his
insistence on his Pharisaic upbringing was part of his insistence on
continuity.
There were those who accepted Paul’s doctrine, but did regard it as a
radical new departure, with nothing in the Jewish scriptures
foreshadowing it. The best known figure of this kind was Marcion, who
lived about a hundred years after Paul, and regarded Paul as his chief
inspiration. Yet Marcion refused to see anything Jewish in Paul’s
doctrine, but regarded it as a new revelation. He regarded the Jewish
scriptures as the work of the Devil and he excluded the Old Testament
from his version of the Bible.
Paul himself rejected this view. Though he regarded much of the Old
Testament as obsolete, superseded by the advent of Jesus, he still
regarded it as the Word of God, prophesying the new Christian Church and
giving it authority. So his picture of himself as a Pharisee symbolizes
the continuity between the old dispensation and the new: a figure who
comprised in his own person the turning-point at which Judaism was
transformed into Christianity.
Throughout the Christian centuries, there have been Christian
scholars who have seen Paul’s claim to a Pharisee background in this
light. In the medieval Disputations convened by Christians to convert
Jews, arguments were put forward purporting to show that not only the
Jewish scriptures but even the rabbinical writings, the Talmud and the
Midrash, supported the claims of Christianity that Jesus was the
Messiah, that he was divine and that he had to suffer death for mankind.
Though Paul was not often mentioned in these Disputations, the project
was one of which he would have approved. In modern times, scholars have
laboured to argue that Paul’s doctrines about the Messiah and divine
suffering are continuous with Judaism as it appears in the Bible, the
Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, and in the rabbinical writings (the
best-known effort of this nature is Paul and Rabbinic Judaism, by W.D.
Davies).
So Paul’s claim to expert Pharisee learning is relevant to a very
important and central issue — whether Christianity, in the form given to
it by Paul, is really continuous with Judaism or whether it is a new
doctrine, having no roots in Judaism, but deriving, in so far as it has
an historical background, from pagan myths of dying and resurrected gods
and Gnostic myths of heaven-descended redeemers. Did Paul truly stand
in the Jewish tradition, or was he a person of basically Hellenistic
religious type, but seeking to give a colouring of Judaism to a
salvation cult that was really opposed to everything that Judaism stood
for?
Chapter 2 The Standpoint of this Book
As against the conventional picture of Paul, outlined in the last
chapter, the present book has an entirely different and unfamiliar view
to put forward. This view of Paul is not only unfamiliar in itself, but
it also involves many unfamiliar standpoints about other issues which
are relevant and indeed essential to a correct assessment of Paul; for
example:
Who and what were the Pharisees? What were their religious and
political views as opposed to those of the Sadducees and other religious
and political groups of the time? What was their attitude to Jesus?
What was their attitude towards the early Jerusalem Church? Who and what
was Jesus? Did he really see himself as a saviour who had descended
from heaven in order to suffer crucifixion? Or did he have entirely
different aims, more in accordance with the Jewish thoughts and hopes of
his time? Was the historical Jesus quite a different person from the
Jesus of Paul’s ideology, based on Paul’s visions and trances? Who and
what were the early Church of Jerusalem, the first followers of Jesus?
Have their views been correctly represented by the later Church? Did
James and Peter, the leaders of the Jerusalem Church, agree with Paul’s
views (as orthodox Christianity claims) or did they oppose him bitterly,
regarding him as a heretic and a betrayer of the aims of Jesus? Who and
what were the Ebionites, whose opinions and writings were suppressed by
the orthodox Church? Why did they denounce Paul? Why did they combine
belief in Jesus with the practice of Judaism? Why did they believe in
Jesus as Messiah, but not as God? Were they a later ‘Judaizing’ group,
or were they, as they claimed to be, the remnants of the authentic
followers of Jesus, the church of James and Peter?
The arguments in this book will inevitably become complicated, since
every issue is bound up with every other. It is impossible to answer any
of the above questions without bringing all the other questions into
consideration. It is, therefore, convenient at this point to give an
outline of the standpoint to which all the arguments of this book
converge. This is not an attempt to prejudge the issue. The following
summary of the findings of this book may seem dogmatic at this stage,
but it is intended merely as a guide to the ramifications of the ensuing
arguments and a bird’s eye view of the book, and as such will stand or
fall with the cogency of the arguments themselves. The following, then,
are the propositions argued in the present book:
1 Paul was never a Pharisee rabbi, but was an adventurer of
undistinguished background. He was attached to the Sadducees, as a
police officer under the authority of the High Priest, before his
conversion to belief in Jesus. His mastery of the kind of learning
associated with the Pharisees was not great. He deliberately
misrepresented his own biography in order to increase the effectiveness
of missionary activities.
2 Jesus and his immediate followers were Pharisees. Jesus had no
intention of founding a new religion. He regarded himself as the Messiah
in the normal Jewish sense of the term, i.e. a human leader who would
restore the Jewish monarchy, drive out the Roman invaders, set up an
independent Jewish state, and inaugurate an era of peace, justice and
prosperity (known as ‘the kingdom of God,) for the whole world. Jesus
believed himself to be the figure prophesied in the Hebrew Bible who
would do all these things. He was not a militarist and did not build up
an army to fight the Romans, since he believed that God would perform a
great miracle to break the power of Rome. This miracle would take place
on the Mount of Olives, as prophesied in the book of Zechariah. When
this miracle did not occur, his mission had failed. He had no intention
of being crucified in order to save mankind from eternal damnation by
his sacrifice. He never regarded himself as a divine being, and would
have regarded such an idea as pagan and idolatrous, an infringement of
the first of the Ten Commandments.
3 The first followers of Jesus, under James and Peter, founded the
Jerusalem Church after Jesus’s death. They were called the Nazarenes,
and in all their beliefs they were indistinguishable from the Pharisees,
except that they believed in the resurrection of Jesus, and that Jesus
was still the promised Messiah. They did not believe that Jesus was a
divine person, but that, by a miracle from God, he had been brought back
to life after his death on the cross, and would soon come back to
complete his mission of overthrowing the Romans and setting up the
Messianic kingdom. The Nazarenes did not believe that Jesus had
abrogated the Jewish religion, or Torah. Having known Jesus personally,
they were aware that he had observed the Jewish religious law all his
life and had never rebelled against it. His sabbath cures were not
against Pharisee law. The Nazarenes were themselves very observant of
Jewish religious law. They practiced circumcision, did not eat the
forbidden foods and showed great respect to the Temple. The Nazarenes
did not regard themselves as belonging to a new religion; their religion
was Judaism. They set up synagogues of their own, but they also
attended non-Nazarene synagogues on occasion, and performed the same
kind of worship in their own synagogues as was practiced by all
observant Jews. The Nazarenes became suspicious of Paul when they heard
that he was preaching that Jesus was the founder of a new religion and
that he had abrogated the Torah. After an attempt to reach an
understanding with Paul, the Nazarenes (i.e. the Jerusalem Church under
James and Peter) broke irrevocably with Paul and disowned him.
4 Paul, not Jesus, was the founder of Christianity as a new religion
which developed away from both normal Judaism and the Nazarene variety
of Judaism. In this new religion, the Torah was abrogated as having had
only temporary validity. The central myth of the new religion was that
of an atoning death of a divine being. Belief in this sacrifice, and a
mystical sharing of the death of the deity, formed the only path to
salvation. Paul derived this religion from Hellenistic sources, chiefly
by a fusion of concepts taken from Gnosticism and concepts taken from
the mystery religions, particularly from that of Attis. The combination
of these elements with features derived from Judaism, particularly the
incorporation of the Jewish scriptures, reinterpreted to provide a
background of sacred history for the new myth, was unique; and Paul
alone was the creator of this amalgam. Jesus himself had no idea of it,
and would have been amazed and shocked at the role assigned to him by
Paul as a suffering deity. Nor did Paul have any predecessors among the
Nazarenes though later mythography tried to assign this role to Stephen,
and modern scholars have discovered equally mythical predecessors for
Paul in a group called the ‘Hellenists’. Paul, as the personal begetter
of the Christian myth, has never been given sufficient credit for his
originality. The reverence paid through the centuries to the great Saint
Paul has quite obscured the more colourful features of his personality.
Like many evangelical leaders, he was a compound of sincerity and
charlatanry. Evangelical leaders of his kind were common at this time in
the Greco-Roman world (e.g. Simon Magus, Apollonius of Tyana).
5 A source of information about Paul that has never been taken
seriously enough is a group called the Ebionites. Their writings were
suppressed by the Church, but some of their views and traditions were
preserved in the writings of their opponents, particularly in the huge
treatise on Heresies by Epiphanius. From this it appears that the
Ebionites had a very different account to give of Paul’s background and
early life from that found in the New Testament and fostered by Paul
himself. The Ebionites testified that Paul had no Pharisaic background
or training; he was the son of Gentiles, converted to Judaism in Tarsus,
came to Jerusalem when an adult, and attached himself to the High
Priest as a henchman. Disappointed in his hopes of advancement, he broke
with the High Priest and sought fame by founding a new religion. This
account, while not reliable in all its details, is substantially
correct. It makes far more sense of all the puzzling and contradictory
features of the story of Paul than the account of the official documents
of the Church.
6 The Ebionites were stigmatized by the Church as heretics who failed
to understand that Jesus was a divine person and asserted instead that
he was a human being who came to inaugurate a new earthly age, as
prophesied by the Jewish prophets of the Bible. Moreover, the Ebionites
refused to accept the Church doctrine, derived from Paul, that Jesus
abolished or abrogated the Torah, the Jewish law. Instead, the Ebionites
observed the Jewish law and regarded themselves as Jews. The Ebionites
were not heretics, as the Church asserted, nor ‘re-Judaizers’, as modern
scholars call them, but the authentic successors of the immediate
disciples and followers of Jesus, whose views and doctrines they
faithfully transmitted, believing correctly that they were derived from
Jesus himself. They were the same group that had earlier been called the
Nazarenes, who were led by James and Peter, who had known Jesus during
his lifetime, and were in a far better position to know his aims than
Paul, who met Jesus only in dreams and visions. Thus the opinion held by
the Ebionites about Paul is of extraordinary interest and deserves
respectful consideration, instead of dismissal as ‘scurrilous’
propaganda — the reaction of Christian scholars from ancient to modern
times.
The above conspectus brings into sharper relief our question, was Paul a
Pharisee? It will be seen that this is not merely a matter of biography
or idle curiosity. It is bound up with the whole question of the
origins of Christianity. A tremendous amount depends on this question,
for, if Paul was not a Pharisee rooted in Jewish learning and tradition,
but instead a Hellenistic adventurer whose acquaintance with Judaism
was recent and shallow, the construction of myth and theology which he
elaborated in his letters becomes a very different thing. Instead of
searching through his system for signs of continuity with Judaism, we
shall be able to recognize it for what it is — a brilliant concoction of
Hellenism, superficially connecting itself with the Jewish scriptures
and tradition, by which it seeks to give itself a history and an air of
authority.
Christian attitudes towards the Pharisees and thus towards the
picture of Paul as a Pharisee have always been strikingly ambivalent. In
the Gospels, the Pharisees are attacked as hypocrites and would-be
murderers: yet the Gospels also convey an impression of the Pharisees as
figures of immense authority and dignity. This ambivalence reflects the
attitude of Christianity to Judaism itself; on the one hand, an
allegedly outdated ritualism, but on the other, a panorama of awesome
history, a source of authority and blessing, so that at all costs the
Church must display itself as the new Israel, the true Judaism. Thus
Paul, as Pharisee, is the subject of alternating attitudes. In the
nineteenth century, when Jesus was regarded (by Renan, for example) as a
Romantic liberal, rebelling against the authoritarianism of Pharisaic
Judaism, Paul was deprecated as a typical Pharisee, enveloping the sweet
simplicity of Jesus in clouds of theology and difficult formulations.
In the twentieth century, when the concern is more to discover the
essential Jewishness of Christianity, the Pharisee aspect of Paul is
used to connect Pauline doctrines with the rabbinical writings — again
Paul is regarded as never losing his essential Pharisaism, but this is
now viewed as good, and as a means of rescuing Christianity from
isolation from Judaism. To be Jewish and yet not to be Jewish, this is
the essential dilemma of Christianity, and the figure of Paul, abjuring
his alleged Pharisaism as a hindrance to salvation and yet somehow
clinging to it as a guarantee of authority, is symbolic.
Part 1 - The Problem of Paul an excerpt from: The Mythmaker: Paul and the Invention of Christianity by Hyam Maccoby
On: Tuesday, February 12, 2013
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