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Discover the life and teachings of the extraordinary disciple of Jesus, St. Paul. Delve into his missionary journeys, theological insights, and letters to early Christian communities. Explore key themes such as faith, salvation, and Christian living.
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CHAPTER EIGHT Paul’s Letters: Jesus the Universal Lord
Life of St. Paul - Saul of Tarsus, future St. Paul, was an extraordinary disciple of Jesus - 13 of 27 New Testament books are attributed to him but he probably only wrote seven - He persecuted Christians before his revelation - Was baptized by Ananias - His upbringing in Tarsus made him familiar with Gentile religions, philosophies, and customs
-Paul engaged in three extensive missionary journeys: Journey 1 Island of Cyprus and the Asia Minor locales
Antioch was starting point and visited first journey locations and other cities Journey 2
Antioch was again the starting point. He revisited some cities from his second journey, but remained in Ephesus for three years Journey 3
Letters of Paul 1 Thessalonians - Earliest NT writing • Dates from only twenty years after Jesus’ life - Encourages Thessalonians, defends his proclamation of the gospel, shares news of his travel plans, and addresses two issues: 1.) Advised the Thessalonians to remain holy 2.) Assured them that Christians who had died would rise one day and live with the Lord forever
Letters of Paul Galatians - First of Paul’s so-called “great” letters - Paul expresses anger toward the Jewish-Christian evangelists who introduced division in his Galatian churches - Doctrinal section of Paul’s letters answers his opponents charges - Paul uses a scriptural argument to defend the truth that faith brings about a right relationship with God
Letters of Paul Philemon - Paul encourages his friend Philemon to accept back his runaway slave as his brother - Paul does not want Philemon to punish the slave, and hints towards freeing him. - Paul is trying to show that the slave is also transformed in Jesus Christ, and therefore a brother
Letters of Paul 1 Corinthians - Corinth had a reputation for permitting every known vice and being immoral - Paul wrote a letter to warn them away from immorality - Body of the letter has the following themes: • Divisions in the Corinthian church • Problems in Christian morality and living • Problems in Christian worship • The Resurrection
Letters of Paul 2 Corinthians - Neither the first nor second letter had much impact, so Paul wrote a third letter harshly critical of Corinthian abuse (letter is now lost) • Major problem this time was false teachers who had influenced the Corinthians to go against teachings of Paul - Titus brought good news about Corinthians: they were beginning to respond to Paul’s word and reject false teachings
Letters of Paul 2 Corinthians - In response to good news, Paul wrote 2 Corinthians - The body of the work deals with: • Paul’s past relationships with the Corinthians • His ministry among them • Praise for their repentance • Appeal for the collection for the church in Jerusalem • Defense of his ministry against false teachers
Letters of Paul Romans - Paul’s letter of introduction to the Christians living in Rome - Longest letter and his deepest theologically - Treats in more detail some themes Paul introduced in Galatians - Central theme is: Faith in Jesus’ death and resurrection reconciles us to God
Letters of Paul 5 Key Points in Romans: A description of the human condition before Christ Justification through faith in Christ Salvation and Christian freedom God’s plan for Israel Christian behavior
Deuteropauline Letters - Six letters might have been written by a close disciple of Paul - Reflect Paul’s thought, but have different vocabulary, style, theological themes, content, and historical context
Deuteropauline Letters 2 Thessalonians - Some thought Paul wrote it shortly after his first letter to the Thessalonians to address a misunderstanding about his teaching about the resurrection -Current scholars favor that it is a pseudonymous letter • Written under someone else’s name -Readers are told that Jesus will not come again until certain signs take place - People need to prepare themselves with patience and prayer
Deuteropauline Letters Colossians -Colossian, Philippians, Philemon, and Ephesians are the “Captivity Letters” • Each reveal that its author was imprisoned - Few doubt that Paul wrote Philemon and Philippians - Scholars believe one of Paul’s disciples wrote Ephesians and Colossians - Colossians was written to counteract some teachings that claimed Christ’s death and resurrection were not enough for salvation
Deuteropauline Letters Ephesians - Likely the work of a secretary or admirer of Paul - Draws out more explicitly some of the themes in Colossians - More of an essay than a letter Body has two main divisions: 1.) Mystery of salvation related to the Church 2.) Paul’s exhortation to Christians to live in unity
Deuteropauline Letters 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus - “Pastoral Letters” • Written by one pastor (shepherd) to two other pastors • Addressed to individuals • Give advice on Church leadership
Deuteropauline Letters Key Teachings of Titus and 1 Timothy: - Severe warning against false teachings and teachers - Many practical instructions for Church organization - Instructions for Christian worship - Instructions for Christian living - 2 Timothy is more of a personal letter, a last testament from the older apostle to Timothy
Vocabulary • Asceticism • Deuteropauline • Gnosticism • Pseudonymous