Peace to you,
RedEye wrote:
tam wrote:
RedEye wrote:
No, I pointed out that accounts provided by hearsay decades later are not necessarily reliable in every detail.
Yes, I know, the details that
refute your hypothesis are the ones that are unreliable, right?
In this instance, given all the other indicators for it being epilepsy which I have listed, yes I firmly believe that to be the case. You take the position that every word in every gospel is the literal truth. You do this for no good reason other than your faith.
I have told you previously that I do not take the position that every word is the literal truth. You have simply assumed this, and then assigned me a reason for doing what you assume I am doing.
I do not. How do you explain the contradiction between Acts 9:7 and Acts 22:9?
Why don't you copy the accounts out and pinpoint for us the exact contradiction?
You can't unless you are prepared to admit that the details can be messed up (or invented).
I can't because there is no contradiction in this case. Regardless, my claim was never that details cannot be messed up (or invented), but that you label any detail that refutes your claim as the messed up (or invented) detail. That is just picking and choosing what you want to accept according to a conclusion you have accepted. Conclusion first, evidence second.
I also pointed out the incoherent nature of the claim that one of video/audio would be "leaked" to other bystanders.
Why would this claim be incoherent? You're assuming 'leaked' as if this was supposed to have been something that no one else witnessed. Why do you assume this?
Um, because if it was a TLE episode then no-one could have seen or heard anything. It was all in Paul's head.
How is that not circular reasoning?
My point is that if this was not an epileptic episode and spirit Jesus was giving a vision to Paul for some purpose then you would expect that he would provide full video and audio for everyone present or he would provide video and audio only to Paul.
My question was
why do you expect this?
Just because this intervention was meant for Paul does not mean that others could not be aware that Christ was speaking to Paul.
For example, I can hear that my husband is being spoken to on the phone without understanding the words being spoken to him.
Furthermore I provided a reason why the author of Luke/Acts might have inserted such a detail.
To give it weight?
That is not what I argued although this could have been a minor reason. Please address what I actually argued.
You may have to repeat what you argued then.
You are claiming that Paul's sole testimony of this vision was enough for Luke to believe, since you are stating that Christ was not even an idea before Paul had and shared his vision (even though both Luke in Acts and Paul in his own letters refute this claim... Galatians 1:13).
The Galatians quote is from long after Paul had his vision so I'm not sure what point you think you are making.
I'm not sure what point you think
you are making with this comment about the timing.
It mentions nothing about persecuting Christians and that is consistent with my position of Paul hallucinating Jesus Christ due to an epileptic seizure.
It certainly does mention persecuting Christians.
For you have heard of my previous way of life in Judaism, how intensely I persecuted the church of God and tried to destroy it.
A - Paul is not going to call something other than Christians the church of God.
B - Even if you do not accept "A" for some reason (you might need to explain how a Christian man would consider something else to be the church of God), Paul himself makes it clear who he is referring to by the end of the chapter:
I was personally unknown to the churches of Judea that are in Christ. They only heard the report: The man who formerly persecuted us is now preaching the faith he once tried to destroy.
He clearly states that it is those in Christ that he formerly persecuted, and that the faith he now preaches is their faith that he formerly tried to destroy.
You are also suggesting that someone who so devotedly believed (as Paul would have believed, due to his vision)... lied.
Only after three years did I go up to Jerusalem to confer with Cephas, and I stayed with him fifteen days. But I saw none of the other apostles except James, the Lords brother. I assure you before God that what I am writing to you is no lie.
"James, the Lord's brother" also disputes your claim that Paul had no knowledge of a human Christ.
This is one of those probable later interpolations I have referred to:
https://vridar.org/2016/01/16/the-funct ... tians-119/
If it is not, it could still be the case that "brother" was used as Paul used it often --- to refer not to family but to brethren in the church. All members of such a congregation considered themselves as "brothers" and used this language. Therefore this one verse is not conclusive proof of anything. (This is off-topic though and I won't respond to this further).
Here is a corroborating verse then of Paul knowing about the human Messiah:
For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you: that the Lord Jesus, on the night He was betrayed, took bread, and when He had given thanks, He broke it and said, This is My body, which is for you; do this in remembrance of Me. In the same way, after supper He took the cup, saying, This cup is the new covenant in My blood; do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of Me. 1 Corinth 11:23-25
Since you address none of these arguments I can only assume that you concede them.
I think you may have assumed a great many things that are untrue.
At the point I wrote that you hadn't addressed any of my arguments so it was a perfectly reasonable assumption to make.
Then you must see how easy it is for even a 'perfectly reasonable assumption' to be wrong.
What do you want me to say? Do I believe that literal scales can fall from people's eyes? No, I don't. That's ridiculous. Of course it is a metaphor and that is what I was addressing, the underlying experience which might invoke the use of such a metaphor.
But Luke is the author, not Paul, correct? Luke did not have that underlying experience so as to invoke the use of such a metaphor. Nor does Luke use that metaphor in his previously written gospel, in which a blind man did receive his sight. (Luke 18:35-43).
Is this supposed to be a refutation? Anyone can use a metaphor whether it applies to a personal experience or a description of one. I have nothing more to add unless you make a valid point.
You are the one who mentioned a personal experience in conjunction with the scales from the eyes description:
A TLE episode can be a powerful and emotional experience. If the person having it is not aware of the cause (that it is a problem within the brain --- an uncontrolled electrical "storm") then of course they may consider the "visions" produced to be real.
I questioned what that had to do with anything, and then you gave the response that you have quoted above.
That can be easily explained by Paul choosing to show humility in this instance. In verse 7 though he reveals that it really is about him.
You mean humility for a couple of sentences? Why?
Um, because he was a humble person perhaps?
If he reveals in verse 7 that it was really about him, then where is the humility?
In the verses preceding it.
If Paul stated immediately that this account was indeed about him, that completely undermines the claim that humility was the cause of Paul not naming himself to begin with.
Why don't you try addressing the actual point (which is not about his attempts at humility and whether they are successful or not)? Do you agree that in verse 7 Paul reveals that he is talking about himself? Yes or no.
No.
But let's look at your points:
Paul is different because:
a) He tells us that he suffered from an embarrassing lifelong "affliction".
No he does not. He said that he was given a thorn in the flesh (stating that this 'thorn' must be epilepsy is speculation and conjecture). Paul does not state that this thorn was lifelong.
Let me qualify. It was lifelong for at least his adult life. Paul tells us that he pleaded three times with God to remove this affliction but God would not ("
in order to keep me from becoming conceited") That makes it lifelong to me.
Yes, that is possible (though the account does not state or even describe what that affliction is).
Nor is it ever mentioned anywhere that Paul suffered from seizures (and continued to suffer this through his entire ministry), which seems a simple enough thing to mention if it were true.
I have already addressed this. He didn't want to name his condition through embarrassment and shame.
How does that make sense? If people were already aware of it, how does not naming it save him embarrassment and shame? He is the one who brings it up (the thorn in the flesh). What about anyone else? There are no episodes of it recorded in any of his many experiences in Acts.
If epilepsy was one of those diseases that people 'spit at', does it seem likely that Paul would have been rising in the ranks as a Pharisee (just think about how much importance was placed upon afflicted and diseased people being unclean, being sinners - that such a man would rise in the ranks?)?
And why should I believe that story?
You did not answer the question.
b) He exhibits a common symptom of epilepsy (disinterest in sex).
I believe William disputed this earlier with Paul's knowledge of what it meant to 'burn with passion'.
And I believe I refuted that having knowledge about something necessarily means that you experience it yourself. I have knowledge of people (including priests) having an uncontrollable urge to sexually abuse young children. That doesn't mean that I have that urge.
True.
Just because one chooses not to marry (or even to be celibate) does not mean that they are suffering from epilepsy or even that they are disinterested in sex.
That wasn't my argument.
Then you do not seem to have an argument (please correct me if I have overlooked it), and you have presented no evidence that Paul was disinterested in sex.
c) He himself alludes to visions (how he received the gospel from no man).
He states that he learned from Christ. I have no argument with you on that. But one does not need to have visions in order to learn from Christ. One can listen (and so hear Christ), as is also attested to. Paul does not state that he learned only in visions.
Again, is this supposed to be a refutation? I see nothing here except an appeal to mystical communication with a mythical being.
It is just a clarification.
So far, point (a) is conjecture about the affliction Paul refers to; (b) has no evidence to support it and (c) is simply referring to visions of which there could be many causes, including that it was a true vision from Christ.
*Side point: You are suggesting also that Paul's vision invented Christ, are you not? But then how were others (such as the apostles) preaching Christ first?
Were they? Prove it (from Paul's authentic writings, not what came later).
Both Galatians and Corinthians (the two books from Paul that I have quoted from) are undisputed authentic writings from Paul.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Authorshi ... e_epistles
Undisputed Authentic Pauline epistles
First Epistle to the Thessalonians
Epistle to the Galatians
First Epistle to the Corinthians
Second Epistle to the Corinthians
Epistle to the Philippians
Epistle to Philemon
Epistle to the Romans
Disputed Deutero-Pauline epistles;
may be authentic
Epistle to the Ephesians
Epistle to the Colossians
Second Epistle to the Thessalonians
Pastoral epistles;
probably not authentic[10]
First Epistle to Timothy
Second Epistle to Timothy
Epistle to Titus
Anonymous sermon;
not authentic
Epistle to the Hebrews
As well, Acts, contents from which you are basing your entire theory upon, also corroborates the fact of others preaching Christ before Paul.
d) Later independent support in Acts from the author of that work.
Later independent support from Acts also corroborates Paul stating that he is the least of the apostles and that Christ appeared to him LAST.
For what I received I passed on to you as of first importance: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that He was buried, that He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that He appeared to Cephas and then to the Twelve. After that, He appeared to more than five hundred brothers at once, most of whom are still living, though some have fallen asleep. Then He appeared to James, then to all the apostles. And last of all He appeared to me also, as to one of untimely birth. For I am the least of the apostles and am unworthy to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God. 1 Corinthians 15:3-9
This directly refutes your claim that Paul's vision invented Christ and others later made up an 'historical Jesus'. The above quote from Paul in Corinthians is corroborated by the account given by Luke in Acts.
It's actually lifted straight from Acts. It's yet another later interpolation. "
The stubborn fact remains: in Galatians Paul tells his readers that what he preached to them when he founded their church was not taught him by human predecessors. In 1 Cor 15 he is depicted as telling his readers that what he preached to them when he founded their church was taught him by human predecessors". That's a direct contradiction.
Please quote from 1 Cor 15, where Paul tells his readers that what he preached to them was taught to him by human predecessors.
(as well, if Acts corroborates what Paul said in 1 Cor 15, I don't know why you are disputing it, since a similar corroboration is part of what you have claimed as your evidence that Paul really did have a vision)
http://historical-jesus.info/9.html
The "
Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures" gives the game away. What scriptures could Paul know about that had Christ dying for our sins? They hadn't been written yet! (This is also off-topic though and I won't respond further to this side issue).
He is referring to the only writings he would have called scripture: Moses, the Psalms, the Prophets. Such as Isaiah 53. What some would call the "Jewish scriptures" (even though they belonged to more than just the Jews).
e) The accounts have sufficient detail (eg. temporary blindness) to link it to a TLE episode (supported by a neuropsycholy researcher).
To suggest the possibility of that link you mean (providing that one ignores the two witnesses and the absence of any mention of further episodes). In the paper you linked to in the OP, others disputed the likelihood that Paul had epilepsy, and still others postulated multiple medical possibilities for his blindness.
Even diagnosing someone in person often has a great deal to do with ruling things out, even with all our medical advancements and technology.
Apart from the nit-picking, the linked article arrives at the conclusion of epilepsy. Correct?
Incorrect.
While the true state of Paul's health cannot be known, with TLE as a hypothesis for the cause of his ecstatic visions it is suggested that his 'thorn in the flesh' was the occasional supervention of grand mal attacks, and that he may have had an attack of TLE on the road to Damascus, followed by post-ictal blindness - this taking place while he was undergoing a profound spiritual change, his conversion to the Christian faith.
The link (and author) speaks only of a hypothesis.
(side note: please note that in the article you are using as evidence to support your claim, the author states that this vision and blindness took place while Paul was converting to the Christian faith... meaning the Christian faith already existed in order for him to convert to it; Paul did not just dream it up out of the blue)
f) Some Christians had come to the same conclusion themselves referring to epilepsy as St. Paul's disease in old Ireland.
Some may have believed this; but that is hardly evidence for it being true.
I love it. Whenever you state that you believe something in future, this will be my standard response back to you.
By all means. If you ever find me stating "I believe" as evidence for something, feel free to call me on it.
I also believe that his vision occurred, so I have no argument with you on that. Just on the cause.
You may believe this; but that is hardly evidence for it being true.

Never claimed that it was.
Peace again to you!
your servant and a slave of Christ,
tammy