Episode 222: Pamela Eisenbaum - Paul & Salvation

In this episode of The Bible for Normal People, Pete and Jared are joined by Jewish New Testament scholar Pamela Eisenbaum to talk about the many misunderstandings surrounding Paul, one of the most complicated figures of the New Testament, and the lens through which he viewed the concept of salvation. Join them as they ask the following questions:

  • What are some problematic translations in the Bible that skew readers’ understanding of Paul?

  • Is Paul really the one who founded Christianity?

  • What does Pamela wish people knew about Paul that maybe falls outside of the framework of Protestant or evangelical teaching about him?

  • How did Paul view Jesus?

  • Did Paul remain religiously Jewish throughout his life?

  • Is Paul the author of all the epistles attributed to him in the New Testament?

  • What does salvation mean for Paul? How does his context and experience of the risen Jesus play into what he thinks of salvation?

  • If Paul didn't worship Jesus as a god, or as God, how did Paul see Jesus?

  • How did Paul understand the concept of salvation if he didn’t worship Jesus as God?

  • Did Paul ever think about hell?

  • To Paul, would salvation have been an individual or a collective concept?

Tweetables

Pithy, shareable, less-than-280-character statements from Pamela you can share.

  • People have argued that Jesus was in the fold of Judaism, and that Paul's the true founder of Christianity. I don't know that I would say that, but I would say this: the form and direction that Christianity takes owes itself to Paul. — @peisenbaum 

  • Religiously [Paul is] just as Jewish at the end of his life as he is at the beginning. — @peisenbaum

  • The understanding of the construction of Christianity as something in opposition to, or over against, or a correction to what Judaism once was—that understanding where Christianity is the fulfillment of Judaism? That rests in Paul, not in Jesus. — @peisenbaum

  • Paul did not worship Jesus like a God. Paul never talks about that kind of religious devotion to Jesus. Jesus is always distinct from God. You don't have a Trinity theologically yet, that comes much later. — @peisenbaum

  • Paul didn't hate women. Relative to his time—perhaps we can't call him a feminist, but he has certain ideas about the role of women that are very unconventional and moving in a very liberative direction that he still needs to be given more credit for. — @peisenbaum

  • Why would a god create the whole world then pretty much destroy almost all of it? And that's called salvation? That creates cognitive dissonance. I think Jesus becomes a way for Paul to understand that God wants to be reconciled to all of humanity, that actually God wants that. — @peisenbaum

Mentioned in This Episode


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Episode 223: Jared Byas - Misconceptions About Deconstruction & the Bible

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Episode 221: Pete Enns & Jared Byas - How to Read the Bible Now That We’ve Ruined It