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Assemblies |
Here is some interesting reading. I do not agree with everything that is written here, but it is lots of valuable information, and worth reading.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/3970/islampau.html
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THE MESSAGE OF THE PROPHETS AND THE TEACHINGS OF PAUL OF TARSUS |
One of the basic tenets of Islam is that there is no difference among the Prophets of God. Muslims must, as an article of faith, believe in the Divinely revealed Torah or the Books of Moses, the Psalms of David, the Gospel of Jesus and the Quran of Muhammad. Muslims believe that the essence of the teachings of all the prophets is the same. It is the sovereignty of God.
The Quran teaches that Jesus and Moses were in the same prophetic line as Muhammad.
There are also many Hadith, traditions or sayings of the Prophet Muhammad, narrated by his Companions, which deal with the other prophets who came before him. Some of the Hadith regarding the Prophets Moses and Jesus, from Al Bukhari, one of the most respected collections, are given below. They illustrate the central tenet of Islam, which is that all the prophets were revealing the same message, that God alone is to be the centre of our way of life
Respect for Moses
Narrated Abu Said Al Khudri: A man from the Jews having been slapped on the face, came to the Prophet and said: O Muhammad! A man from the Ansar slapped me on my face!
The Prophet said "Call him"
When they called him the Prophet said "Why did you slap him?"
He said: "O Allah's Apostle while I was passing by the Jews I heard him saying "By Him who selected Moses above the human beings." I said: 'Even above Muhammad?' I became furious and slapped him on the face."
The Prophet said: "Do not give me superiority over the other prophets, for on the Day of Resurrection the people will become unconscious and I will be the first to regain consciousness. Then I will see Moses holding one of the legs of the Throne. I will not know whether he has regained consciousness before me or whether the shock he had received at the Mountain (Sinai) during his worldly life was sufficient for him (so that he was exempted)."
Sahih Al Bukhari vol 6 p.128-129
Narrated Ibn Abbas: The Prophet once came to us and said, 'All the nations were displayed in front of me and I saw a large multitude of people covering the horizon. Somebody said, 'This is Moses and his followers.'
Sahih Al Bukhari Vol 4 p.411
Respect for Jesus.
Narrated Ubada: The Prophet said: "If anyone testifies that None has the right to be worshipped but Allah Alone Who has no partners and that Muhammad is His slave and His Apostle, and that Jesus is Allah's slave and His Apostle and His word which he bestowed on Mary and a soul from Him, and that paradise is true and hell is true, Allah will admit him into paradise with the deeds which he has done even if those deeds were few."
Sahih Al Bukhari vol 4 p.429
Narrated Abu Huraira: Allah's Apostle said: "Both in this world and in the hereafter, I am the nearest of all people to Jesus, the son of Mary. The prophets are paternal brothers; their mothers are different, but their religion is one."
Sahih Al Bukhari Vol 4 p.432
Another Hadith which mentions Jesus has profound implications for those who claim to follow the Gospel of Jesus but who are in fact, deeply influenced by the religion created by Paul. The reference to the breaking of the cross can be understood as denial by Jesus of the religion of the crucified Christ. The killing of the pigs, a forbidden food under the Law, symbolises his rejection of Paul's claim that the Law was dead.
The Second Coming of Jesus
Narrated Abu Huraira: Allah's Apostle said 'By Him in Whose Hands my soul is, surely Jesus the son of Mary will soon descend amongst you as a Just Ruler; he will break the cross and kill the pigs and there will be no Jizya (a tax taken from non-Muslims in return for freedom from military service). Money will be in such abundance that nobody will accept a charitable gift, and a single prostration to Allah (in prayer) will be better than the whole world and what is in it.'
Abu Hurairah added: "If you wish you can recite this verse from the Holy Quran:
Muslims believe that Muhammad was the Last of the Prophets so the Book revealed to him is the final revelation which will remain until the Day of judgment. We do not believe that he was the only prophet or that the other prophets should be ignored.
The Message of the Prophets is Unwelcome
The Message of God, delivered by Moses, Jesus and Muhammad and all the other prophets, has brought out all the forces of oppression and darkness against it, from the beginning of history until today. The histories of Abraham, Noah, Moses, David, Jesus and Muhammad reveal the struggles they were forced to undergo from opponents of God's message. The greedy and powerful have always, until today, feared this message and sought to silence it or, when this is obviously impossible, to modify it.
Maulana Maududi, the leading Islamic scholar to come out of India this century, attempted to explain this phenomenon in an address in 1939. This was published as a pamphlet entitled "The Political Theory of Islam". Maududi was sentenced to death at one stage by a so-called Muslim Government for his forthright opinions. This illustrates how the Muslim world is ruled by those who fear Islam, something not fully comprehended in the West.
Maududi writes:
The question at issue was not dominion over land and sea or over the universe but over the allegiance of the people, not who should be regarded as controlling the forces of nature, but who should have the right to claim the obedience of human beings.
Amongst all creation it is only humans who can and do claim godhood in relation to their fellow beings.
Maududi writes of the two types of people who seek this status of a god. They can be like Pharaoh, with state power, a system of law courts and police and an army. In the past this was associated with direct claims to divine status. The Emperor Augustus was proclaimed a god by the Roman Senate. Pharaoh was the living god, an incarnation of Horus. In modern times they are more likely to be president for life, like Kim Il Sung of North Korea, or be the founder of a national ideology with a greater than human status. Maududi writes of this type of aspirant to godhood:
Nimrod's claim was based on the absolute power he had over his subjects, over their lives and property. That is why he demanded that Abraham should serve and obey him.
The second species of claimants to godhood are those who use the gullibility of the people or their ignorance and superstition to assert that they are in some way the mouthpiece of God. These people may claim that they too obey God but that they are the intermediaries through whom humanity must approach Him. They alone must carry out the sacred ceremonies and they alone can guide us:
The Law of God is a Protection to Humanity.
Only acceptance of the Law of God can liberate humanity from the rule of false gods. If we accept the rule of pretenders to godhood we become their slaves. It is the willingness of so many people to submit to false gods that creates the horrors we see in many parts of the world today. It is not pleasing to God that there should be world wide starvation, famine created by civil wars, mass poverty in the Third World and in the cities of the rich countries. This is a situation we have allowed to occur through our own short-sightedness. Our failure to take seriously the message of the prophets, which calls for submission to the Laws of God and the rejection of idols, is the fundamental cause of the distress which threatens to overwhelm us.
Maududi writes:
Many people today, especially in the rich Western countries which regard themselves as "post-Christian", claim to be without religion. Many have been influenced by the scientism of the early twentieth century and the incompatibility between what is in the Bible and what is established fact in other disciplines. It may be true that they cannot believe in Biblical stories which have been altered and edited over the centuries to fit various ambitions or the dogmas of Paul and his followers, but it is not true that they are 'without religion'. Maududi writes:'If you do not believe in God, some artificial god will take His place in your affection.' Our religion is our way of life and is centred upon our object of worship. In former societies the object of worship may have been a stone god or a spirit. In modern societies the object of worship has, for many people, become position, financial success or comfort, or the well-being of their immediate family. A political leader, a philosophical theory or a great cause can become a god for those whose horizons are less limited. One lesson that history has taught us is that if we make just one aspect of life or experience our god, we limit the development of our truly human capacities to the sphere dictated by that religion. The evil within philosophies and religions like nazism or other deified versions of racism, is not only the physical damage they do to their opponents, but the way they stunt their adherents as well. It is important that people should clearly recognise their object of worship. Only then can they reflect upon the quality of their faith and the limitations inherent within it.
Revelations from prophets have provided a pathway for humanity since there have been human beings. No people have been left without guidance. The way or the religion which they have revealed is one which is not limited like the religions built around gods created by human desires are limited. The prophets call us to a broad, unlimiting way of life in which our object of worship is the Lord of All the Worlds, the Beneficent, the Merciful, the Eternal upon Whom all the universe depends but Who depends upon nothing. This object of worship frees us from all slavery to lower gods.
The prophets throughout all history have called us to the path of liberation, away from the slavery which worship of invented gods creates. This call was always in the past and is still today, accompanied by hostility from those whose power was or is threatened. The threat is real. It means the end of personal power over others, the end of domination. Maududui explains it in these terms:
Did Paul of Tarsus preach this Message of God?
In modern Trinitarian Christianity, Paul, called 'the apostle', assumes central importance. It is his epistles which form the foundation of the religion of the 'crucified Christ' teaching salvation through faith in the resurrection. There is very little in his writings about the Gospel revealed to Jesus or of the life of Jesus. In fact Paul claimed to be proclaiming a new gospel. It was a gospel of accommodation with the Roman rulers of Palestine and their Herodian puppets.
Paul wrote in his Letter to the Romans:
Such an attitude was very different from that of those thousands of Jews who accepted the Gospel and who were 'zealous for the Law' (Acts 21:21). They abhorred pagan rule and the pollution of the Temple and of the land which it brought.
Paul's departure from the teachings of the prophets was further highlighted by difference over the Law itself. The purpose of the Law, according to Paul, was to control the evil and was in no way of benefit to the good.
The Law
Paul's view of the Law is difficult to understand. It is as if he hated what what been revealed by God and reiterated by the Prophets of Israel right down until the Gospel of Jesus. The essence of the Law was clear. It involved recognition of the sovereignty of God:
This constant remembrance of God was the core of the individual's and the society's progress towards holiness, giving rise to an ever deepening consciousness of justice and righteousness amongst the people.
Under the Law, the power of a ruler, who had to be a believer, was limited. It was clear that sovereignty was not his to possess.
It also involved establishing justice:
The Law was intended to train the people of Israel to serve God and thus to prepare them as a light to the world. It included demands for abstention from evil and the positive cultivation of virtue. The dietary laws were associated with the notion of holiness. They were part of training in self-discipline, without which submission to God is impossible. The sacrificial cult involving expiation of religious sins was part of the cultivation of awareness that such offences created a gulf between the individual and God, erecting a barrier to the attainment of holiness.
Justice and Righteousness are the fundamentals of the moral law established by God. Justice, which Epstein describes as 'the negative aspect of Holiness', involves six fundamental rights:
(Epstein p.27)
Jesus came to confirm this Law. Even later Pauline theologians could not expunge this subject from the collection of writings which became the New Testament. Respect for the Law was so basic to his teachings that to ignore it would have rendered all else invalid. Jesus said:
The final part of this statement makes matters even plainer. Jesus said:
In the Gospel according to Luke, who was close to Paul, it is written:
Jesus condemned the scribes and Pharisees, not for following the details of the Law but for concentrating on only part of it. He said, according to the Gospel of Matthew:
He also taught that his message was not for the pagans. In his instructions to his disciples Jesus told them not to go into gentile territory and not to enter any Samaritan town but to '...go instead to the lost sheep of the House of Israel' (Mat 9:6-7). Again in the Gospel according to Matthew it is recorded that a Canaanite (non-Jewish) woman asked Jesus to assist her daughter. Jesus said "I was sent only to the lost sheep of the House of Israel.' She kept on begging him for help so he said 'It is not fair to take the children's food and throw it to the house-dogs.' She persisted and Jesus gave in and helped her. (Mat 15:23-28)
Jesus also warned that not all who claimed to be his followers would be recognised as such, not even those who claimed to prophesy or work miracles. He is reported to have said:
Paul had great confidence in the truth of his personal revelation. He seemed unaware of the teachings of the Gospel on the importance of the Law. It is of course possible that Paul did not know what Jesus had actually preached as he had not heard him and makes no reference to his teachings in his letters.
Paul writes:
The teachings of Paul created great controversy at the time. There is evidence from Paul's letters and from other sources that they were not well received by the Jerusalem Community or its leaders. They were so different from the teachings of the prophets, including Jesus, that Christian scholars are still writing explanations of his views.
Paul a Controversial Figure
Paul's defensiveness in the letters which can be clearly attributed to him, suggest that he was under constant and sustained attack. He denies that his message comes '...from any delusion or impure motives or trickery' (1 Thes 2:3) and denies that he seeks to flatter human beings (Gal 1:10) or seek honor from them (1 Thes 2:6). His authority to preach is questioned for he comments '...you are asking for a proof that it is Christ who speaks in me' (2 Cor 13:3). He complains that he is not universally accepted as an apostle, writing: 'Even if to others I am not an apostle, to you at any rate, I am, for you are the soul of my apostolate in the Lord' (1 Cor 9:2). He is also most sensitive to the charge that he lives off the church members and wants to emphasise how hard he and his companions work and how they suffer (1 Thes 2:9; 2 Thes 3:7, 1 Cor 4:12-13). That he was at some stage referred to as the 'enemy' is intimated in his Letter to the Galatians in which he asks 'have I turned into your enemy simply by being truthful with you? (4:16).
The strength of his attacks upon his opponents suggest a fierce ideological struggle between the Pauline 'saved through the blood sacrifice of Jesus' school and the Jerusalem Community, advocating adherence to the Law and the Gospel of Jesus. He attacks the pro-Law advocates who have apparently had great impact upon the Galatians as 'troublemakers who are seeking to pervert the Gospel of Christ' (Gal 1:7) and goes on in the same chapter to put such people 'under God's curse'. He attacks them again as 'false brothers who had secretly insinuated themselves to spy on the freedom that we have in Christ Jesus, intending to reduce us to slavery' (Gal 2:4). Although it had been instituted by God, Paul claimed that return to observance of the Law would mean that the Galatians would again 'be fastened to the yoke of slavery' (5:1). He warns his followers against those who wish to obey the Law and the Gospel, describing them as 'self-mutilators' (Phil 3:2). He accuses Cephas and Barnabas of insincerity in his account of what occurred in Antioch after some people came from James in Jerusalem (Gal 2:13). This attack upon the very people whom he elsewhere refers to as 'God's holy people in Jerusalem' (1 Cor 16:1-4; and 'Pillars of the Church' (Gal 2:9) suggests, at the very least, a deep ambivalence in the relationship between them and Paul. He can only mean the Jerusalem leaders when he states that he does not consider himself at all inferior to the 'super-apostles' and writes that 'those super-apostles had no advantage over me' (2 Cor 11:5,12:11). Paul in fact recognised no earthly authority above himself, claiming that he had been appointed an apostle by Jesus, not any human being (Gal 1:1).
This tremendous sense of total correctness led Paul to interpret all opposition to him as devilish. He suggests that those who oppose him include 'counterfeit apostles' and 'dishonest workers' (2 Cor 11:13) and even Satan's servants disguised as 'servants of uprightness' (2 Cor 11:14-15). He wishes that his opponents would 'mutilate themselves' (Gal 5:12). The advocates of the Law were self interested people who just wished to boast about their success (Gal 6:13), wished to stir up disagreements (Rom 16:17) and who preached differently to Paul 'out of malice and rivalry' or 'out of jealousy, not in sincerity' (Phil 1:15-19).
Although certain that he was following the correct path, Paul could not totally ignore the community of those who followed the Gospel of Jesus. The prestige of those who had walked with him and heard his Gospel as he had preached it, the Jerusalem Community and its three leaders, James, Cephas and John, could not be ignored. To have some credibility with the Gentiles and overseas Jews, Paul had to have their support or at least their apparent support. He is much concerned with the collection being taken for 'God's holy people' the Jerusalem Community leaders (1 Cor 16:1-4), a theme continued in both his Letters to the Corinthians. That he felt it necessary to answer the charge that he might embezzle the collection (2 Cor 8:20-21) shows the suspicion with which he had to contend. He must claim the authority of the Jerusalem Community for the validity of his teaching to the Gentiles (Gal 2:1-10) and he writes that 'they asked nothing more than that we should remember to help the poor'. This was some 17 years after his conversion, for as he states, he was in no hurry to confer with any human being as he had been selected in his mother's womb for this work (Gal 1:15-17). Even so, he was fearful that he and his gift might not be accepted by the Jerusalem leaders, writing: 'I pray that the aid I am carrying to Jerusalem will be acceptable to God's holy people' (Rom 15:31).
But still there might be another barb for these 'super-apostles' for Paul throws in the line 'One person may have faith enough to eat any kind of food; another less strong, will eat only vegetables' (Rom 14:2). James the Righteous, leader of the Jerusalem Community was a vegetarian and supporter of the Law and the Gospel.
James the Righteous and the Jerusalem Community.
James, the brother of Jesus (Mat 13:55-57), was the leader of the Jerusalem Community and was described by Eusebius as the first Bishop of Jerusalem. James the Righteous or 'upright' was said to have been ' holy from his birth'. 'He drank no wine or intoxicating liquor and ate no animal food, no razor came near his head' (Eusebius p.59). A wearer of priestly linen, he was permitted to enter the Sanctuary of the Temple alone. He was so often on his knees beseeching forgiveness for the people that his knees grew hard like a camel's. These were all characteristics of the nazirites, those consecrated to Yahweh, the most firm of all adherents of the Law, (Num 6:1-5). He taught the Gospel so well that even some of the ruling class came to believe that Jesus was the Messiah. 'Because of his unsurpassable righteousness he was called the Righteous and Oblias - in our own language 'Bulwark of the People and Righteousness'- fulfilling the declarations of the prophets regarding him.' (Eusebius p.59)
Eusebius tells the story of James' martyrdom. The scribes and Pharisees, afraid of his effectiveness, asked him to tell the people gathered for the Passover that Jesus was not the Messiah. He went up on the parapet of the sanctuary to address the crowd. Instead of denying that Christ was the Messiah, he won many to the Gospel. The Pharisees threw him off the parapet and he was stoned then beaten to death with a fuller's club (Eusebius p.58-61). However according to Eisenman there is evidence that this was not quite correct. The Pseudoclementines tell that he broke his legs in a riot at the Temple, instigated by 'an Enemy'. He was stoned outside the city at a later date. Hegesippus may have confused the two incidents.
The strict adherence to the Law of this Jerusalem Community is reflected in the name they were given. The early followers of Christ were called 'Nozrei ha-Brit' or 'Nozrei brito' - keepers of His Covenant (Eisenman p.36, 99). The name of Nozrei is Hebrew terminology for Christians. In Arabic it is Nazrani. It has nothing to do with the town of Nazareth, which may not even have existed at the time of Jesus. Later developments have obscured this attitude of the early followers of Christ towards the Law but indications have survived. For example, the first martyr Stephen, condemned the Jewish leaders for failing to uphold the Law and the Prophets and for betraying the 'Upright One' (Acts 7:51-53).
The successor to James the Righteous as leader of the Jerusalem Community according to Eusebius, was Symeon, who was known as the cousin of Jesus. This was because his father Clopas was the brother of Joseph, the husband of Mary. He was martyred under the Roman Emperor Trajan for being a follower of Jesus and for being a descendant of David . His successor was Justus, a follower of Jesus and the Law. Grandsons of Jude, another brother of Jesus, lived on until this time, although they had nearly been executed by the Emperor Domitian for being descendants of David, for his descendants were long considered a potential threat to Roman rule in Palestine. (Eusebius p.95-96).
This church was called by the Greek Christians the "Church of the Circumcision", for all the leaders of the followers of Jesus in Jerusalem until 135 C.E. were Hebrews and followers of the Law (Eusebius p.107). The line ended when the Roman Emperor Hadrian expelled all Jews from Jerusalem, levelled the City and established Aelia Capitolum. The Jews had risen up in full scale revolt against Roman rule but were defeated. The city was subsequently inhabitated by Gentiles and the leadership of the church there passed to those who followed the tradition of Paul.
The Great Controversy.
Robert Eisenman, whose work on the Dead Sea Scrolls is only now becoming well known, deals in some depth with the major split amongst the Jews at the time of Paul's epistles and James' martyrdom. In his" James the Just in the Habakkuk Pesher" 1986 and "Maccabees, Zadokites, Christians and Qumran: A New Hypothesis of Qumran Origins" 1983, he argues that during the first century of the Common Era, the time of the Herodians, the strict followers of the Law were at odds with official Temple Judaism. Those who claimed to be servants of God and adherents of the Law, obedient to the New Covenant, stood up against 'seekers after smooth things' those who were prepared to accept foreign kingship, foreign appointments of high priests, foreigners and foreign gifts in the Temple, marriage with nieces, divorce etc. All of these offences involved Herodians or those closely associated with them.
Pharisees were the 'seekers after smooth things' for they sought accommodation with foreigners (Herodians and Romans). Sadducees were divided into two groups - those who followed Boethus, the imported Herodian priest, who also 'sought after smooth things' and those who strictly followed the Law. The Sadducees who took part in the persecution of the followers of the Gospel of Jesus were those of the official party.
The official Dead Sea Scroll scholars, who have had control of the documents for over thirty years, date them, on highly controversial evidence, safely out of the Christian era. This scholarly orthodoxy has been challenged by Eisenman who has evidence that they were contemporary with what is now known as 'the early church'. What is most compelling is his argument that it is events in the early church which can alone account for the issues and ideas dealt with in many of the scrolls. Eisenman argues that the teachings of the Righteous Teacher in the Commentary on Habakkuk can be linked to those of James the Just in the early Jerusalem Community.
Enemies of The Way.
In the Commentary on Habakkuk there are two antagonists of the Teacher of Righteousness. One antagonist was the Wicked Priest and the other, the Liar.
Eisenman writes:
The depth of this division between those who advocated close adherence to the Law and those who accepted the status quo comes out in several documents. The Herodian royal family was a particular target for attack and association with it was evidence of departure from God's religion.
Eisenman writes :
Priests like Ananus took their appointment from the Herodians. It is to members of this foreign royal family that the 'three nets of belial' refer. That Herodians were even allowed into the Temple was part of the 'pollution' charge, the theme at the centre of internecine squabbling from 40s CE to 60s CE, eventually triggering the uprising against Rome and the destruction of the Temple.
Justification by Faith and the City of Blood.
The question of 'justification through faith' is a major theme of the Commentary on Habakkuk. Paul taught that the blood of Jesus who died on the cross removed the necessity to obey the written Law. It was a sacrifice to God the Father, which the follower of Paul who wrote the Letter to the Hebrews claimed '..has achieved the eternal perfection of all whom he is sanctifying' (Heb 10:14).
The Letter to the Hebrews, designed to carry Pauline ideas to the Jews, contains a particularly clear image of the new doctrine, :
There is an opposing view in the Letter of James in the New Testament. James writes "Empty man (fool)! Would you not like to know that faith without deeds is useless?" (2:20). This has been taken by some scholars to be a direct reply to Paul's preaching on the subject.
There is a similar counter to the Pauline notion of justification through faith in the Commentary on Habakkuk. It might even be the reason it was written in the first place. Eisenman writes:
The 'Commentary on Habakkuk' reads:
Thus the Commentary restricts justification by faith to the Children of Israel and amongst them, to those who observe the Law, the 'Doers of the Torah'. That they will be delivered because of 'their faith in the Teacher of Righteousness' distinguishes them from the rest of the House of Judah, suggesting a new dimension to the Law, perhaps a new revelation. James takes a view entirely consistent with the Commentary. This is quite distinct from the way Paul tries to use this quotation from scripture. The significance of his position becomes more intelligible when we consider the religio-political situation under the Herodians.
Apart from this attack upon the Pauline theology of 'justification through faith' in the Commentary on Habakkuk, there is also an attack upon the whole notion of salvation through blood. The scriptural text is followed by a denunciation of the city of vanity built with blood.
Given the antagonism expressed in his letters towards other preachers who did not accept his freshly revealed gospel, Paul could well be the target of this denunciation. Claiming that those who preached the Law and Gospel were 'servants of Satan', 'counterfeit apostles' and referring to those who had been close to Jesus as 'super-apostles' with 'no advantage over me', put Paul into the category of one of those 'who vilified and outraged the elect of God'. Certainly James is dealing with vilification by someone specific when he writes in his letter;
Even more point is given to James' criticism of those who slander their brothers. This is why the letter has often been interpreted as an attack upon Paul.
The Commentary on Nahum, like the Commentary on Habakkuk, also contains an attack upon the 'city of blood' which the deceitful ones have constructed.
It mentions amongst the deceitful ones, 'the stranger' who joins the 'kings, princes and priests' who lead Ephraim astray with 'their false teaching, their lying tongue, and deceitful lips'. This reads like a denunciation of the whole establishment of heathens and 'seekers after smooth things' who have been joined by someone new, 'the stranger' perhaps from Tarsus.
'The tongue' is a frequently used image in the scrolls, associated with 'the Liar'. 'The Liar' is also accused of removing the 'boundary markers' of the Law and leading the house or city of Ephraim into the wilderness so that they lose their way. Ephraim - those who are deceived by the Liar and those with him, and Judah - those who steadfastly follow the Law and reject the 'smooth things', are often juxtaposed in the scrolls.
Paul's Mission Protected by Rome
In the Acts of the Apostles, Paul's mission is portrayed as though it was acceptable to the Jerusalem Community, but there are many suggestions that the case was otherwise. In chapter 21 from verse 17 there is an account of a demand from James and the elders, that Paul should show that those who had said he told people to disobey Moses were in error by undertaking public penance in the Temple, according to the Law. This required a seven day ritual of purification. However before the time was over he was recognised and denounced as '..the man who preaches to everyone everywhere against our people, against the Law and against this place' (Acts 21:27). It is possible that James may have forced Paul into this situation, knowing that he could not refuse to undertake the ritual as this would have put him in open defiance of the Law, but by agreeing to the ritual he made himself, more than ever, the 'Liar ' attacked in the Commentary on Habakkuk (Baigent and Leigh p.218-219).
The whole city apparently erupted into riot. Paul was dragged from the Temple and the doors closed behind him. The Roman tribune heard what was going on and led his soldiers to the rescue. As the tribune actually led his troops, it is likely that the whole cohort, 600 men, was involved. Paul was carried by soldiers into the fortress out of the reach of the crowd which wanted to kill him. According to Acts, only when he was inside and was about to be put under interrogation did he reveal his status as a Roman citizen to the tribune. Freed the next day, he went to the Sanhedrin, where he created dissension between the Sadducees and the Pharisees by claiming to be 'a Pharisee and the son of a Pharisee' (Acts 23:6). The dispute became so emotional that once again the tribune rescued Paul and put him in the fortress.
Forty men, obviously those 'zealous for the Law', decide to kill Paul. "But the son of Paul's sister heard of the ambush they were laying and made his way into the fortress and told Paul, who called one of the centurions and said 'Take this young man to the tribune." (Acts 23:16-18). The tribune, concerned for Paul's welfare, called out 200 soldiers with 70 cavalry and 200 auxiliaries, provided a horse for Paul and quietly got him escorted out of the City 'in the third hour of the night'. He was safely delivered to Felix the Roman governor in Caesarea. Here he was lodged in Herod's praetorium, the palace that was the official residence of the Roman procurator.
When the high priest Ananias and some elders came before Felix to put their case, Paul told Felix that he accepted the Law. '...I worship the God of my ancestors, retaining my belief in all points of the Law and in what is written in the prophets...' (24:14). Paul remained there under house arrest for two years, having frequent discussions with Felix until the governor was replaced in about 60 CE. The new governor Festus visited Jerusalem early in his term of office and the case of Paul was again raised. Called before his tribunal, Paul again argued that he had committed no offence against either Jewish law, the Temple or Caesar. He appealed to Caesar when Festus asked if he was prepared to answer those charges before him in Jerusalem, for he understood that he might not be able to escape again.
King Agrippa II and his sister Bernice, with whom he was widely believed to be living in an incestuous relationship, visited Caesarea not long after this where they met Paul. The strength of the links between these Herodians and the Romans is indicated by the fact that Bernice later on became the mistress of Titus, second in command to Vespasian at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem and later Emperor of Rome. After the fall of the city in 70 CE, and the capture of thousands of its inhabitants, Titus visited Caesarea on the coast and then Caesarea Philippi '...where he stayed a long time exhibiting shows of every kind. Many of the prisoners perished here, some thrown to wild beasts, others forced to meet each other in full-scale battles.' Another 2,500 were similarly dealt with, some being burnt alive, to celebrate his brother's birthday in Caesarea a few months later (Josephus p.376-377).
Unlike John the Baptist, who died for denouncing Herod the tetrarch for marrying his niece, (Mat 14:3-5) Paul speaks to Agrippa as to a fellow believer. Agrippa, according to the author of Acts, is so moved by Paul's eloquence that he declares 'A little more, and your arguments would make a Christian of me.' (26:28) 'And Agrippa remarked to Festus, 'the man could have been set free if he had not appealed to Caesar.' A rather different attitude from that of Herod the tetrarch to John the Baptist or of Pharaoh to Moses. The ideology of Paul and his supporters is revealed by such writing. They have thrown off what the followers of the Law regarded as fundamental, advocacy of the truth, especially before tyrants. They were indeed shown to be 'seekers after smooth things'.
When Festus died unexpectedly in 62 CE, the position of Roman Governor was temporarily unfilled. Agrippa took the opportunity to have James the Righteous murdered. While he may have been sympathetic towards Paul, he showed no such feelings for the leader of the Jerusalem Community, whom even Paul recognised as one of the 'Pillars of the Church'. This provides further substantiation for the view that James represented the party which threatened the power of the tyrants, while Paul represented something else.
Acts continues the story of Paul's voyage to Rome. When forced aground on Malta the soldiers planned to kill all the prisoners but the Roman military again saved him. '...the centurion was determined to bring Paul safely through and would not let them carry out their plan' (27:43). Arriving eventually in Rome 'Paul was allowed to stay in lodgings of his own with the soldier who guarded him' (28:16). At his meeting with the leading Jews of Rome just after his arrival, Paul again denied doing anything contrary to 'the customs of our ancestors' which was a demonstrable untruth. Acts ends with Paul in his own rented lodging in Rome, preaching 'without any hindrance from anyone'.
That Paul may have been used to dealing with the Herodians is indicated by some of the comments in his letters. In Romans 16:10-11 he writes 'Greetings to all the household of Aristobulus. Greetings to my kinsman, Herodion..' Aristobulus was one of the sons of Agrippa II and 'Herodion' is obviously a member of the monstrous family. Luke mentions as amongst the prophets and teachers in the church of Antioch 'Manaen, who had been brought up with Herod the tetrarch' (Acts 13:1).
Eisenman sees some commonality between Herodian dynastic ambitions and Paul's views. Paul's Roman citizenship was due to his birth in Tarsus in Cilicia.
Such opinions are not acceptable to the modern Pauline Christian Church. Eisenman acknowledges this but does not draw back from his conclusions.
Blessed the Upright...Woe to the Wicked.
James the Righteous was martyred for his uncompromising adherence to the Law and the Gospel of Jesus. His martyrdom, according to Eisenman, was the work of Ananus the 'Wicked Priest' of the Qumran Scrolls, appointed by Agrippa II. He was used by the king to murder James in 62 CE during the interregnum created by the sudden death of Festus. He too, was slaughtered. Josephus, the Jewish traitor wrote of the death of Ananus:
Eisenman suggests that Agrippa may have blamed James for the embarrassment of the Temple Wall affair. Those 'zealous for the Law' had insisted on the building up of the wall to prevent Agrippa witnessing sacrifices in the Temple, while lolling at his banquets in his palace across the way. The antagonism of the lower priesthood towards the Herodians and their appointments and the leading role taken by James in opposition to them, may have been related to the mention in Acts that 'a large group of priests made their submission to the faith' (6:7) and the mention of the conversion of 'thousands of Jews all zealous for the Law' (21:21).
Hegesippus, the Jewish follower of the Gospel upon whom Eusebius relies, writing about a century after the events, quotes Isaiah 3 as referring to the destruction of Jerusalem and the martyrdom of James. This style of exegesis of Scripture is in accord with that of Qumran. It suggests an evil fate for 'the wicked'. The actual text referring to the martyrdom is:
To Hegesippus there was no doubt that the martyrdom of James 'the upright' by 'the wicked' was the immediate precursor to the siege of Jerusalem by Vespasian. Eusebius mentions that the followers of the Gospel were saved from the Fall of Jerusalem in 70 CE. '... by means of an oracle given by revelation to acceptable persons there, were ordered to leave the City before the war began and settle in a town in Peraea called Pella.' (Eusebius p.68) He also quotes a comment by Josephus, which has since disappeared from all copies of his work, having been changed to the above reference to Ananus, that:
The Commentary on Habakkuk refers to the fate of the Wicked Priest, suggesting that the early church commentaries on these events showed considerable linkage with those dealt with in the Qumran Scrolls:
Eisenman translated this last line as 'they inflicted ignominious pollutions and they took vengeance upon the flesh of his corpse'. Instead of Vermes translation, Eisenman argues that 'ignominious pollutions' suggests the shame and divine disapproval associated with such mistreatment of the 'flesh of his corpse' (Eisenman p.49-51).
Another reference to this event is alluded to in the Commentary on Habakkuk 2:17. In Hebrew 'the poor' are 'ebionim' and it says that the Wicked Priest shall be paid the reward he tendered to 'the Poor' (Vermes p.289). 'The Poor' here is a reference to James and his companions who were martyred, according to Eisenman's interpretation of the scroll, and is an indication of what lies in store for Ananus, the murderer who will himself be murdered.
The Poor
There is some evidence from histories of the early church, after the defeat of the Jews by Rome, that the Jerusalem Community continued to observe the religion taught by Jesus for many years. Histories of the Christian Church deal with 'the Poor', which appears to have been the term used for those who followed the Gospel. It carried the sense, not of deprivation of basic necessities, but of complete dependence upon God (Fox p 124). This is similar in concept to the meaning of 'Muslim', one who surrenders to God. The meaning of the 'good news proclaimed to the poor' (Luke 7:22) and Paul's collection for the 'poor saints which are in Jerusalem' (Rom 15:26) take on a different light with this understanding.
Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, 'How blessed are the poor in spirit: the kingdom of heaven is theirs' (Mat 5:3) or 'How blessed are you who are poor: the kingdom of God is yours' (Luke 6:20) suggests a link between 'the Poor' and the followers of the Gospel from an early stage. It is of interest that the Qumran Commentary on the Psalms carries a similar idea to that of this famous sermon, offering blessings to 'the Poor'. The commentary deals mainly with Psalm 37 which is concerned with the destiny of the just and the wicked:
This identification of 'the Poor' with the early followers of the Gospel of Jesus is supported by evidence from 250 years after the fall of Jerusalem to Titus. Eusebius, who wrote at the time of the Emperor Constantine, was one of those who attended the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE. In his history of the church, he made this comment about what was by then regarded as an heretical sect, 'the Poor' or, in Hebrew, the 'Ebionim' or 'Ebionites':
The New Jerusalem Bible identifies the Ebionites as Judeo-Christians who fled the city before the collapse of Jerusalem in 136 CE and dispersed in Transjordan and Syria (p.2074). There are many references to these remnants of the Jerusalem Community over the years. In "The Roots of Christianity", Walsh writes of these Gospel followers:
Consequences of Domination by Pauline Christians.
Christianity became the quietistic religion advocated by Paul, accepting the authority of the Roman Emperor and joining in the general anti-Jewish attitudes of the Empire following the Jewish Revolts of 66 CE and 135 CE. The anti-Jewish tone of much of the New Testament can be traced to this disassociation of the Pauline Christians from Judaism and the desire to appease the Roman authorities as to the loyalty of the Christians to the State. The writing up of the role of the Roman authorities in protecting Paul from the Jews in the Acts of the Apostles may have been rooted in this same desire
This personal religion in time became the State Church of Constantine, in which Jesus became intertwined with Sol Invictus, the Sun god. The East, the source of the Rising Sun, became the direction towards which Christians prayed and the rays of the sun around the head of the elect denoted holiness in religious art. Far from challenging the pretensions to sovereignty of the Emperor, this religion supported them, for the state became the mighty protector of Pauline orthodoxy. The Emperor became God's representative on earth. Heresy, a deviation from official doctrine, became a criminal offence and opposition to the state became a sin against the church.
Ian Wilson writes in "Jesus: the Evidence"
We need little imagination to work out what Moses, Jesus or James the Righteous would have thought about this new establishment cult.
The message of Jesus and the Jerusalem Community which followed him, was in accordance with what the pro-Law and anti-Herodian Doers of the Torah, the believers of Qumran, practised. John the Baptist went before him and had been executed for denouncing Herodian fornication. James the Righteous was to suffer the same fate after him, for his pronouncements on the Law and the Gospel.
Recurring 'Heresies'
The Pauline variety of the gospel was not the unchallenged victor. The ultimate fate of the Ebionites is unknown but over the centuries there were many revivals of the original message, each revival becoming a paler imitation of its predecessor.
Many of the 'heresies' Eusebius denounces were arguments that Jesus was a human prophet with a message from God. Artemon's 'heresy', that Jesus was a human being, was revived in Eusebius' day by the Bishop of Antioch, Paul of Samosata. Eusebius complains that these 'false teachers' always claimed that the notion that Christ was only a human was an old established belief, whereas, he maintains, it was but a recent invention. Artemon's followers argued that the true belief, that Jesus was but a man, was accepted by the Roman church until Victor, the thirteenth bishop after Peter (Eusebius p.175-176).
The teachings of Paul of Samosata, appointed bishop in 264 CE, disgusted Eusebius. He taught that Jesus was a man, he denied that he had come down from heaven, i.e. he denied the doctrine of incarnation, and he refused to allow hymns to Christ to be sung in the churches because they were innovations. Much of Eusebius' account of this deviation from the Pauline church's "truth" is taken up with describing the scandalous nature of Paul of Samosata's personal life (p.244-249). This appears to have been as popular a way of slandering political and theological opponents at that time as it is today.
Although Paul of Samosata was denounced by the synods of Antioch in 264 and 268, he was not dealt with until his opponents called upon the pagan emperor to remove him from his diocese. The Paulicians continued teaching for hundreds of years. As late as the ninth century they were sufficiently strong for the Empress Theodora to send an army to Armenia to destroy them. Despite violent suppression, the teaching remained in the culture and consciousness of the people. Those whose ancestors had been massacred by the emperors, did not forget. Professor Faruqi remarks that a small number called themselves Paulicians after they had accepted Islam. They were known as strict unitarians and as iconoclasts aruqi p.223).
Unitarians, Socinians, and Arians all rejected to varying degrees the notion of the 'sonship' of Jesus and the Pauline teachings of salvation through faith in the crucified Jesus. They all rejected the trinity and were all subjected to ferocious persecution throughout the history of Christendom. The Companions of Muhammad found, when they were spreading the message of the Quran, that wherever there were Arians or Unitarians in large numbers, they quickly won adherents to the new revelation. There were however, Unitarians in countries and cultures separated from the Message of the Quran. Michael Servetus, who was burnt alive in Geneva by Calvin in 1553 for his faith in One God, is one of those who rejected the divinity of Jesus and the doctrine of the trinity, as was Joseph Priestley, the discoverer of oxygen, who was forced to flee England for his Unitarian faith when his home was destroyed by a 'church and king' mob in the 1790s.
Spain had enjoyed centuries of Arianism under the Visigoths until, after years of bloody struggle, the Roman Catholics took control. Like Islam, Arianism rejected duality in the nature of Christ, rejected the crucifixion and resurrection and its view of a divine nature in Christ might be interpreted as God's spirit or word breathed into him. In 710 CE a group of Muslim missionaries went to Spain from North Africa. They were murdered by the Spanish Catholic authorities which were, at that time, engaged in a theological and physical war with the remnants of Arianism. In accordance with older Roman notions of the unity of religion and culture, different religious beliefs were considered politically dangerous by the Roman Catholic authorities. It was not a healthy climate into which to try to introduce Islam.
The murder of the Muslims was a major blunder. The Catholics did not allow for the preparedness of the converted North African Muslims, many of whom had been Christians before, to defend their missionaries, and they did not understand the attitudes of the Spanish masses to their Catholic Church. In 711 a Muslim expedition to support the right of Muslim missionaries to preach without hindrance was launched. It found a lot of support amongst the Spanish people and clergy. Large numbers of priests accepted Islam, setting an example to their congregations, which converted in hundreds of thousands. It was an example unprecedented in history. The prestige of Islam and of the Muslims rose to levels which could only be compared to the adulation given to western culture amongst Third World peoples today. Alvar, a monk of Cordoba in 854 complained:
Domination by the Pauline Church suppressed the truth but could not wipe it out. The survival of the old ideas in the face of official terrorism for so long gives courage to those who believe that truth may become temporarily weakened, but it cannot be eliminated altogether.
Conclusion.
Moses, Jesus and Muhammad (p) carried the same message of submission to God. Paul's teachings differ from them on each major principle.
1. The three prophets taught the Oneness of God, the Creator of the universe and acceptance of the absolute sovereignty of God.
This was the very foundation of the Ten Commandments delivered to Moses, it was the essence of the Law as described by Jesus (Mat 22:35) and is the foundation of the faith based upon the revelation to Muhammad. To become a Muslim, the first thing one must declare is that there is no object worthy of worship other than God.
Paul laid great emphasis upon Jesus as a son of God, leading in time to the development of the trinitarian belief. Although he cannot be described as a trinitarian himself, his error was that his teachings were compatible with this idea. He also attributed sovereignty to the State, which was at that time, the pagan Roman State.
2. The three prophets taught that obedience to God was the path to salvation.
The Law delivered by Moses was the basis of obedience for the Children of Israel. Jesus taught that adherence to this Law led to salvation. The Quran was revealed as a guide to those who want to submit to God and to do His Will. Islam or surrender to God, is the path to happiness and salvation.
Paul placed his personal 'revelation' above the Gospel of Jesus and the Law of Moses. He developed the notion of salvation through faith alone, leading to denunciation of the Law.
3. The three prophets stood up to the ruling authorities of their time, demanding that those authorities should recognise the sovereignty of God.
Moses warned Pharaoh of the consequences of his refusal to listen to the Word of God and Pharaoh lived to know the truth of what he said. Jesus berated the scribes and Pharisees for their hypocrisy, obeying the outward details of the Law but ignoring justice, mercy and good faith. (Mat 23:23) Muhammad called on the ruling pagans of Mecca, the Quraysh, to abandon the partners they attributed to God and to worship Him alone. He condemned their oppression of pilgrims and their racial pride.
Paul taught obedience to the pagans and to the Herodians at a time when their tyranny was reaching the stage of terrible excess. His notion of religion was more of an individual belief, closer to that of the cults of the time than to the religion of God.
4. The three prophets were all forced to become refugees at some stage of their lives because of the threat they represented to those in power.
Moses led his people into Sinai from Pharaoh, Jesus was taken into hiding from King Herod and Muhammad was forced to leave Mecca. In each case their continued presence was considered a real danger to the status quo and in each case the life of the particular prophet was at stake. In each case it was their status as servants of God which caused them to flee.
Paul was forced to flee several times. He was under such a cloud with the Jerusalem Community that when he got to Jerusalem some three years after his conversion, he was told by the elders to return to Tarsus, the place of his birth. (Acts 9:30) This was tantamount to exile when the whole Gospel was aimed at the Children of Israel. The opposition he met may have been due to his attitude to the Law or to the fact that he had been a major persecutor of the followers of Jesus for the Temple establishment earlier on. His final exit from Jerusalem to Caesarea under Roman escort was because the pro-Torah party wanted to kill him for teaching opposition to the Law. In each case his exile was related to opposition from advocates of the Gospel or the Law.
5. The three of them taught respect for the rights of the weak as part of submission to God.
The Law and the Prophets are forthright on the fate of those who oppress the poor and this message was re-iterated by Jesus. The fundamental position of all the opponents of the Romans and Herodians in Jerusalem at the time of the destruction of the Temple was 'hesed' or piety towards God and 'zedek' or righteousness towards men (Eisenman p.vii). This is spelt out in the summary by Jesus of the essence of the Law in which it is stated that believers must love God and love their neighbours as themselves.(Mat 22:34-40). In the Quran the rights of neighbours are so strong that the Prophet Muhammad once remarked that he thought there might be a revelation giving them rights of inheritance. Similarly the rights of orphans, servants and the oppressed are given both legal and moral standing in Islam and neglect of the rights of others renders other acts of worship invalid.
Paul's writings are intensely polemical, concerned rather with defending the gospel he was preaching, warning against teachers he disagreed with and arguing against observance of the Law. The social teachings of the Gospel of Jesus are not mentioned. Salvation through faith which is undemanding of works does not recognise the place of 'zedek' in religion.
6. Those who claimed to follow the prophets tried to change their teachings into a religious form acceptable to the status quo, a personal faith which quietly accepted persecution and oppression.
By the time the Herodian family ruled Palestine, Judaism was demonstrating signs of corruption. The chair of Moses had been taken over by corrupt successors. The official priesthood, the Pharisees and sections of the Saddducees, 'seekers after smooth things', accepted the immorality of their rulers, pagan donations to the Temple and pagan control of Jewish political life. Jesus and the Jerusalem Community which followed him, sought to re-establish the primacy of the Word of God in this community. The Gentile Christians who replaced the original followers of the Gospel after the total destruction of Jerusalem by Hadrian in 136 CE had a different view of the meaning of the life and message of Jesus, based largely on the teachings of Paul. A central tenet of this teaching was that the ruling authorities should be accepted as appointed by God (Romans 13:1-4). Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire and a bulwark of its authority.
Similarly in the Muslim world, particularly since the advent of modern imperialism and Third World nationalism, secular and neo-colonial authorities have tried to mould Islam into something approximating State Christianity, a bulwark of oppressive authority. Some Muslim majority countries have even established departments of religious affairs with a clerical class paid by the State to carry out "official Islam" which is suitably "non-political".
However this is not the total picture. The message of God is protected by Him and will never be obliterated. While Judaism has largely degenerated into a tribal cult and has lost sight of its universal message and Christianity has, for the most part become the religion established by Paul, there are Jews and Christians still seeking the truth. There are Muslims weighed down under false State propaganda and opportunist teaching, but they have the source of truth, the Holy Quran, available to them. Seekers after truth will find the essence of God's revelation over the centuries contained within it. While the original books of the Torah and the Psalms have been altered from time to time and many records of the teachings of Jesus have been altered or destroyed, we have God's promise that the Quran will be protected until the end of the world. This means that the message of the sovereignty of God will never disappear and explains why the modern Pharaohs with their Herodians and Pauls are working so hard to distort Islamic education and control Muslim scholars and leaders.
Islam is not a religious sect. It calls only for our submission to the One God and places great emphasis upon the Quran, not for any sectarian purpose but because it is a record of God's final revelation to humanity. It is worth serious investigation.
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Josephus. The Jewish War. trans. G.A. Williamson. Revised Edition. Penguin Classics. London 1981.
Khan, Muhammad Muhsin. The Translation of the Meanings of Sahih Al Bukhari. Islamic University, Al Medina Al Munauwara. 2nd revised edition. Hilal Yayinlari, Ankara. 1976.
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Address to Muslim Students Association, Melbourne University, September 1992
Bilal Cleland.
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