Jebus wrote:
Like in the extreme case of General Butt Naked, who is now a priest who often preaches to family members of those he killed and ate.
I haven't heard of that, that's interesting.
Jebus wrote:I don't know why you assume the early Christians were the smiley, "forgiving" type we see today. They certainly weren't like that during most of Christian history. In any case, I doubt forgiveness is something Saul/Paul would have anticipated. This is an important point as we are discussing the likelihood of the theory you presented.
Saul went out of the way to advertise the fact that he used to persecute Christians; it doesn't seem like he was otherwise particularly well known or notorious for it. It's also not entirely clear what that persecution entailed.
If he didn't anticipate it, it's something he found useful in rhetoric (just like some prominent apologists find it useful to claim to have been atheists -- whether or not they really were). He very well could have made it up, or greatly exaggerated that too.
And, of course, Acts is a historical fabrication, so there may also be later exaggeration on that point by his followers who decided it was useful.
Anyway, as to early Christian attitudes, that the concept worked and was widely repeated is evidence enough of that.
Saul had his detractors, but I haven't read much criticism of him for his past; more that dramatic change as evidence of his divine inspiration.
Jebus wrote:
Whether or not he was deranged or a cold calculating liar does make a difference to me as I believe the theory is far more unlikely in the latter case.
There's no real way to tell the difference between the two for sure, since only Saul knew that, but I would recommend comparing him to modern apologists and religious leaders claiming divine inspiration.
Like this guy:
http://www.christianpost.com/news/austr ... ion-96955/
Is he crazy? Is he lying? A little bit of both? He's clearly not a reincarnation of Jesus.
Keep in mind: Not all liars are necessarily 'cold'; many of them lie and convince themselves they're doing good, giving people hope and faith. Saul was a student of philosophy and theology, and he may have seem himself as fixing Christianity and leading it off a path he disagreed with to help people, even with a little white lie behind it.
Some even believe their own lies after a while. Thanks to cognitive dissonance, the line between lying and crazy isn't always so clear.
There was a martial arts master a while back who was convinced he had magical powers, because his students were convinced by his lie and reacted to and supported to it. The feedback between master and student just escalated, where he would throw magical balls and qi and knock students over, and both became fully convinced that it was real (until he tried it on somebody who didn't drink the Kool-Aid).
It's not necessarily a very different relationship between prophet and follower.
EDIT: This questioner is awesome:
http://en.allexperts.com/q/Christianity ... stians.htm
Christian apologist answering questions on a history site with the bible, and irrelevant historical references that was way off date, and giving people the run around. The questioner makes a good point: There's no evidence for any of it, and the account in Acts doesn't make any sense.