T
Tolle_Lege
Guest
A case can be made for authentic authorship of St. Paul for every letter in the New Testament ascribed to him. Obviously, by even his own admission in some letters, a scribe or companion wrote the letter dictated by him. But to think that someone “wrote in Paul’s name” 30-40 years after his death and wasn’t trying to deceive anyone amounts to having fraudulent letters in Sacred Scripture. Trying to sugarcoat or justify such a thing as, “well, they were Paul’s thoughts” or “from the Pauline school” or some other made-up contemporary “scholarship” doesn’t solve the problem.
Many modern scholars smugly state, as if it were an open-and-shut case, that we have only 7 actual letters from St. Paul. And these ideas permeate the corpus of popular Biblical scholarship as if they were the only opinions that existed, and that it is with 100% certainty that they are correct. Well, they are not correct.
Read John A.T. Robinson (“Redating the New Testament”), Ben Witherington III, and other contemporary Protestant scholars (Bock, Evans, Keener, Blomberg, Wallace), as well as Catholics (Hahn, Mitch, Pitre) who give very balanced treatment to both opinions, but advocate for authentic Pauline authorship. Not to mention the centuries upon centuries of Saints and others who upheld the authenticity of his letters.
So, St. Paul wrote Romans. As well as Ephesians, Colossians, both letters to the Thessalonians and St. Timothy, to St. Titus, etc. St. Peter is the author of both his letters (see M. Kruger for 2 Peter). Same with the epistles of Sts. James and John.
Skeptical scholarship which explicitly doubts or denies the stated author of books listed in Sacred Scripture can be a great scandal to the Church, and since the Bible is the Word of God, is tantamount to doubting God Himself.
Many modern scholars smugly state, as if it were an open-and-shut case, that we have only 7 actual letters from St. Paul. And these ideas permeate the corpus of popular Biblical scholarship as if they were the only opinions that existed, and that it is with 100% certainty that they are correct. Well, they are not correct.
Read John A.T. Robinson (“Redating the New Testament”), Ben Witherington III, and other contemporary Protestant scholars (Bock, Evans, Keener, Blomberg, Wallace), as well as Catholics (Hahn, Mitch, Pitre) who give very balanced treatment to both opinions, but advocate for authentic Pauline authorship. Not to mention the centuries upon centuries of Saints and others who upheld the authenticity of his letters.
So, St. Paul wrote Romans. As well as Ephesians, Colossians, both letters to the Thessalonians and St. Timothy, to St. Titus, etc. St. Peter is the author of both his letters (see M. Kruger for 2 Peter). Same with the epistles of Sts. James and John.
Skeptical scholarship which explicitly doubts or denies the stated author of books listed in Sacred Scripture can be a great scandal to the Church, and since the Bible is the Word of God, is tantamount to doubting God Himself.