Pseudonymity in the Ancient World and How it Influenced II Thessalonians versus I Thessalonians

First, a disclaimer: This article was originally going focus on pseudonymity in the ancient world, while using I Thessalonians and II Thessalonians as examples. However, there are apparent eschatological differences between II Thess and I Thess – and that Paul himself possibly did not write II Thess — this means bridging any connections between pseudonymity…

To Be or Not To Be — Raptured?

Borrowing from Hamlet’s famous line, “To be or not to be?”, reading Paul’s approach to the resurrection of the dead creates another dilemma: To be or not to be – raptured? For instance, take Paul’s first letter to the Thessalonians, covered in Module 5 in this course: In 1 Thess 4:13-18, Paul is preparing the Thessalonians…

An Intro to the “Justification versus ‘Works'” Conversation — Beginning with Paul’s Letter to the Galatians

If the discussion about the “bread of life” discourse is already challenging enough, this next discussion is the equivalent of “hold my beer.” That is, the debate over justification by faith versus justification by works (or sometimes defined as works of the Law). The “works” position is often the most contentious part of the debate, as…

A Brief Intro to the Controversial “Bread of Life” Discourse

One of the most hotly debated topics between Catholic Christians and Protestants is the Bread of Life discourse in John 6:1-71. At the center of this is John 6:51-58, in which Jesus repeatedly emphasizes, both literally and metaphorically, that he is the bread of life. However, the situation gets dicey as Jesus includes this to…

Theology Bits: Linking the Liturgy and the Eucharist to Koinonia

If there is one word that encompasses much of Catholic Christian theology and its two wings of Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture, it is koinonia. Although a seemingly bizarre, broad sounding word at first – and not nearly as common as the English words, Gospel, Confession, Liturgy, and Eucharist, when describing Catholic Mass or Sacraments…

A Brief, Theological Intro to Matthew’s Gospel

Of the four Gospel authors, who appears to be the most concerned with Jewish history and Jesus’ links to the Old Testament / Hebrew Scripture? Who makes a point of including numerous references to the OT prophecies fulfilled by Jesus, a birth narrative that remarkably resembles Moses’ birth, and phenomenal events – signs from the…

Theology Bits: Early Christian Evangelization and its Parallel to Modern Day Challenges

Borrowing from the old adage, “all roads lead to Rome”, it appears that all ancient Mediterranean cities led to Christianity. Even despite Christianity being a minor movement in the first century, the sophisticated (for ancient times), Roman-designed travel routes throughout the Mediterranean and Asia Minor allowed early Christians to mingle with other cultures and gain…

Back to the Future IV: The Exile — through the Eyes of Moses?

Studying Deuteronomy is like watching a time travel movie, or other mind-bending story, where it is hard to tell whether the protagonist is still in the past, or was always in the present, or is in a perpetual loop of appearing in the past, yet still in the present, yet actually in the past, and…