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There Was No Pre-Pauline Oral Tradition
By Eli Kittim š
When asked why Paul didnāt give us more details about Jesusā existence, some scholars often use a common strawman argument that everyone already knew the story and so Paul didnāt have to write anything about it. But after thinking about this explanation for some time, I didnāt find it convincing. A key problem besetting the assumed pre-Pauline tradition is that it is a) based entirely on the gospel literature, which came much later, and b) it hasnāt been verified because there were no eyewitnesses and no firsthand accounts. Plus, the stories that weāre all familiar with (from the gospels) were not written until a few decades after Paulās writings. So the life of Jesus was not written before, but after, Paul. Given that Paulās knowledge of the story of Jesus is based entirely on āa revelation,ā and that Paul himself admits that he didnāt receive it from man, nor was he taught it (Gal 1:11-12), itās reasonable to assume that no one else knew the story prior to Paulās writings, at least from a literary standpoint. After all, Paul was the first to write about it!
There are a lot of presuppositions that are implied by the oral Pre-Pauline-tradition hypothesis that most people arenāt aware of. Many people also presuppose that the gospels are historical, even though that has not been verified either. On the contrary, the fact that they were anonymously written, and that there were no eyewitnesses and no firsthand accounts, and that the events in Jesusā life were, for the most part, borrowed from the Old Testament, seems to suggest that they were written in the literary genre known as ātheological fiction.ā
What is more, because the gospel texts are found at the beginning of the New Testament, people often presuppose that the gospels were the first Christian writings, and so they completely misunderstand the New Testament literary chronology. This presupposition leads to many other false assumptions that are very misleading and totally unrelated to the actual chronological development of the New Testament writings.
They have it all backwardsāļø
What is more, because of the hypothetical Q source (for which thereās no evidence), even scholars often talk as if the gospels preceded the epistles, and so given that everyone already knew about the story, Paul didnāt have to mention all the detailsā¦
But wait just a secondā¦ āļø
The full-fledged story we usually refer to actually starts around 70 AD with Mark, and ends at the end of the first century with John. But surprise surprise, Paul is writing much much earlier than that. Paulās letters are the FIRST Christian writings, which are written over two decades earlier (49-50 AD)! Paulās writings are actually the EARLIEST Christian writings. So, presumably, no one knew the story yet, at least from a literary perspective. It was Paulās task to tell the reader all about it.
But Paul failed to mention the pertinent information regarding the details of Jesusā life, even though it is assumed that he was in a position to know this information. If Paul was expected to have all the pertinent information regarding the Jesus-story, and intending to write a complete account of these events, and if the details of the Jesus-story were important enough to deserve to be mentioned, then why didnāt Paul talk about any of them? Astoundingly, Paul didnāt mention any of the legendary elements that we find in the later embellishments of the 70s, 80s, and 90s. In Paulās letters, thereās no nativity, no virgin birth, no shepherds, no star of Bethlehem, no magi, no census, no Elizabeth, no Zechariah, no John the Baptist, no flight to Egypt, no slaughter of the innocents, nothing about
āJesus healing anyone,
casting out a demon, doing any other
miracle, arguing with Pharisees or
other leaders, teaching the multitudes, even
speaking a parable, being baptized, being
transfigured, going to Jerusalem, being
arrested, put on trial, found guilty of
blasphemy, appearing before Pontius Pilate
on charges of calling himself the King of the
Jews, being flogged, etc. etc. etc. Itās a very,
very long list of what he doesnāt tell us
about.ā āSource credit: Bart D. Ehrman
This doesnāt mean that Paul is writing letters to people who already knew about the story.
It means that such a story didnāt exist. It was added later!
Conclusion
How is a supposed Aramaic story suddenly taken over, less than 2 decades after the purported events, by highly articulate Greeks and written about in other countries, such as Greece and Rome? None of the New Testament books were ever written in Palestine by Jews! That doesnāt make any sense and it certainly casts much doubt about the idea of a supposed Aramaic oral tradition.
In fact, most of the New Testament Books were written in Greece: Romans, 1 & 2 Corinthians, Galatians, 1 & 2 Thessalonians, 1 Timothy, Titus, the Book of Revelation, and possibly others as well! To sum up, most of the New Testament Books were composed in Greece. Most of the epistles were penned in Greece and addressed to Greek communities. The New Testament was written exclusively in Greek, outside of Palestine, by āGreekā authors who copied the Greek Septuagint rather than the Hebrew Bible when quoting from the Old Testament. So where is the Aramaic tradition?