P1340:4, 121:7.6
And so a different people were called upon to carry an advancing theology
to the world, a system of teaching embodying the philosophy of the Greeks,
the law of the Romans, the morality of the Hebrews, and the gospel of personality
sanctity and spiritual liberty formulated by Paul and based on the teachings
of Jesus.
P1340:5, 121:7.7
Paul's cult of Christianity exhibited its morality as a Jewish birthmark.
The Jews viewed history as the providence of God -- Yahweh at work. The Greeks
brought to the new teaching clearer concepts of the eternal life. Paul's doctrines
were influenced in theology and philosophy not only by Jesus' teachings but
also by Plato and Philo. In ethics he was inspired not only by Christ but
also by the Stoics.
P1340:6, 121:7.8
The gospel of Jesus, as it was embodied in Paul's cult of Antioch Christianity,
became blended with the following teachings:
- The philosophic reasoning of the Greek proselytes to Judaism, including
some of their concepts of the eternal life.
- The appealing teachings of the prevailing mystery cults, especially the
Mithraic doctrines of redemption, atonement, and salvation by the sacrifice
made by some god.
- The sturdy morality of the established Jewish religion.
P1341:1, 121:7.9
The Mediterranean Roman Empire, the Parthian kingdom, and the adjacent peoples
of Jesus' time all held crude and primitive ideas regarding the geography
of the world, astronomy, health, and disease; and naturally they were amazed
by the new and startling pronouncements of the carpenter of Nazareth. The
ideas of spirit possession, good and bad, applied not merely to human beings,
but every rock and tree was viewed by many as being spirit possessed. This
was an
enchanted age, and everybody believed in miracles as commonplace occurrences.
