{"id":3839,"date":"2009-08-05T15:32:35","date_gmt":"2009-08-05T20:32:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/?p=3839"},"modified":"2013-05-07T11:02:40","modified_gmt":"2013-05-07T15:02:40","slug":"august-5-2009-the-real-paul","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/2009\/08\/05\/august-5-2009-the-real-paul\/3839\/","title":{"rendered":" The Real Paul"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2009\/08\/trpp3.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-3844\" title=\"trpp3\" src=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2009\/08\/trpp3.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"240\" height=\"299\" \/><\/a><strong>REVIEW ESSAY<br \/>\nThe Real Paul<br \/>\nby Allen Dwight Callahan<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>It has been a big year for the Apostle Paul.<\/p>\n<p>According to the Roman Catholic Church, 2009 <em>is<\/em> his year\u2014or more exactly the liturgical year from June 28, 2008 to June 29, 2009 <em>was<\/em> his year, marking the 2,000th anniversary of his birth.<\/p>\n<p>The party got started in Rome in 2007, when Pope Benedict XVI announced a special jubilee year dedicated to Paul at a service at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls. Beneath the church\u2019s main altar Vatican experts had unearthed what they said was evidence that a roughly cut marble sarcophagus is the tomb of St. Paul, believed to have been martyred nearby.<\/p>\n<p>The sarcophagus, which dates back to at least AD 390, was the subject of an extended four-year excavation completed in 2006. \u201cOur objective,\u201d said Vatican archaeologist Giorgio Filippi, \u201cwas to bring the remains of the tomb back to light for devotional reasons, so that it could be venerated and be visible.\u201d Many pilgrims who came to Rome during the Catholic Church\u2019s 2000 jubilee year had expressed disappointment upon finding St.\u2019s Paul\u2019s tomb inaccessible for veneration.<\/p>\n<p>This June the pope said a scientific test \u201cseems to confirm\u201d that the remains in the sarcophagus belong to Paul. If the fourth-century tomb had contained fourth-century bones\u2014three centuries too late to be Paul\u2019s\u2014it might have dampened the enthusiasm of the faithful. But Benedict\u2019s announcement of a jubilee year for Paul had already created an excellent business opportunity for the fitful industry of Pauline scholarship.<\/p>\n<p>Benedict emphasized in his vespers announcement of the Pauline year that it would have an important ecumenical dimension, explaining that \u201cthe Apostle of the Gentiles, who dedicated himself to the spreading of the good news to all peoples, spent himself for the unity and harmony of all Christians.\u201d In that spirit John Dominic Crossan, an Irish Catholic biblical scholar and former Roman Catholic priest, and Marcus Borg, a Protestant biblical scholar and Episcopal canon theologian, teamed up to coauthor <em>The First Paul<\/em> (Harper Collins, 2009).<\/p>\n<p>Borg, as the Protestant principal of the duo, writes, \u201cAs I look back on my experience of growing up Lutheran, it is clear that I was taught to see Jesus, God, and the Christian gospel through a Pauline lens as mediated by Luther.\u201d Crossan recalls his days as a young priest in 1959 \u201cwhen I first stood in St. Peter\u2019s Square in Rome and looked at the statues of St. Peter \u2026 and St. Paul.\u201d Together Borg and Crossan claim to cut through the hagiographical accretions to get to the original Paul, the first Paul, and say \u201cour common hope is that we can get Paul out of the Reformation world and back into the Roman world.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>For Borg and Crossan there is more than one Paul in the New Testament and no less than three Pauls. The first is \u201cthe radical Paul,\u201d author of the seven genuine letters that go under his name: Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, 1 Thessalonians, Philippians, and Philemon. Then there is \u201cthe conservative Paul\u201d of 2 Thessalonians, Ephesians, and Colossians (\u201cthe disputed letters\u201d) and \u201cthe reactionary Paul\u201d of the Pastoral Epistles.<\/p>\n<p>Some recent commentators do not mark differences between the Paul of the seven undisputed letters, the Paul of Ephesians and Colossians, the Paul of the Pastoral Epistles, and the Paul of Acts, differences explained with characteristic clarity and elegance by Garry Wills in his <em>What Paul Meant<\/em> (Viking, 2006). Yet among some entries to the ample bibliography of the Pauline Year, there is still some slippage. Raymond Collins\u2019s <em>The Power of Images in Paul<\/em> (Liturgical Press, 2008), as its table of contents makes clear, treats the Magnificent Seven as authentic, devoting a chapter to each. The first chapter opens with a quotation from Titus 1:1-3, which Collins describes without further comment as having been written \u201ctoward the end of the first century, CE\u201d by \u201can anonymous author.\u201d But Collins freely refers to Acts to document that Paul was born in Tarsus and was a disciple of Gamaliel and a devotee of the Jerusalem Temple. Stephen Finlan, in <em>The Apostle Paul and the Pauline Tradition <\/em>(Liturgical Press, 2008), makes much of the importance of distinguishing the different sources of Pauline tradition and the theological difference that makes, without explicitly endorsing the judgment that the authentic Paul is the Paul of the seven letters.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2009\/08\/trpp4.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-3842\" title=\"trpp4\" src=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2009\/08\/trpp4.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"240\" height=\"361\" \/><\/a>Borg and Crossan, for their part, avidly endorse the persona of the seven-letter corpus as the real Paul, an anti-imperialist advocate of radical equality in imitation of his Lord Jesus Christ: \u201cIn Paul, the mystical experience of Jesus Christ as Lord led to resistance to the imperial vision and advocacy of a different vision of the way the world can be.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>But the best that has been thought and said about Paul\u2019s purportedly anti-imperialist project has already been thought and said in a number of scholarly treatments in the last decade. The seminal collection of essays edited by Richard Horsley, <em>Paul and Empire<\/em> (Trinity Press, 1997), comes most readily to mind. Horsley and company first raised the question and set the scholarly agenda for answering it. <em>The First Paul<\/em>, subtitled \u201cReclaiming the Radical Visionary behind the Church\u2019s Conservative Icon,\u201d promises more of the same, if not better. But it is neither, and for one simple reason: the radical Paul of Borg and Crossan is not really very radical at all. This becomes painfully clear, among several other instances that could be adduced, in their contorted exegesis of Roman 13:1-7, Paul\u2019s infamous exhortation to obey ruling authorities\u2014read the Roman imperial regime\u2014because they are \u201cordained of God,\u201d who has given them the sword to enforce law and order.<\/p>\n<p>Borg and Crossan explain that Paul feared his Roman audience would resort to \u201cviolent tax revolt\u201d against Rome: \u201cPaul is most afraid not that Christians will be killed but that they will kill, not that Rome will use violence against Christians but that Christians will use violence against Rome.\u201d This danger of violent revolt whips Paul into a \u201crhetorical panic\u2019 and causes him to \u201cmake some very unwise and unqualified statements with which to ward off that possibility\u201d\u2014the possibility that church folk in Rome would use their marginalized, persecuted faces to scuff the brass knuckles of Roman state terror. The hermeneutic here would be hilarious if Paul\u2019s \u201cstatements\u201d in this toxic text were not so \u201cunwise and unqualified.\u201d With radicals like this, who needs reactionaries?<\/p>\n<p>The authors also identify a fourth Paul, the globetrotting hero of the second half of the book of Acts. The several and in some cases irreconcilable differences between Paul\u2019s representation in Acts and his self-representation in his letters are treated at some length by Borg and Crossan in their third chapter, \u201cThe Life of a Long-Distance Apostle.\u201d These differences have led some scholars to conclude that Paul\u2019s letters and theology were either unknown to or ignored by the writer of Acts, who has woven a text about Paul\u2019s career using threads of legend along with the whole cloth of his own imagination. Yet Borg and Crossan write, \u201cOur primary source will be the seven genuine letters, supplemented when appropriate by Acts.\u201d This begs the question, of course, of how Borg and Crossan know when it\u2019s appropriate\u2014a question they don\u2019t answer in their book. This unresolved methodological issue must leave us in doubt about any conclusions they draw from harmonizing the first Paul and the fourth.<\/p>\n<p>Consider only one of a number of dubious instances: the question of Paul\u2019s Roman citizenship. Acts has Paul telling a Roman centurion \u201cI was born a [Roman] citizen\u201d (Acts 22:25-29). Reading this with the strident notice from the mouth of Paul elsewhere, \u201cI am a Jew from Tarsus in Cilicia, a citizen of an important city\u201d (Acts 21:39), we get the point: Acts is at pains to show that Paul is no low-status bumpkin from some jerkwater\u2014as were Jesus and his first followers, incidentally\u2014but the son of a metropolitan center, Tarsus, and a citizen of the empire. Yet Borg and Crossan point out that Paul never claims to be a Roman citizen in any of his letters. Indeed, there is evidence to the contrary: Paul writes that \u201cthree times I was punished, beaten with rods\u201d (2 Corinthians 11:25), a corporal punishment the Romans inflicted only on non-citizens. The author of Acts, in spite of himself, relates that Paul was \u201cbeaten with rods\u201d in a Philippian jail (Acts 16:22). Are we to read Acts against Paul on this question of Paul\u2019s Roman citizenship? Or are we to read Paul against Acts\u2014and Acts against itself?<\/p>\n<p>Borg and Crossan simply roll their own here, with what characteristically follows from rolling one\u2019s own: selective figments of reality in more vivid colors, fleeting delirium, and occasional outbursts of goofiness. In the selective figments category goes Paul\u2019s martyrdom. \u201cIt is not surprising that Paul, like Jesus, was eventually executed by Rome,\u201d they write. But the circumstances surrounding Paul\u2019s death are completely mysterious, and neither the New Testament nor contemporary documents say anything about it, let alone that it was the consequence of an imperial capital sentence. On this question, as Borg and Crossan concede, they are \u201con the borderline between tradition and scholarship, guess and conjecture.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2009\/08\/trpp5.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-3841\" title=\"trpp5\" src=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2009\/08\/trpp5.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"240\" height=\"363\" \/><\/a>In the mild delirium category goes what Borg and Crossan call Paul\u2019s \u201cNabatean mission.\u201d Paul writes to the Galatians that after receiving his life-changing revelation of the Lord Jesus Christ, he \u201cwent away at once into Arabia\u201d (Galatians 1). Borg and Crossan assert that this is Paul\u2019s first mission, \u201cin immediate obedience to his vocation as Apostle to the Gentiles,\u201d the Gentiles in this case being the Nabatean Arabs. Paul writes that he escaped the clutches of the Nabatean Arab king Aretas by being let down over the wall of Damascus in a basket (2 Corinthians 11:32-33), an unceremonious departure mentioned in Acts 9:23-25. Yet, as the authors admit, \u201cPaul passes over this first mission in silence, and Luke [i.e., the writer of Acts] never mentions it at all.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the occasional goofiness category is the chain of \u201cconjecture\u201d Borg and Crossan borrow from William Mitchell Ramsey, an Oxford classical archaeologist who flourished at the turn of the twentieth century. What Paul called his \u201cweakness in the flesh\u201d (Galatians 4:13) and \u201cthorn in the flesh\u201d (2 Corinthians 12:7) were recurring bouts of malaria he had contracted in the marshes in his hometown of Tarsus. As noted already, Paul never mentions his home town in any of the letters and, like most of us, refuses to go public with exactly what his \u201cweakness in the flesh\u201d was.<\/p>\n<p>So why even use Acts in a historical reconstruction of Paul? I\u2019m reminded of the Groucho Marx joke about the man who goes to a therapist because the man\u2019s brother thinks he\u2019s a chicken; the man rejects the therapist\u2019s offer to cure the brother because, he says, the family needs the eggs. One reason New Testament scholarship needs the eggs, as it were, is that Acts provides a story, a narrative upon which to hang Paul\u2019s disjointed discourse about himself. Without Acts, we are left with but a baker\u2019s dozen of undated letters\u2014no Pauline story, no Pauline biography and, most important for the business of the Pauline Year, no Pauline itinerary.<\/p>\n<p>The travelogue of Acts furnishes the itinerary for a Pauline pilgrimage, from Palestine to Turkey to Greece and to Rome, the capital of Roman Catholic Christianity. That\u2019s a lot of frequent flier miles, hotel reservations, exotic liquors, luxurious rugs, and overpriced trinkets. But <em>caveat emptor<\/em>: there is about as much evidence for Paul\u2019s travels in Aegean tourist traps as there is for Paul\u2019s \u201cNabatean mission.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The Jesuit magazine <em>America<\/em> devoted an entire issue to the observance of the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.americamagazine.org\/content\/current-issue.cfm?issueid=675\" target=\"_blank\">Pauline Year<\/a> (November 10, 2008), in which a coterie of Catholic scholars tackles Paul\u2019s toughest PR problems. In his contribution, John C. Endres, professor of sacred scripture at the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley, California, puts the best face on the Pauline pilgrimage in Turkey, where Paul spent so many of his travel miles (\u201cIn His Shoes: A Pilgrim\u2019s Guide to Some Pauline Sites\u201d). Endres\u2019s sunny excursions notwithstanding, the fact is that in Turkey those places associated with Paul bear precious little witness to his historical presence. The modern Tarsus, \u201cbirthplace of St. Paul,\u201d is a crummy vestige of its ancient self. Its one monument to the apostle, St. Paul\u2019s Well, is a water-bearing borehole in the ground.<\/p>\n<p>Many of the various whistle stops on Paul\u2019s Turkish itinerary lack any sign that \u201cPaul slept here.\u201d Archaeologists have only begun to dust off the remains of ancient Laodicea and Colossae, whose ancient Christian communities Paul commanded to exchange a copy of one of his letters (Colossians 4:16). As for the cities on Paul\u2019s Galatian tour (see Acts 14), of Iconium Endres admits that \u201clittle of the former Roman city remains visible,\u201d and the ancient cities of Lystra and Derbe remain unexcavated. Even the venerable Ephesus proves emblematic of Turkey in general: the city has much to offer, but little to offer the pilgrim venerating St. Paul.<\/p>\n<p>But no matter. On the pilgrimage tour the radical Paul, the conservative Paul, and the reactionary Paul take a back seat to the missionary Paul of Acts. Careful readers of the New Testament may split the differences as Borg and Crossan do, picking and choosing those elements to be included in an alternative myth of the radical Paul, sliced and diced by historical criticism.<\/p>\n<p>Or all these ingredients may be thrown into the high-speed blender of ecclesiastical tradition and pur\u00e9ed into orthodoxy. Such is the venerable modus operandi of Pope Benedict, whose erudite but pious portrait of Paul in his book <em>Saint Paul<\/em> (Ignatius Press, 2009), an edited compendium of twenty of his general audiences over the past year, is untroubled by the apparent contradictions that occupy Borg and Crossan.<\/p>\n<p>Without qualm, Benedict reads Acts as the historical itinerary for all of Paul\u2019s missionary journeys. In his treatment of the Pastoral Epistles, he acknowledges that \u201cmost exegetes today are of the opinion that these Letters would not have been written by Paul himself\u201d; \u201cthey reflect his legacy for a new generation,\u201d and \u201csome parts \u2026 appear so authentic that they could have come only from the heart and mouth of the Apostle.\u201d A more felicitous description of ancient forgery has never been written. As for Paul the martyr, though \u201cthe New Testament writings tell us nothing of the event\u2026ancient Christian tradition witnesses unanimously that Paul died as a consequence of his martyrdom here in Rome.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Benedict\u2019s account of Paul\u2019s showdown with Peter in Antioch is a masterpiece of spin control. Paul\u2019s tantrum in Galatians, in which he twice calls Peter \u201ca hypocrite\u201d (Galatians 2:11-13), only shows \u201cthe veneration and at the same time the freedom with which the Apostle addresses Cephas and the other Apostles.\u201d Reading Paul\u2019s appeal to tolerance in matters of kosher observance in Romans 14, the pope points out that \u201cin writing to the Christians of Rome a few years later\u2026Paul was to find himself facing a similar situation and asked the strong not to eat unclean foods in order not to lose or scandalize the weak.\u2026The incident at Antioch thus proved to be as much a lesson for Peter as it was for Paul.\u201d The row in Antioch was not an apostolic smack-down, but \u201csincere dialogue, open to the truth of the Gospel.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the pope\u2019s treatment, Paul\u2019s schizophrenic symptoms\u2014his violent outburst, impaired judgment, and persecution complex\u2014go untreated. Borg and Crossan, as we have seen, engage in a literary lobotomy, surgically removing the more troubling tissue from his letters. But in his graphic novel, <em>Blinded: The Story of Paul the Apostle<\/em> (Seabury Books, 2008), writer and illustrator Steve Ross does something entirely different. He lets Paul rant and rave until he administers his own talking cure of sorts.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2009\/08\/trpp2.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-3845\" title=\"trpp2\" src=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2009\/08\/trpp2.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"480\" height=\"420\" \/><\/a>Ross\u2019s narrative follows that of Acts, but the story is updated, told in black and white with contemporary color. We begin with Saul Tarsus, heartless agent of a hopped-up Homeland Security unit that seeks out and destroys partisans of the clandestine Jesus movement. After being almost killed and temporarily blinded in an auto accident, Saul strives to understand his near-death experience. With a new name and new angst, he sets out to finds \u201csome answers.\u201d Along the way he\u2019s recruited by an evangelistic sideshow, chased by military brass, arrested, jailed, and water-boarded. He barely escapes being buried in the rubble of a less-than-surgical air strike and embarks on a preaching career that becomes a trail of provocations. Paul talks down slaves in revolt against their wealthy master, Jason, in Thessalonike and convinces them to become \u201cslaves of Christ.\u201d Their enslavement then becomes all the more unbearable, and they again rebel. In Athens, Paul seeks to sway his hearers by offering \u201cirrefutable proof that your gods suck.\u201d In Corinth, he turns a humble, common meal into a wildly popular supper club of eschatological enthusiasts. He then enrages the entire membership by announcing that the imminent end of the world \u201chas been postponed.\u201d In Ephesus, he provokes a pious pagan mob by off-handedly dissing the local deity. Later, his preaching in Rome sets off a fundamentalist pogrom. As Paul himself plaintively observes, \u201cWhat am I doing wrong? I preach love. I get hate. I preach communion. I get division. I preach compassion. I get revenge.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Ross holds in stereoscopic view both Paul the provocateur and Paul the litt\u00e9rateur by keeping an unblinking eye on Paul the visionary and the zealotry to which visionaries so easily fall prey. Paul may have been a man of vision but, concludes Ross, \u201cfor every vision, a blind spot.\u201d Ross\u2019s Paul becomes aware that his vision de jour is impaired; he anxiously intuits that he\u2019s not seeing things quite right. He is sometimes very wrong, and he knows it. Thus, his desperate mid-course corrections: he strains, again and again, to be his best self in spite of himself. Again and again, he fails.<\/p>\n<p>It is neither the virtue of a radical, nor the heroism of a martyr, but the pathos of a flawed man that makes Ross\u2019s representation of Paul the Apostle compelling, even appealing, and an appealing Paul is a tour de force. Borg and Crossan concede that some find Paul \u201cappalling.\u201d John J. Kilgallen, professor of New Testament at the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome, begins his <em>America<\/em> magazine essay, \u201cA Complicated Apostle,\u201d by admitting that \u201cwhen one reads or hears what Paul wrote, one often meets a personality that can seem unpleasant or even antagonizing \u2026 appearing pompous, cantankerous, superior, harsh.\u201d Experts agree: Paul can be a difficult fellow. He exhorts love for enemies, yet is not above wishing aloud that his enemies would castrate themselves (Galatians 5:12). He calls his addressees stupid (Galatians 3:1). Though he imperiously claims to have \u201cseen the Lord\u201d (1 Corinthians 9:1, 15:8; Galatians 1:15-17), Paul in fact never laid eyes on Jesus of Nazareth and comes by \u201cthe word of the Lord\u201d as he had come by everything else that had to do with Jesus\u2014by hearsay or seizure. He repeatedly admits to having violently persecuted the church he so faithfully serves (1 Corinthians 15:9; Galatians 1:13; Philippians 3:6). Even Paul\u2019s biggest booster, the author of Acts, introduces Paul to the reader as an accessory to a lynching (Acts 7:60).<\/p>\n<p>So we may well ask: why should we take seriously, let alone read reverently, this vituperative, hallucinating, conflict-ridden polemicist who was at the same time both a passionate disciple of a man he never followed and a passionate enemy, by his own admission, of those who did? Why hasn\u2019t the world written him off as a fulminating, apocalyptic crackpot? And why has a worldwide Christian communion been celebrating his birthday?<\/p>\n<p>Because that man, in the perverse hindsight that only dogma could call Providence, became the future of an ancient movement of unlettered, agrarian, Semitic-speaking, indigenous Palestinians that would come to be co-opted by parvenus who, like him, were none of those things.<\/p>\n<p>And because another man, now enthroned in the capital city of the empire Paul supposedly resisted, decided this was Paul\u2019s year. And what a year it was.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Allen Dwight Callahan is the author of <em>The Talking Book: African Americans and the Bible<\/em> (Yale University Press) and <em>A Love Supreme: A History of the Johannine Tradition<\/em> (Fortress Press).<\/strong><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>REVIEW ESSAY The Real Paul by Allen Dwight Callahan It has been a big year for the Apostle Paul. According to the Roman Catholic Church, 2009 is his year\u2014or more exactly the liturgical year from June 28, 2008 to June &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/2009\/08\/05\/august-5-2009-the-real-paul\/3839\/\" class=\"more\">More <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":56,"featured_media":16635,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[5888,5887,5889,5886,5885],"class_list":["post-3839","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-allen-dwight-callahan","tag-apostle-paul","tag-new-testament","tag-pauline","tag-st-paul","faith-christian"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>August 5, 2009 ~ The Real Paul | August 5, 2009 | Religion &amp; Ethics NewsWeekly | PBS<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"The Apostle Paul was &quot;a conflict-ridden polemicist&quot; who became &quot;the future of an ancient movement of unlettered, agrarian, Semitic-speaking, indigenous Palestinians,&quot; writes New Testament scholar Allen Dwight Callahan.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"noindex, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"August 5, 2009 ~ The Real Paul | August 5, 2009 | Religion &amp; Ethics NewsWeekly | PBS\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The Apostle Paul was &quot;a conflict-ridden polemicist&quot; who became &quot;the future of an ancient movement of unlettered, agrarian, Semitic-speaking, indigenous Palestinians,&quot; writes New Testament scholar Allen Dwight Callahan.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/2009\/08\/05\/august-5-2009-the-real-paul\/3839\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Religion &amp; Ethics NewsWeekly\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:publisher\" content=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/PBS.ReligionEthics\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2009-08-05T20:32:35+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2013-05-07T15:02:40+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\/wnet\/religionandethics\/files\/2009\/08\/therealpaul.jpg\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:width\" content=\"200\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:height\" content=\"100\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:type\" content=\"image\/jpeg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"stephanie winkler\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:creator\" content=\"@ReligionEthics\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:site\" content=\"@ReligionEthics\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Written by\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"stephanie winkler\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:label2\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data2\" content=\"17 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\\\/\\\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"Article\",\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\\\/wnet\\\/religionandethics\\\/2009\\\/08\\\/05\\\/august-5-2009-the-real-paul\\\/3839\\\/#article\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\\\/wnet\\\/religionandethics\\\/2009\\\/08\\\/05\\\/august-5-2009-the-real-paul\\\/3839\\\/\"},\"author\":{\"name\":\"stephanie winkler\",\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\\\/wnet\\\/religionandethics\\\/#\\\/schema\\\/person\\\/65d8fe1274e21b2bfa76738ef5a2b236\"},\"headline\":\"The Real Paul\",\"datePublished\":\"2009-08-05T20:32:35+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2013-05-07T15:02:40+00:00\",\"mainEntityOfPage\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\\\/wnet\\\/religionandethics\\\/2009\\\/08\\\/05\\\/august-5-2009-the-real-paul\\\/3839\\\/\"},\"wordCount\":3420,\"commentCount\":5,\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\\\/\\\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\\\/wnet\\\/religionandethics\\\/2009\\\/08\\\/05\\\/august-5-2009-the-real-paul\\\/3839\\\/#primaryimage\"},\"thumbnailUrl\":\"https:\\\/\\\/pbs-wnet-preprod.digi-producers.pbs.org\\\/wnet\\\/religionandethics\\\/files\\\/2009\\\/08\\\/therealpaul.jpg\",\"keywords\":[\"Allen D. 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