In my previous post I showed why the vocabulary of the Pastoral epistles and the kinds of problems they address suggest that they were written after Paul’s time, by a follower who was using his name.  As I indicated there, of particular importance for establishing they do not come directly from Paul is the way in which “false teachings” are attacked in the Pastorals, for the author’s basic orientation appears to be very much like what we find developing in second-century proto-orthodox circles.

In some ways, to understand this different orientation we have to think about how it is that one kind of Christianity came to be dominant within the rising religion.  Christianity of the second and third centuries (long after Paul) was widely diversified, with all sorts of teachers teaching all sorts of things (with numerous questions unresolved:  how many gods are there? Was Christ human? Divine? Both somehow?  How?  What books are Scriptural authority?  How should the church be organized? Etc. etc.).  But out of that wild diversity one Christian movement of the early ended up becoming dominant. How did it happen that from all the variety that we have seen within early Christianity, only one form of Christianity emerged, from which the Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Protestant churches of today all derive?

The story is far too long to narrate in full here, interesting as it is. For our purposes, it is enough to indicate that the group that I’ve called the proto-orthodox was successful in countering the claims of other groups, and therefore in attracting more converts to its own perspectives, by forming a unified front that claimed a threefold authorization for its understanding of the religion.

Excerpted from my textbook on the New Testament:

This unified front involved (a) developing a rigorous administrative hierarchy that protected and conveyed the truth of the religion (eventuating, e.g., in the papacy), (b) insisting that all true Christians profess a set body of doctrines promoted by these leaders (the Christian creeds), and (c) appealing to a set of authoritative books of Scripture as bearers of these inspired doctrinal truths (the “New” Testament; see chapter 1). Or, to put the matter in its simplest and most alliterative terms, the proto-orthodox won these conflicts by insisting on the validity of the clergy, the creed, and the canon.

These forms of authorization were not in place during Paul’s day. They are in the process of development, however, in the Pastoral epistles.  That shows these books are probably from after his time.  We look at them now in turn.

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