Yesterday was our first TEEM class on Paul. It was riveting. I'm still not much interested in preaching using Paul's letters, but because Paul has been so influential and so misused, it's good to find out what's really there.
The most interesting way of thinking about Paul that was new to me is to see him as a Jew framed by apocalyptic thinking, the apocalypse being when God comes to earth to judge the living and the dead, an event which will begin with the dead rising up from their graves as they come back to life to be judged.
So when Paul meets Jesus on the Damascus Road, a man who has been dead brought back to life and speaking to him, he assumes that judgment day is under way. Being a good Pharisee, he would assume that Jews will be O.K. on Judgment Day--as people of the Covenant, God has chosen them. But Gentiles are in danger. Thus, off he goes to tell them how to be saved.
I asked the question that some of you might be asking. Did Paul see a human Jesus on the Damascus Road? I have always thought of that event as the heavens splitting open and the voice of Jesus speaking to him, not as an encounter with Jesus in his human body. My professor talked about the different depictions of that event, including recountings of that event that we find in Acts and the letters of Paul. In some of them, the encounter does sound disembodied, the voice from the heavens. In others, we could interpret it as an encounter between Paul and a human-appearing Jesus.
I still maintain my long-standing approach to Paul. He wrote letters to specific churches/communities with specific problems. Taking those letters and applying them to twenty-first century life makes very little sense--unless we're experiencing similar problems. We had an interesting session looking at 1 Corinthians, the passage where Paul excoriates the Church for eating the good food before the whole community arrives and connecting this behavior with Communion. How do our own Communion practices exclude or include in similar ways?
I still can't see myself preaching on Paul or even having the kind of Bible study that would interest most people. But I'm very glad to have had this educational opportunity.