Art Cunningham gave this to me years ago, and it's been gathering dust on my shelf, but I decided to give it a whirl after reading Karen Armstrong's book on the Bible.
Paul made Christianity into a mystery religion, similar to Mithraism and the salvation found through Hercules, where salvation comes though faith in the cross. It was a much different movement from that of the Way, the church in Jerusalem, or from that of Jesus, a devout and fervent Jew and faith healer in the backwater ports of Galilee. Paul was an urban citizen of the empire who claimed to know Jesus better than Paul or James, because he had had visions and prophecies of the "true" word of god. This led to his break with the church in Jerusalem as well as from Judaism.
Paul also made it clear that man is utter depraved and unable to do good by himself, for himself. It is only through the love of god through the crucifixion that man can be saved. For Paul, that meant the imminent coming of Jesus where the saved would escape the wrath of God when the kingdom is re-established in Israel and all the gentile worship the one true god. This leads to a poignant scene when Paul is whisked away from Jerusalem and taken to Caesarea without the end having come.
Wilson makes it clear that Christianity would probably not have lasted without Paul's stamp, although it was not a religion or a movement that Jesus would have recognized or endorsed. It was a fascinating book that read much like a novel.
Author: Wilson, A. N.
Date Published: 1994
Length: 258 pp
print