Paul, the Apostle of Satan


Book Description

A line-by-line berean commentary, which compares the teachings of Paul to the words of Yeshua and the law and the prophets.




The God of This Age


Book Description

How did Paul depict Satan as an apocalyptic opponent? Derek R. Brown demonstrates the significance of Paul's references to Satan and demonstrates the history of Satan in the Bible and nature of Satan's inimical work.




Paul


Book Description

Saul of Tarsus Venerated Apostle or Sanctimonious Apostate? Did you know the apostle Paul never taught or quoted a single parable of Jesus Christ, when the Lord taught exclusively by parables? Do you realize the apostle Paul never cited or referred to any of the miracles performed by Jesus Christ, including raising Lazarus from the dead, walking on water, or feeding the multitudes with a few loaves of bread?Are you aware the apostle Paul materially lied about the Lord's resurrection? Where you aware the apostle Paul did not advocate for repentance and water baptism? Do you know the apostle Paul did not instruct his disciples in the Lord's Prayer? Did you know the apostle Paul did not share the transfiguration on the mount? Did you know the Apostle Paul gave three different accounts of his Damascus experience? Were you aware that everything the apostle Paul taught came by revelation, boasting that none of his knowledge came from the apostles? Did you know the apostle Paul constantly disparaged Peter and the other apostles, claiming they taught a different gospel than his? Saul The Devil's Apostle Exposes this usurper and imposter in meticulous detail as you have never heard it before. While many believe an end-time deception is coming upon the church, few are able to see they have spent their whole lives living in it.




Paul, the Apostle of Satan


Book Description

What if the commonly accepted Bible canon contains the leaven of the Pharisees? This work is a side-by-side comparison of what Paul says in contrast with the rest of the Bible. Be as the Bereans and examine who Paul is according to his own testimony.




The Enemies of Paul: Demons, Satan, Betrayers, and Apostles


Book Description

Paul’s conflict with viscous enemies, human and otherwise, led him to employ efficacious powers, charismata (charismatic powers), and controversial and sometimes illegal practices that are only coherent when placed in context of the first century Hellenistic-Roman world. These included soul and spirit transportation, possession, and exorcisms, special techniques to repel demonic attack, as well as what was considered the darkest of black magic in the ancient world—the casting of death curses, which called on Satan to infect, harm, and even kill his enemies. All of these can be recovered in striking detail using risk analysis of his undisputed writings and comparing them with contemporary sources, papyri, and documents independent of the New Testament. The results demonstrate that Paul’s letters are so much more than simply intellectual and rhetorical correspondences—they are infused with dangerous mystical and charismatic powers feared in an ancient world that was saturated with prevalent, active dark forces and multi-layered human and supernatural conflicts; of angels and demons at war; of charismata and anathemata (deadly curses); and Paul’s expectation of the hemera kuriou, “Day of the Lord,” that would defeat Satan and the curse of death via pistis (faith) in the efficacious euangelion (gospel) of agape (love).




The Secret of Satan Used by Paul to Deceive the Whole Christian World


Book Description

Paul is a DECEIVER—a Masterful Deceiver with no equal. Paul was so good as a deceiver that he was able to deceive everyone who listened to his gospel, including no less than the “early church fathers” that approved his epistles to be included in the New Testament. Paul was so good as a deceiver that he was able to deceive even the “experts of the word of God,” such as the bible scholars, theologians, teachers, preachers and ministers—up to now! Most importantly, Paul was so good as a deceiver that his teaching already supplanted the very teachings of Jesus that in all homilies and preaching around the world, it is his words that are mostly quoted, hardly the words of Jesus. Behold in this book: “THE SECRET OF SATAN USED BY PAUL TO DECEIVE THE WHOLE CHRISTAIN WORLD.” Happy reading!




Paul


Book Description

Depicts the life of Saint Paul, discussing his religious teachings and travels.




The Enemies of Paul


Book Description

Paul's conflict with viscous enemies, human and otherwise, led him to employ efficacious powers, charismata (charismatic powers), and controversial and sometimes illegal practices that are only coherent when placed in context of the first century Hellenistic-Roman world. These included soul and spirit transportation, possession, and exorcisms, special techniques to repel demonic attack, as well as what was considered the darkest of black magic in the ancient world--the casting of death curses, which called on Satan to infect, harm, and even kill his enemies. All of these can be recovered in striking detail using risk analysis of his undisputed writings and comparing them with contemporary sources, papyri, and documents independent of the New Testament. The results demonstrate that Paul's letters are so much more than simply intellectual and rhetorical correspondences--they are infused with dangerous mystical and charismatic powers feared in an ancient world that was saturated with prevalent, active dark forces and multi-layered human and supernatural conflicts; of angels and demons at war; of charismata and anathemata (deadly curses); and Paul's expectation of the hemera kuriou, ""Day of the Lord,"" that would defeat Satan and the curse of death via pistis (faith) in the efficacious euangelion (gospel) of agape (love). ""This work represents a new approach to the problem of Paul's opponents. If you are willing to hear what an intelligent, attentive, risk expert and sojourner has to say about these texts we know as familiar, and yet are still strange, I recommend this work and its author to you."" --Stephen J. Patterson, Willamette University ""Busse has an extensive background and expertise in the application of risk analysis. This new approach evaluates responses to risk evidenced in ancient texts when placed in their contemporary setting. I recommend this study and author to you."" --Paul Slovic, University of Oregon, President, Decision Research ""It happens rarely that someone who is well educated in a completely different field makes a serious effort to engage in Bible scholarship from the perspective of one's own discipline. Extending his use of risk assessment methods to the historical Jesus in his previous book, Busse now applies them to the problem of understanding Paul and his enemies. Offering a rich, textured reading of the historical Paul in his first century background, Busse succeeds in presenting Paul and the early church in their complexity."" --Loren Crow, PhD Roger S. Busse is a recognized specialist in risk analysis, and a graduate of Reed College and Harvard Divinty School. His awarded career has spanned over forty years, from CEO of a nationally recognized institution to SVP of risk administration. Busse is a certified management consultant, adjunct professor, and author of two industry texts, The Essentials of Commercial Lending and Business Profiles, and two books on risk analysis and Christian origins, To be Near the Fire and Jesus, Resurrected.




Paul and Jesus


Book Description

Draws on St. Paul's letters and other early sources to reveal the apostles' sharply competing ideas about the significance of Jesus and his teachings while demonstrating how St. Paul independently shaped Christianity as it is known today.




God of this Age


Book Description

This thesis aims to elucidate the nature of the references to Satan in the undisputed Pauline corpus. Although scholarship has frequently devoted attention to the various "powers of evil" in Paul's letters--including principalities, rulers, demons, etc.--insufficient consideration has been given to the figure of Satan as an isolated subject matter. Moreover, scholarship on the individual references to Satan has often neglected Paul's depiction of Satan's activity vis-à-vis his apostolic calling. This raises the question, how and why does the Apostle Paul refer to the figure of Satan in his letters? In order to address this question, the thesis commences by examining two key areas of background material. First, Chapter Two investigates the various "images" of Satan in the Hebrew Bible and Second Temple Jewish texts. Instead of delineating a historical sketch of the development of Satan in Jewish thought, emphasis is placed on the various roles in which Satan functions within these writings. Second, Chapters Two and Three investigate two aspects of Paul's theology which relate to his references to Satan. First, Satan's place within Paul's apocalyptic theology is explicated (Chapter Three). Second, the thesis considers Paul's self-understanding as the Apostle to the Gentiles and, critically, the importance of Paul's churches for his apostleship (Chapter Four). Chapters Five and Six then utilize the findings of the previous chapters in their examination of the ten clear references to Satan in the undisputed Pauline letters. Chapter Five focuses on the sole reference to Satan in Romans (16:20) and the two references in 1 Thessalonians (2:18; 3:5). Chapter Six then analyzes the several references to Satan in the Corinthian correspondence (1 Cor 5:5; 7:5; 2 Cor 2:11; 4:4; 6:15; 11:14; 12:7), including their collective significance. On the basis of the examination of the Pauline references to Satan, it is argued that Paul--while sharing the Jewish and early Christian understanding of Satan as an enemy and tempter of the people of God--fundamentally characterizes Satan in his letters as the apocalyptic adversary who opposes his apostolic labor (kopos). Paul does so, it is argued, because he believed that his apostleship was pivotal in spreading the gospel at a crucial point in salvation history. The final chapter then anticipates the implications of the study for further research.