For men, deprived of the care of the deity who had possessed and tended us, since most of the beasts who were by nature unfriendly had grown fierce, and they themselves were feeble and unprotected, were ravaged by the beasts [274c] and were in the first ages still without resources or skill; the food which had formerly offered itself freely had failed them, and they did not yet know how to provide for themselves, because no necessity had hitherto compelled them. On all these accounts they were in great straits; and that is the reason why the gifts of the gods that are told of in the old traditions were given us with the needful information and instruction,—fire by Prometheus, the arts by Hephaestus and the goddess who is his fellow-artisan, seeds and plants by other deities.1 [274d] And from these has arisen all that constitutes human life, since, as I said a moment ago, the care of the gods had failed men and they had to direct their own lives and take care of themselves, like the whole universe, which we imitate and follow through all time, being born and living now in our present manner and in that other epoch in the other manner. — Plato, Statesman, 274b, translated by Fowler
Paul was the academic mostly responsible for Greek Philosophy influencing Christianity at its very beginning. — Joe Mello
So it's an attempt to arianize Jesus. To un-Jew him. — Olivier5
Of course I can say what a Christian is for myself. — Apollodorus
Of course I can say what a Christian is for myself — Apollodorus
This maps well with Jesus' tendencies to reject this world as inherently corrupt, and the Devil as dwelling in it. — Olivier5
Absolutely! And it is precisely because they have started to incorporate the phenomenological and 'embodied cognition' approaches, which in turn grew out of the movement away from old-school scientific materialism. — Wayfarer
He likes to say that St. Paul “cut out” the Greek tradition from Christianity — Dermot Griffin
Exactly! I was hoping that the passage I quoted reinforced the point you were making. — Wayfarer
Grimes also claimed that the core of Jesus' message did not reflect the concerns or concepts of Judaism. I hope the contributions by schopenhauer1 and Oliver5, amongst others here, show how ridiculous that claim is.If sufficient evidence appeared proving Grimes’ thesis, then yes, I would not have a problem with that. — Dermot Griffin
