madeleine wrote:I would like to know what you think the purpose of these other gods you believe in, is.
I "believe in"? This has nothing to do with my religious beliefs. This is just scholarship.
madeleine wrote:St. Paul was the apostle to the Gentiles, the pagans. His message for them, of Christ crucified, being reconciled, was a message of the One True God, who desired their faith and fidelity.
What need does God have for these other gods? What does an empty idol have to do with the one true God?
The other gods were the gods of the nations in the ancient Near East. Deut 32:8-9 has God giving each one of his offspring a nation over which to rule, giving YHWH the nation of Israel. By the time of the New Testament, their purviews had been taken over by YHWH, but they were still acknowledged, but as lower-level gods with no cosmological responsibilities.
madeleine wrote:What does the cult of Caesar, popular at the time of Paul, have to do with Christ? Caesar, being a real person, viewed as divine, is this one of the many gods that you believe exist?
You continue to misunderstand my academic position for a religious belief. Kindly stop.
madeleine wrote:I am not seeing why or how God, the One True God, has anything to do with pagan gods. All righteousness is in God. Where does this leave room for the existence of other gods, at all
"Righteousness" is not coterminous with "god"?
madeleine wrote:As a side note, a Jewish acquaintance once told me that Gentiles can worship whatever God(s) they like, but a Jew is required to worship the one true God of Israel. She did not mean, at all, that she believed other Gods were real.
Modern Jews did not write the Old or New Testaments, did they?
madeleine wrote:It does not align to Jewish belief, at all.
So what? The Bible does not align with modern Christian beliefs about the Trinity at all. Why do you still accept the Trinity?