Paul of Tarsus, who never met the historical Jesus, fundamentally transformed Jesus's identity from a Jewish teacher who lived by the law into a cosmic deity through theological innovations including the invention of pre-existence, original sin, and blood atonement, while deliberately omitting Jesus's actual teachings and life to create a universal religion suited for the Roman Empire.
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Spinoza Exposes 7 Massive Lies Paul Invented About Jesus?Añadido:
Everything you think you know about Jesus is actually what one man wanted you to think. A man who never walked with him. A man who never ate with him.
A man who never heard him preach. For 2,000 years, the church has built its cathedrals on the words of Saul of Tarsus, known to you as street Paul. But if we strip away Paul's letters, the Jesus of history disappears, replaced by a helanized phantom. Did Paul save the message of Christ? Or did he commit the most successful identity theft in human history? Today, we use the cold, rational lens of Baroo Spinosa to dissect the seven massive lies that turned a Jewish rebel into a Roman god.
Prepare to lose your religion to find the truth. Do you dare to face the truth that the entire foundation of modern Christianity might be built on a massive substitution? For 2,000 years, the church has worshiped a figure they call Jesus. But if we strip away the theological layers, we find the product of Saul of Tarsus, known to you as Street Paul. Through the rational lens of philosopher Baroo Spinosa, we will dissect a brutal reality. Paul never met the living Jesus, never heard him preach, yet he was the one who buried the Jewish carpenter to resurrect a Roman god. From abolishing the Mosaic law to inventing the concept of original sin, Paul executed the most spectacular spiritual coup in history. This video is not intended to blaspheme, but to perform a historical autopsy based on primary sources and ancient texts to answer one question. Are we following the religion of Jesus or are we trapped in the religion of Paul? Prepare yourself because these seven lies will shake the very foundations of your faith. To understand the first and perhaps most significant transformation in human history, we must look at the silent gap between the dusty roads of Galilee and the high altar theology of the early church. We begin with a man named Jesus, a teacher who lived, breathed, and prayed as a devout Jew. In the earliest records we have of his life, Jesus is a prophet of the coming kingdom of God. He is a man who humbles himself before the creator. A man who insists that only God is good and a man whose primary mission was to call his people back to the heart of the law.
This was the Jesus of history. A human being rooted in time, culture, and a strictly monotheistic faith. However, shortly after his death, a new voice emerged that would forever alter this image. That voice belonged to Paul of Tarsus. Paul did not just preach about Jesus. He reinvented the very essence of who Jesus was. This is what we call the divinity theft. It is the moment when the earthly prophet was stripped of his humanity and dressed in the robes of a cosmic deity. To understand how this happened, we must realize that Paul was not writing history. He was creating a new religious system designed to conquer the Roman Empire. In the Jewish world where Jesus lived, the idea of a man being God was not just offensive, it was an impossibility. The Jewish faith is built on the absolute oneness of God.
Jesus himself, according to the oldest accounts, never claimed to be the second person of a trinity or the eternal creator of the universe. He spoke of himself as a son of man, a term that emphasized his role as a messenger for humanity. But Paul lived in a different world, a world of Greek philosophy, Roman emperors who claimed to be gods, and mystery religions where savior gods died and rose again. Paul realized that a humble Jewish carpenter would never win the hearts of the Greeks and Romans.
To make Jesus relevant to the pagan world, Paul had to make Jesus a god. The first step in this theft was the invention of pre-existence. In his letters, Paul began to claim that Jesus did not start his life in the womb of Mary, but that he had existed since before the world was created. Paul wrote that through Jesus, all things were made. This was a radical departure from anything Jesus had ever said about himself. By claiming that Jesus was an eternal being who descended to earth, Paul effectively erased the human teacher. The wisdom of the parables, the struggle against social injustice, and the call to follow the commandments were suddenly overshadowed by a grand supernatural drama. If Jesus is God, his human life becomes merely a costume, a temporary mask worn by the divine.
Furthermore, Paul introduced a type of mysticism that Jesus never taught. While Jesus taught his followers how to live, Paul taught them how to worship. Jesus spoke of the father. Paul spoke of the Christ. This distinction is vital. The Christ of Paul is a cosmic force, a metaphysical entity that exists outside of history. By focusing on this divine figure, Paul allowed the church to ignore the difficult radical teachings of the actual man. It is much easier to bow down to a statue of a god than it is to follow a man who tells you to sell everything you own and give it to the poor. Spinosa, the great philosopher of reason, looked at this transformation with a critical eye. He understood that when you turn a man into a god, you move religion out of the realm of human ethics and into the realm of superstition. Paul's version of Jesus was designed to demand faith rather than action. In the original Jewish context, being a follower of a teacher meant doing what they did, practicing kindness, justice, and obedience to the divine will. But in Paul's system, the primary requirement was to believe in the divinity of the person. This shift allowed the church to build a massive power structure. If Jesus is the only way to God because he is God, then the institution that claims to represent him holds the keys to the universe. We must also consider the silence of the earthly Jesus regarding his own divinity. In the three earliest gospels, Matthew, Mark, and Luke, Jesus never says, "I am God."
He prays to God. He asks why God has forsaken him. and he admits that he does not know the hour of the end of the world, stating that only the father knows. These are the marks of a human being who is subordinate to the divine.
Paul, however, bypassed these human limitations. He wrote to his followers that they should have the same mind as Christ Jesus, who though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped. This language of equality with God was the final nail in the coffin of the historical Jesus.
By the time the church councils met centuries later to finalize their creeds, the theft was complete. They argued over the substance of Jesus's divinity using Greek philosophical terms that Jesus himself would likely not have understood. The Jewish prophet was gone, replaced by a helanized icon. This lie was massive because it fundamentally changed the goal of the spiritual life.
instead of striving to create a kingdom of justice here on earth as Jesus taught humanity was told to focus on a divine savior who would rescue them from the earth. Paul's invention of the god man served a political purpose as well. A human prophet can be ignored or killed, but a god man provides a permanent foundation for an empire. The Roman authorities eventually realized that Paul's version of Jesus could be used to unite a fractured people. By merging the Jewish Messiah with the characteristics of the Greek gods, Paul created a hybrid religion that was perfectly suited for the imperial mind. It offered the mystery of the east with the structure of the west. In conclusion, the divinity of Jesus was not a discovery made by his friends. It was a theological construction manufactured by a man who never met him. Paul took the identity of a humble, law-abiding Jewish teacher and transformed it into a cosmic deity to satisfy the cultural cravings of the Roman world. In doing so, he may have saved the name of Jesus from being forgotten, but he destroyed the message of the man himself. We are left with a church that prays to a god it has created, while the true voice of the prophet Jesus remains buried under 2,000 years of Pauline myth. To find the truth, we must be brave enough to look past the divine crown and see the human face that Paul worked so hard to hide.
To understand the gravity of what we call the great betrayal, we must first look at the world through the eyes of a first century Jewish person. For the people of that time, and especially for Jesus, the law of the Torah was not a cold list of restrictions or a heavy burden to be endured. It was the very breath of life. It was the sacred contract between the creator and his people, a map for how to live in justice, purity, and love. When Jesus walked the hills of Galilee, he lived entirely within the boundaries of this law. He wore the traditional tassels on his robes. He kept the Sabbath holy, and he debated the fine points of the commandments with the passion of a man who loved every word of his heritage. He famously declared that he did not come to destroy the law, but to fill it with meaning. He insisted that until heaven and earth passed away, not the smallest letter or the tiniest stroke of a pen would disappear from the law. This is the baseline of truth. Jesus was a reformer who wanted to bring people back to the heart of the law, not an executioner who wanted to kill it.
However, when we turn the pages to the writings of Paul, we encounter a sudden and violent shift in direction. Paul of Tarsus did not just interpret the law differently. He declared it dead. This is the moment where the movement of Jesus was hijacked and turned into something the Jewish prophet would have found unrecognizable.
This was the death of the law and it remains the most successful act of religious sabotage in history. The betrayal began with a practical political problem. Paul wanted to expand his influence into the heart of the Roman Empire. He wanted to convert the Greeks, the Romans, and the pagans who lived under the shadow of Caesar. But he faced a massive obstacle, the law. To become a follower of the Jewish Messiah at that time, a person had to follow the Jewish way of life. This meant strict dietary restrictions and most significantly for adult men, the painful and frightening requirement of circumcision. Paul realized that his marketing campaign for a new religion would fail if he forced Roman men to undergo surgery and give up their favorite foods. He had a choice. He could stay true to the teachings and lifestyle of Jesus or he could change the rules to make the religion easier to sell. Paul chose to change the rules. To justify this change, Paul had to do more than just say the law was optional. He had to make the law look like an enemy.
In his letters, Paul began to use shocking language to describe the very thing Jesus called holy. He called the law a curse. He described it as a yoke of slavery and even referred to it as the ministry of death. Imagine the horror of the original disciples in Jerusalem, men like Peter and James, the brother of Jesus, when they heard that this newcomer was calling God's sacred instructions a curse. This was not a minor disagreement. It was a total rejection of the foundation upon which Jesus stood. Paul's lie was a brilliant piece of theological gymnastics. He argued that the law was never meant to save anyone, but was only a temporary babysitter designed to show people how sinful they were. He claimed that now that Christ had come, the babysitter was no longer needed. By doing this, Paul effectively told his followers that they could ignore the commandments that Jesus himself had kept. He replaced the path of action, the daily practice of living out the law, with a path of belief.
Suddenly, being a good person or a follower of God had nothing to do with how you lived or the laws you followed.
It only mattered that you had faith in Paul's version of the resurrected Christ. This move was a betrayal of the highest order because it stripped Jesus of his Jewish identity and made him a figurehead for a lawless religion. When Paul told the people of Galatia that Christ is the end of the law, he wasn't just offering them freedom. He was cutting the roots of the tree. Without the law, the teachings of Jesus become abstract and vague. The radical social justice of the Torah, the protection of the poor, and the specific ethical demands of the prophets were all tossed aside in favor of a mystical supernatural feeling of grace. The philosopher Spininoza, who valued reason above all, would point out that this was the moment when religion stopped being about human conduct and started being about mental manipulation. Spinosa understood that the law of Moses was intended to create a stable, just society. By destroying that framework, Paul moved the focus of religion from the earth to the sky. He convinced people that the world was too broken to fix and that the only way to be right with God was through a mental transaction of faith. This served Paul's purpose perfectly because it allowed him to create a universal religion that could fit into any culture, but it came at the cost of the truth. The original followers of Jesus, led by James in Jerusalem, were rightfully outraged.
They saw Paul as a lawless teacher who was leading people astray. History tells us of a massive conflict between the original apostles and Paul, a conflict the church has tried to hide for centuries. The original apostles insisted that to follow Jesus, you had to live like Jesus. But Paul had the advantage of the Roman roads and the Greek language. His simplified law-free version of the faith spread like wildfire because it demanded so little from its converts. You didn't have to change your life. You just had to change your mind. This betrayal changed the course of Western civilization.
Because of Paul, the church eventually became an institution that could ignore the actual lifestyle of Jesus while claiming his name. It allowed empires to claim they were Christian while practicing violence and greed. Because Paul had told them that they were under grace, not under law. The ethical guard rails that Jesus loved were removed, leaving behind a religion of pure belief that could be used to justify almost anything. When we look at the death of the law, we see the true birth of what we now call Christianity. It is not the religion of the Jewish teacher from Nazareth. It is the religion of the Roman citizen from Tarsus. Paul took the beautiful, grounded, and demanding spirituality of the Torah and turned it into a cosmic mystery that required no obedience, only submission to his specific narrative. He killed the law to save his mission. And in doing so, he betrayed the very man he claimed to serve. To find the real Jesus, we must go back past the letters of Paul and rediscover the man who believed that every single commandment was a precious gift from the divine meant to be lived out with every breath. The great betrayal was the moment the church traded the difficult truth of the law for the easy lie of a lawless grace. To understand the third massive transformation that Paul forced upon the story of Jesus, we must look at the way the human heart perceives itself. If the first lie was about who Jesus was and the second lie was about how we should live, then this third lie, the mechanics of guilt, is about who we are at our very core. It is the most psychologically powerful tool ever devised by a religious mind. It is the invention of a problem that didn't exist so that Paul could sell a solution that only he possessed. This is the creation of original sin and the dark transactional logic of blood atonement.
When Jesus walked among the people, his message was one of radical intimacy and immediate forgiveness. He told stories of a father who runs to embrace a weward son the moment he sees him on the horizon, asking for no sacrifice, no payment, and no blood. To Jesus, God was a father who already loved his children.
Jesus looked at children and said, "The kingdom of heaven belongs to them." He did not look at a newborn baby and see a vessel of wrath or a child of sin. He saw purity. In the world of Jesus, sin was an act of the will, a mistake you made that you could turn away from. It was not a genetic disease you were born with. But Paul, looking through the lens of Greco Roman drama and legalistic fear, changed the narrative. He introduced a concept that is found nowhere in the teachings of Jesus. the idea that every human being is born broken because of a man named Adam. Paul turned the poetic story of the Garden of Eden into a cosmic trap. He argued that because one man ate a fruit thousands of years ago, every single person who has ever lived is born guilty in the eyes of God. This is the lie of original sin. It is a brilliant, albeit cruel, psychological maneuver. If you can convince a person that they are born dirty, that their very nature is offensive to the creator, you have broken their spirit, you have made them a prisoner who is desperately searching for a key. Why would Paul do this? The answer is found in the power of the global problem. If Paul wanted to create a universal religion that could span the entire Roman Empire, he needed a problem that applied to everyone, Jew and Gentile alike. By claiming that all of humanity was fallen in Adam, he created a universal sickness. And once the sickness was established, he could present his specific version of Jesus as the only medicine. Paul turned religion into a pharmacy of the soul where he held the only prescription. This leads us to the even darker side of this invention, the doctrine of atonement. In the simple, beautiful theology of Jesus, forgiveness was free. If you were sorry and you changed your ways, God the loving father forgiven you. But Paul could not accept a God who simply forgives. He lived in a world of Roman law and pagan sacrifices where every debt had to be paid and every god had to be appeased with blood. Paul took the tragic political execution of Jesus on a Roman cross and turned it into a payment. He taught that God was a judge who was so angry with humanity's inherited sin that he demanded a human sacrifice to satisfy his justice. Think about the horror of this shift. In Paul's hands, God is no longer the father of the prodigal son. He is a celestial debt collector who refuses to forgive until he sees blood. This is the lie of blood atonement. It suggests that Jesus had to die to save us from God himself. It turns the creator into a monster who requires the torture of his own son to keep from destroying the rest of his children. Jesus never asked for a cult of death to be built around his execution. He asked people to follow his life, not to worship his wounds. He spoke of the living God, but Paul focused almost entirely on the dead Christ. The philosopher Spinosza would see this as a total abandonment of reason. Spinosa argued that God is perfect and lacks nothing. A perfect being cannot be angry, nor does he need payment or satisfaction. Anger and the desire for revenge are human weaknesses, not divine attributes. By projecting these human flaws onto God, Paul created a religion of fear. He made the spiritual life a matter of legal transactions where Jesus pays the price and we receive the credit. This commercialized the soul. It moved faith away from the internal transformation of the heart and into the realm of external magic. The consequences of this mechanics of guilt have been devastating for 2,000 years. By teaching people that they are inherently evil and that God is a judge who demands blood, the church gained absolute control over the human conscience. Guilt became the chain that bound the believer to the institution.
If you believe you are born a sinner and that only the blood of the lamb can save you from eternal fire, you will never dare to question the priests who claim to distribute that blood. Paul's theology created a cycle of shame and dependency. It taught people to loathe themselves and to fear their creator.
Furthermore, this lie shifted the focus of the religious life from this world to the next. Jesus spoke of bringing the kingdom of heaven down to earth through acts of justice and love. But Paul's focus was on getting into heaven by believing in the right transaction. If the main problem is a sin debt that was paid on the cross, then the purpose of life is no longer to change the world, but simply to accept the payment so you can escape the world. This made Christianity a religion of the cemetery rather than a religion of the street. It allowed the powerful to keep the poor in their place by telling them that their suffering on earth didn't matter as long as their debt was paid for the afterlife. In the end, the mechanics of guilt is a betrayal of the very essence of what Jesus represented. Jesus came to set the captives free. But Paul's theology of sin and atonement built a new, more invisible prison. It replaced the light of the father's love with the shadow of the judge's wrath. To find the truth, we must be brave enough to reject the idea that we are born broken. We must realize that God does not need a sacrifice to love us. and that the death of a prophet was not a payment for our souls, but a witness to the cruelty of empires. When we stop believing in Paul's lies about guilt, we can finally start listening to Jesus's truth about love. We can move from being debtors in a heavenly court to being children in a divine home. The cross was a Roman crime, not a divine necessity, and the only original thing about us is not our sin, but our worth. To understand the final and perhaps most deceptive layer of this historical mystery, we must look at what is missing. In any great investigation, silence speaks louder than words. If you were to sit down and read the letters of Paul from beginning to end, and if you had never heard of the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, or Luke, you would be left with a startling realization. Paul seems to know almost nothing about the life of the man he calls his Lord. This is the mystery of the silent witness. It is the final lie of omission, a deliberate choice to ignore the human Jesus in order to protect the divine myth. Think about the people you love or the teachers you admire. When you speak of them, you tell stories. You remember the way they spoke, the specific things they taught, the way they handled a crisis, and the people they chose to help. Yet in all of Paul's writings, which make up a massive portion of the New Testament, there is an eerie, chilling silence. Paul never mentions a single parable of Jesus. He never speaks of the prodigal son, or the good Samaritan. He never mentions Jesus healing the blind, walking on water, or feeding the hungry. He never mentions the sermon on the mount, the Lord's Prayer, or Jesus's specific commands regarding the poor. For Paul, the 33 years Jesus spent on this earth seemed to be an irrelevant footnote to Paul.
Only two things mattered. The death on the cross and the resurrection. Why would a man who claimed to be the greatest apostle of Jesus ignore almost everything Jesus actually said? The answer is as simple as it is disturbing.
Paul could not afford to let the real Jesus speak. If the historical Jesus, the Jewish rebel who stood for the oppressed and lived by the law, remained the center of the story, Paul would have had no authority, Paul was an outsider.
He was a man who, by his own admission, never met Jesus during his lifetime. He was a man who arrived late to the movement and often found himself in direct conflict with the original apostles in Jerusalem, the men who had actually walked, eaten, and cried with Jesus. By ignoring the life of Jesus, Paul turned the Messiah into a blank canvas. On this canvas, Paul could paint whatever theological image he desired.
If you don't talk about what Jesus taught, you can claim he taught whatever you want. If you don't talk about how Jesus lived, you can claim his life was merely a waiting room for his death.
This silence allowed Paul to transform a revolutionary Jewish teacher into a helanized cosmic spirit. It allowed him to move the focus away from the difficult earthly ethics of Jesus and toward a mystical heavenly religion of his own making. This was a strategic power play. The original apostles in Jerusalem, led by Peter and James, the brother of Jesus, held the historical authority. They knew the facts. They knew what Jesus liked, what he hated, and exactly what he meant when he spoke about the kingdom of God. Paul knew that as long as the movement was based on these historical facts, he would always be a secondary figure. To seize control of the narrative, Paul had to shift the foundation. He claimed that he didn't need to listen to the people who knew Jesus because he had received a direct revelation from a spiritual Christ in a vision. He effectively said that his ghost, Jesus, was more important than their flesh and blood Jesus. Baroo Spininoza, the philosopher who sought the truth through the clear light of reason, warned us about the danger of putting revelation above history. When a person claims a private vision that contradicts the known facts of history, they are often seeking power, not truth.
Spinosa understood that the life of a person is where their true essence resides. By cutting Jesus away from his life and his Jewish context, Paul moved the religion into the realm of pure imagination. He replaced the Jesus of history with the Christ of faith, a figure that could be shaped to fit the needs of the Roman Empire or any future power structure. This silence also served the purpose of universalism. The real Jesus was deeply rooted in his culture. His teachings were filled with references to Jewish life, the Torah, and the struggles of a people under Roman occupation. If Paul had focused on those teachings, it would have been very difficult to convince a Roman centurion or a Greek philosopher to join the movement. By stripping Jesus of his life, his stories, and his specific Jewish instructions, Paul made him generic. He turned Jesus into a universal symbol of salvation that required no cultural understanding and no commitment to the specific ethics of the Jewish prophets. He made the religion easy to export, but in doing so, he emptied it of its original soul.
The tragedy of this silent witness is that the church followed Paul's lead.
For centuries, the followers of this religion have focused more on the fact of the resurrection than on the way of the life. We have built cathedrals to a divine icon while ignoring the man who told us to give everything to the poor.
We have argued over the complex theology of Paul's letters. While the simple clear calls for justice in the parables of Jesus gathered dust, Paul's silence became the church's silence. It created a world where you could call yourself a Christian without ever having to act like Jesus because Paul had convinced everyone that only the faith in the death mattered. In the end, we must ask ourselves, who is the true witness? Is it the man who never met Jesus and ignored his words or is it the life itself? The lie of part four is the most subtle because it is a lie of the shadow. By casting a shadow over the life of Jesus, Paul ensured that he would be the one to interpret the meaning of the man. He became the gatekeeper. But if we are to find the truth, we must step out of Paul's shadow. We must look at the silence and ask why it is there. We must realize that the miracles, the parables, and the human struggles of Jesus were not irrelevant details. They were the message. To rediscover the real Jesus, we must be willing to ignore Paul's letters for a moment and listen to the voice that Paul tried to drown out. We must look at the prophet who stood in the dirt, who touched the outcasts, and who spoke truth to power. Paul's cosmic Christ is a majestic statue, but the historical Jesus is a living breath. One is a silent idol created for an empire.
The other is a loud demanding teacher who calls us to change the world. The silence of Paul was the death of the teacher. But our recognition of that silence can be the beginning of the teacher's resurrection in our own lives.
We do not need a cosmic mystery to be good. We need the courage to follow the man that Paul was too afraid to talk
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