Notthedarkweb
Indian phil, German idealism, Rawls
This answer is very insightful and interesting. Catholicism too takes Paul's epistles into significant consideration and account.
Nevertheless as a person who has been raised Catholic, I know that the Gospels are the truth dictated by our Lord Jesus, whereas Paul's epistles are admonishments and advises from either great apostle of Christianity.
The other is Saint Peter.
ERGO
Jesus the Lord prevails over a man, Paul.
So my question still stands: are the Gospels more authoritative than Paul's epistles?
By authoritative I mean that if there are two verses (one from the epistles and one from the Gospels) that slightly contradict each other, the Gospels prevail. At least that's what I was taught.
I mean, no, this seems like an insane extreme. The normative position of the creedal churches is that the entire Canon has been freely given by the grace of God to humanity, including the Pauline texts, authentic or non-authentic. The Gospels are second-person accounts of Jesus' life as a testament to God's activity in the world as the Son and his promise to us of salvation. Paul's epistles, and the other epistles in the text, are the Godhead's own self-reflection on its real life in the world and its mission, i.e. it is fundamental theology since its perfect science of being as revealed to being itself (God as perfect being.)
Both are absolutely necessary for an understanding of the Christian faith because there is no Christian faith separate from Paul's theology of it. At least Luke-Acts and John are very heavily inspired by Pauline Christology, and Luke-Acts is basically the Gospel account as undertaken through Pauline methods, to the point that it departs from Mark to basically all but quote Paul.