A
angellous_evangellous
Guest
I don't think that Paul wrote 2 Thessalonians. I've been studying the letters of Paul lately and the definative Paul is Galatains, 1 Corinthians, and Romans. By this standard we can include 2 Corinthians (on a provisional basis only - it appears to be a compilation of Pauline and non-Pauline epistles), Ephesians (= Colossians), Philippians, Philemon, and 1 Thessalonians. The pastorals (1 and 2 Timothy and Titus) are pseudo-Pauline with 2 Thessalonians.
I reject 2 Thessalonians as Pauline because:
1) The letter displays a strong sense of group identity that is characteristic of a highly developed group. In other words, it seems that the letter represents a later version of Christianity than plausible for the time of Paul (with, of course, 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus).
2) The letter is apocalyptic and not an occasional epistle. It is basically an apocalypse with a salutation - it's dressed up as a letter. The occasions that are in the letter are taken from 1 Thess and unoriginal. There are apocalyptic images in the epistle that are not highlighted elsewhere in Paul.
I reject 2 Thessalonians as Pauline because:
1) The letter displays a strong sense of group identity that is characteristic of a highly developed group. In other words, it seems that the letter represents a later version of Christianity than plausible for the time of Paul (with, of course, 1 and 2 Timothy and Titus).
2) The letter is apocalyptic and not an occasional epistle. It is basically an apocalypse with a salutation - it's dressed up as a letter. The occasions that are in the letter are taken from 1 Thess and unoriginal. There are apocalyptic images in the epistle that are not highlighted elsewhere in Paul.