![]() ![]() ![]() In these regards, Pagels argues that early Christianity constituted a wide variety of competing theological interpretations of Jesus’ message. In these regards, one of the most notable considerations Pagels makes concerns the conflicting nature of Jesus’ teachings. While the text’s overarching theme is the utilization of Satan as an oppositional figure throughout Christian history, it also provides a number of pertinent theological investigations. Pagels main reasoning in this regard is an argument that since the Gospels, she claims, fundamentally represent a the struggle between God and Satan, they had to have been written after the first incarnation of the identification of Satan with the Christian enemy. Pagels extends her identification of this labeling mechanism to the field of New Testament scholarship in arguing that since it was during this period the Jews were for the first time identified with Satan, then the Gospels must have been written after 70 A.D. She writes, “"The New Testament gospels almost never identify Satan with the Romans, but they consistently associated him with Jesus’ Jewish enemies." (Pagels 13). ![]() During this period, the Jews that refrained from accepting the main tenants of Christianity were labeled as being vehicles for Satan or Satanic thought. Pagels argues that Christian enemies became identified with Satan as early as the Jewish Wars from 66-73 A.D. ![]()
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