Thomas, Mary Magdalene, etc.
You didn't answer the question. You refer to known fakes, but didn't answer the question of why they claimed Apostolicity.
Who says they denied the resurrection? They most likely did not regard Jesus as divine, but that does not mean they also did not believe he rose from the dead. Those two issues are almost entirely separate
No Ma'am, they are one and the same. Conquering death and all that. Only way to do that is to be the giver of life; i.e., God. This is a central tenet. That some groups failed to grasp the ramifications - yeah, obviously. The Apostles themselves didn't get it, despite how many times Jesus went over all this with them before hand.
And who put these pieces together first? The man you so dearly love to hate - Saul of Tarsus. And why was he approved by the other Apostles? Because he knew what only they knew, and were taught directly by Jesus Himself. They were more than a little reluctant to accept him into their inner circle, for obvious reasons.
And your claim is something like:
I only think this because Constantine spread Christianity by the sword. (Gross over-simplification, I know) But nothing could be further from the Truth! I rejected every form of tradition at the age of 4. I met the Lord personally at age 16, under circumstances totally apart from any Church. I never went to any Church for over 3 years, over 800 miles away. And I independently arrived at the same conclusions the Orthodox have taught all along, which are entirely foreign to anything I was raised in or ever taught. And only recently, via this very website, have I even considered giving any credence to any Tradition. Truth be told it still bugs the snot out of me, but some of it undeniably makes sense. That and people do love their traditions so, so I've come a long way in not holding that against them.
You can't make your theory jibe with my facts. Yes, I realize my facts are subjective and only valid to me, and no, there's no way you can independently verify them. But to take people at face value you simply have to come to some other conclusion, even if its "I don't know."
Now,
traditions? How Christians worship, the architecture, art, music, etc? Sure! The influence of the winning army prevails. And I like to think that's why I have such a distaste for tradition. Maybe even some periphery detail? Ok. The main guts of the Gospel? Not a chance. And this is being proven more and more with physical evidence.
And personally, I am not at the mercy of any Church councils to determine for me what to read, what to think, or anything else. The basics of the Gospel are really quite simple, and were known by all (in the Church) LONG before anyone ever tried to codify anything, or even to write it down. At least you recognize it was Paul who started that process, and it had nothing to do with recording the Gospels. I'll also point out that just this much is an increase of knowledge over what we had most of the time since.
Here's what might be an incredible challenge for you: think your way through what it would mean for God to deliberately use Paul that way. I think you know enough of the relevant details, but it would force you to consider what you automatically reject. And there's some underlying
reason for that rejection.
As for my "anti-Paul bias": I've got nothing of the sort. I do believe he was a charlatan
That's bias. And charlatan means someone in it for money. He specifically wouldn't take people's money. LOGIC FAIL.
Without him, the movement would probably have been dead by the turn of the third century, like so many other fledgling religions that never quite got off the ground.
Why? You don't know the depths of how he connected Messiah to Judaism. You content yourself with hand waving it away. I can understand that as a teen, maybe as a young married, but sooner or later, if you're going to devote this much time discussing it with strangers, don't you think you should actually peer into that void?
Look at the progression: Jews accepted Him post resurrection, which is kinda shallow. Yes I'm including the first Bishop of the first Church who looked just like Jesus, His half-Brother James. What made that movement continue? There were
some Gentiles in the Church at that point, but it was still almost entirely Jewish. They never stopped going to Temple services. They were constantly barraged with doubts from their peers who didn't believe Jesus was Messiah.
It took Paul to connect those dots, and point out how Christ was throughout the OT. The other Disciples knew this via the road to Emmaus, but they weren't nearly so knowledgeable abut Judaism as Paul was, neither were they so incredibly brilliant as to put it all together. And to be fair, most Christians today
still don't get all that! While that's no barrier to Salvation, you have repeatedly admitted it is the mystics who 'really get it.' Obviously there must be some substance there! You even clearly see the life - death - rebirth cycle wherever it exists in human experience as relevant; why not examine his source for yourself and see if the connection is valid, or to be dismissed?