Paton, W. R., on the Sacaea, 53
Paul’s general aloofness from the historical Jesus, 138;
did not prevent his testifying to the main facts of his life, 132 foll.
Paul’s lack of appreciation of Greek art, 180;
his rivalry with the older Apostles, 134
Pauline Epistles, how handled by the deniers of Jesus’s historicity, 125;
evidence of their antiquity in Marcion, Ignatius, and Clement of Rome, 125 foll.;
mainly genuine, if judged by their contents, 131;
their evidence as regards historicity of Jesus, 132 foll.;
their picture of Jesus, 169
Peter, an understudy of Mithras or of Janus or of Proteus, 62 foll., 143;
his Epistle testifies to an historical Jesus, 153
Peter, Gospel ascribed to, recognizes the Twelve Apostles, 13
Pfleiderer, Dr., Mr. Robertson’s judgment of him, 172
Philonean character of Johannine Gospel, 103, 111
Philo’s embassy to Caligula, 180;
his docetic views as to angels visiting Abraham, 106;
his description of mob-mockery in Alexandria of the King of the Jews, 53
Pilate, the Javelin man of Dr. Drews, 27