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Old 07-28-2011, 09:07 PM   #21
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From a past PBS show on Christianity, the gospels were likley written specificaly as promtional literature and appropriatly embellished.

From my Oxford commentary, the gospels were written in a recognizable literary form of the times. It was a tradgedy, the hero dies in the end.

Given that the writers/followers were removed from any possible actual events, having JC die was important. They were then free to form at will.

I'd have to look up chapter and verse. I recall conflict betwwen Peter and Paul with Peter asserting hey, I was there!

From Paul there were references to Christian offshoot groups he declraed inauthentic. Poiint being, having the son of god around or having specific dictated rules from JC would be inconviebient all the way around. Even today with the diversity of interpretaiton.
Granted, having JC hang around would make it more difficult for the church to do what they wanted in his name.

But still he didn't have to die. He could've ascended.
But the climactic end of the story, JC dies as a human and is resurected. Resurection for the human faithful is the fundmanmental cornerstone of the faith.
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Old 07-29-2011, 07:30 AM   #22
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Granted, having JC hang around would make it more difficult for the church to do what they wanted in his name.

But still he didn't have to die. He could've ascended.
But the climactic end of the story, JC dies as a human and is resurected. Resurection for the human faithful is the fundmanmental cornerstone of the faith.
That's the strongest argument for death. It demonstrates the eternal aspects.
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Old 07-29-2011, 09:43 AM   #23
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But the climactic end of the story, JC dies as a human and is resurected. Resurection for the human faithful is the fundmanmental cornerstone of the faith.
That's the strongest argument for death. It demonstrates the eternal aspects.
Without the alleged accounts of witness to the ressurection, there is no Christiianity.
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Old 07-29-2011, 10:07 AM   #24
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That's the strongest argument for death. It demonstrates the eternal aspects.
Without the alleged accounts of witness to the ressurection, there is no Christiianity.
As we currently understand it. There's an argument that the Gospel of Thomas, lacking any reference to the passion or resurrection, was not written for Xtians.

But there were also traditions among early Xtians that Jesus lived. Sorry my memory is not such that I have cites at my fingertips. There are also arguments that the Simon of Cyrene episode in the Passion and the quick death of Jesus with Pilates consequent surprise reflect those traditions.

Obviously those traditions didn't stand the test of time. The consensus here also seems to be that death is the strongest ending, and I agree.

My problem with the death ending is that it's so dark. I have a problem with a spirituality that demands so much contemplation of suffering, violence and brutality.

In the Phaedo, the death of Socrates isn't so grim; his last words are a joke. Maybe if Jesus were some kind of Achilles figure defeated in battle instead of a helpless victim...
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Old 07-29-2011, 10:24 AM   #25
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Without the alleged accounts of witness to the ressurection, there is no Christiianity.
As we currently understand it. There's an argument that the Gospel of Thomas, lacking any reference to the passion or resurrection, was not written for Xtians.

But there were also traditions among early Xtians that Jesus lived. Sorry my memory is not such that I have cites at my fingertips. There are also arguments that the Simon of Cyrene episode in the Passion and the quick death of Jesus with Pilates consequent surprise reflect those traditions.

Obviously those traditions didn't stand the test of time. The consensus here also seems to be that death is the strongest ending, and I agree.

My problem with the death ending is that it's so dark. I have a problem with a spirituality that demands so much contemplation of suffering, violence and brutality.

In the Phaedo, the death of Socrates isn't so grim; his last words are a joke. Maybe if Jesus were some kind of Achilles figure defeated in battle instead of a helpless victim...
Not dark, the promise of eternal life. The JC of the NT was not hanging with the elite, he was hanging with the bottom. Fishermen as disciples. Bear yoiur suffering and believe and find eteranl life. Hope for the downtrodden.

The American Christian 'god wants you to be rich' is an absolute corruption of the NT message.

Of course what we have as Christianity is based on a narrow selection of text. There were a number of competing Christian sects. Chrtianity is more correctly called Paulism.

There is no way to know what the real genesis was. That it was a Jewish movement seems to be a safe assumption.
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Old 07-29-2011, 10:35 AM   #26
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Not dark, the promise of eternal life. The JC of the NT was not hanging with the elite, he was hanging with the bottom. Fishermen as disciples. Bear yoiur suffering and believe and find eteranl life. Hope for the downtrodden.
I can't agree that it's not dark. Transcending death is of course hopeful, but a bloody tortuous death is not, sorry. I can't agree with that.

Maybe the downtrodden of the early church liked it dark. Maybe they liked it lurid; maybe they could relate to it better that way. Also there's an element of no matter how low you go, how bad it is, the promise is still there.

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There is no way to know what the real genesis was. That it was a Jewish movement seems to be a safe assumption.
I don't think a Jewish movement is at all a safe assumption. There are fingerprints of Hellenism are all over the early church.But I agree, there's no way to know.
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Old 08-04-2011, 08:14 PM   #27
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There is no way to know what the real genesis was. That it was a Jewish movement seems to be a safe assumption.
I don't think a Jewish movement is at all a safe assumption. There are fingerprints of Hellenism are all over the early church
I agree with this statement. Eusebius asserts the books of Moses to be in ways superior to the books of Plato. Why did he think he needed to do that? The Jewish language was not used, it was the Greek LXX which was "lifted" , or "borrowed" or "commandeered" as a source material with embellished and false antiquity, and then data mined to arrive with the Greek books of the new testament. One does not need any Jewish knowledge to do this. What one needs to do this is knowledge of the common greek language. That's all that is required. That's all the earliest manuscript evidence is - Greek. Jesus was a Roman fiction in Greek.


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.But I agree, there's no way to know.
I disagree, in that I think there are pathways by which we can know about the Hellenistic fingerprints with more and more technical certitude, such as the use of C14 dating etc. Time will tell. The pathways to greater knowledge is critical examination and analysis of all the available evidence, and its secure and accurate chronology. And new evidence entering the "mystery" to be solved.
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