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Old 06-15-2006, 03:46 PM   #121
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Originally Posted by Didymus
Well, it's a helluva lot easier to dismiss Doherty as an un-peer-reviewed amateur than it is to refute him. Much as I respect Ehrman's work with text criticism, I think he and most other scholars are out of their element here, so they are trying to dodge the issue for as long as they can. After all, the question of Jesus' historicity was settled for them in the fifth grade.

A response to Doherty would put their academic reputations at risk ("We don't debate amateurs. Why are you giving that crackpot an academic forum?") and grant him academic stature of a sort, which in turn would send other scholars scurrying to get up to speed.

It could happen, but I'm looking for a lot more specious appeals to authority before it does.

Didymus
Voost's Jesus outside the New Testament offers arguments that extra-biblical evidence for Jesus is strong evidence for the historicity of Jesus.

Bart Ehrman addresses these issues, which other posters have alluded to. For example, while some jewish groups were looking for a messianic figure who would liberate israel from roman rule, there is no recorded evidence in the first century of any jewish group expecting a messiah who would be crucified. such a suggestion strongly goes against the expectations of what the messiah is and would do, and hence it is probably historical.

also the mere claim a man name jesus is not particularly extraordinary.
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Old 06-15-2006, 03:52 PM   #122
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Originally Posted by RUmike
The point is, there is no good reason for an early Christian to invent a saying that places John above Jesus.
There is no such thing as "an early xian" writing a gospel. It is Jewish literature.
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Originally Posted by RUmike
The most plausible explanation of how it entered the tradition in the first place is that Jesus in fact said it.
Only guess work. And meaningless. Thank you for proving my point.
"Plausible" : :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: Your fantasy only.
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Of course you ignore this because it doesn't mesh with your theory that nothing historical can be found in the gospels.
Strawman. Read better what I wrote. Now of course I can challenge your reading skills also for the gospels...
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Old 06-15-2006, 03:55 PM   #123
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Originally Posted by post tenebras lux
So ... what is the evidence for a HP folks?
Rien.
But here this question does not rise much interest. They are late compared to European studies.
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Old 06-15-2006, 03:57 PM   #124
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So there's no extra-biblical evidence?

Nada?
Nada. Nothing.
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Old 06-15-2006, 04:03 PM   #125
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Originally Posted by Toto
The evidence for a Historic Paul is that we have some letters written by someone who calls himself Paul. Most people accept that as sufficient evidence. Even if the letters were forged, they were presumably forged in the name of a significant person.
"Presumably?" Who knows? Nobody. Again only guess work.

Hermann Detering: Paulusbriefe ohne Paulus.

These "letters" mean a complete ideological turnover from the gospels. Written by renegate Jews.
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Old 06-15-2006, 04:13 PM   #126
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Thanks dog-on, at 203 pages it looks like quite a read, but I'll try to during my upcoming long weekend. I've already noticed that he mentions Pope Ratty's interpretation of 'Fortunate Hans' on page 182.
And this link to show to our US friends :
The Denial of the Historicity of Jesus in Past and Present so that they will understand that Doherty brings something new only to those who can't read foreign languages... And it is far from complete. There is a long tradition of myth support here. it is sad that they seem not to be aware of it focusing all on Doherty. Did he only bring something new from the previous myth treatments?
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Old 06-15-2006, 04:34 PM   #127
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discussion on the pericope of the adulteress has been separated out here
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Old 06-15-2006, 04:52 PM   #128
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Originally Posted by ChrisWeimer
Robert Price and Richard Carrier are other examples, though from last I heard neither were mythicists per se, i.e. they thought that though we cannot know anything about them, they didn't begin as myths, as you posited in The Jesus Puzzle. The exchange I had with Carrier not too long ago led me to believe that was his position, and what I read of Price in The Incredibly Shrinking Son of Man that was his position as well. Deterring is another mythicist. If you know better of Price's and Carrier's positions, do tell. I'm all for listening.
Richard Carrier has recently declared himself a mythicist. In fact, I thought it was on this board that he did so. I’m not necessarily taking the credit for that, but I understand that his own studies on the Gospel of Mark pushed him over the edge. He appealed to Bayes’ Theorem and comes up with a figure of 80%+ in favor of no HJ, which he regards as virtually equivalent to certain. At least, that’s how I understood him. As for Price, between Deconstructing Jesus and the Incredible Shrink, I think he is a mythicist in all but tattooing it on his forehead. (I won’t tell you where I’ve got mine tattooed.)

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I only responded to it when it was brought up by Ted Hoffman and Gakusei Don about your interpretation of it, which was that by kata sarka you meant not flesh but sublunar realm.
This is a misconception, or at least a distortion. I have never said that kata sarka means, literally, the sublunar realm, as though Paul uses it as a place name for some spiritual dimension below the moon. As Paul himself uses it, sarx is a term with a wide range of meaning. Kata with the accusative of that word can mean (among a lot of other things) “in the region of” or “in relation to,” which are two rather different applications. The first represents spatial aspect, and since the realm of “flesh” was synonymous with change and corruptibility, and encompassed even spiritual entities like the demons, it could be applied to the entire area below the moon; I maintain it could refer to a descending deity’s state or activity when he was in that area. (Some of the remarks I quoted from the TDNT would support that.) The second is not spatial, but a marker of relationship. It could refer to the deity’s activities in regard to, how they affected or intereacted with, what relationship he bore to, that realm of flesh. The two applications overlap in such a case, and the question is, could that have been Paul’s thinking in some of his uses of kata sarka? If he did regard Jesus as a descending deity who stopped short of the surface of the earth, how else would he have expressed the nature he assumed, and the effects he had on, humanity and the human realm? I simply suggest that sarx would have been the natural choice.

Ramsey demands some kind of proof that Paul actually thought this way. I have supplied all sorts of indicators. I have shown how his (by which I also mean his imitators and other early epistle writers) language and imagery shows Middle Platonic elements (Hebrews is a perfect example). And I have argued that my interpretation of certain terms, as laid out in the preceding paragraph, cannot be demonstrated to be impossible or even unlikely. (Which isn’t the same thing as saying it has to be right.) When this interpretation is combined with other factors in the mythicist case, with other documents such as the Ascension of Isaiah, with the period’s heavy, if not exclusive, reliance on scripture for info about Christ, and the portrayal of scripture as some kind of mystical world from which Christ “speaks” and makes himself known—taken of course with the utter absence of oral tradition and historical events in the epistles: even the one supposedly clear Gospel event (1 Cor. 11:23f) is compromised by being spoken of as something revealed to Paul directly from the Lord—then you’ve got good grounds for interpreting things as I have.

Quote:
This was never convincing. What's the difference between creating someone ex scripturis or justifying what they've done by selective example of the scripture?
Ah, but the problem is, your latter alternative is simply conjectural, and is entirely dependent on introducing Gospel preconceptions into the equation. It is not based on any indication in the texts. This is clear in everything from Paul to Hebrews to 1 Clement. They do not compare scriptural elements to historical elements. You need two sides of an equation to justify a consideration of your latter alternative: pointing to scriptural indicators and comparing them with historical tradition. No one in the epistles does this. Not even Barnabas, who has a foot in both camps, does it, showing that he had the barest of concepts that Christ had been present on earth, but virtually no details of that life. (I suggest looking at my article on Jesus in the Apostolic Fathers.)

Nor does 1 Cor. 15:3-4 fill the bill, since we can’t be sure that Jesus died, buried and risen kata tas graphas is “in fulfillment of the scriptures” or simply “according to the scriptures” in the sense of ‘as the scriptures tells us,’ “on the basis of” (another lexiconal meaning) what the scriptures say.

Your argument reminds of the “interpretation of Jesus” claim: that the hymns, Hebrews, Paul’s ‘transcendent’ treatment of Christ is in fact an interpretation of the Gospel Jesus by early writers and thinkers. This is simply a case of reading the Gospels into the epistles, since in this alleged interpretation, the figure of the Gospel Jesus is never mentioned. We have no indicators that such a figure is even in these writers’ minds.

The turn of the era was a philosophical soup. Platonism, while dominant at the time, competed with other systems. Judaism had multiple expressions with varying degrees of absorption of Hellenism. Paul came from the Diaspora, and virtually his entire activity took place outside Judea. It’s simply not legitimate to try to lock him into any one school of thought, or try to prove anything thereby.

A careful analysis (actually, it doesn’t even have to be all that careful) of how Paul uses the term sarx (along with “body”) in relation to Christ is a good indicator that a simple human man was the furthest thing from his mind. I have drafted a lengthy discussion on that matter which I will be incorporating into the second edition of TJP.

By the way, I misinterpreted what I read online about a book at one of our local university libraries. I was not able to find a text by pseudo-Ocellus as recorded by Stobaeus. But since GakuseiDon has departed the precincts to devote himself to historical fiction (perhaps following in the footsteps of Mark & Co.), perhaps no one is too concerned that I can’t supply Ocellus’ text after all. And it doesn’t seem to be traceable on the Internet, at least that I could find.

All the best,
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Old 06-15-2006, 06:09 PM   #129
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Johann_Kaspar
There is no such thing as "an early xian" writing a gospel. It is Jewish literature.
It is either Jewish Christian or Gentile Christian literature.

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Only guess work. And meaningless. Thank you for proving my point.
"Plausible" : :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: :rolling: Your fantasy only.
Unfortunately, you have NO plausible explanation as to how such a saying entered the tradition. Yet you laugh at me for some reason.

Quote:
Strawman. Read better what I wrote. Now of course I can challenge your reading skills also for the gospels...
You wrote, "it means there is about nothing historical in them as a matter of facts". For all intents and purposes I didn't misread you at all.
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Old 06-15-2006, 10:42 PM   #130
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Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
People who think that the gospels are only partly myth, even if they think the part is 99 percent, are considered historicists. What is called the mythicist position is that Jesus was entirely mythical, that the gospels have zero basis in historical fact.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Didymus
I can agree only with the last sentence.

What basis do you have for the all-or-nothing-at-all rule?
I'm not offering it as a rule. I'm offering it as observed usage. It is how I have seen the words used. If you are advocating that they should be used differently, I'm not quarreling with you on that point. I'm just saying that as far as I can tell from what I have noticed, people are not called mythicists unless they believe that there was no real man on which the gospel stories were based, loosely or otherwise, directly or indirectly.

Of course my reading in this area has not been exhaustive. Far from it. Maybe the words are in fact used by some people as you say they should be used. If so, then I am in error and it won't bother me to admit it.
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