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Old 04-16-2011, 09:13 AM   #91
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I used to be a conspiracy theorist and I debated my way out of it
I know the feeling. I was attracted for a while to the thesis that Q never existed. The first time I got into a debate about it, I got my ass kicked.

And then there was the time I tried to argue for reinstating literacy tests for voters.
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Old 04-16-2011, 07:15 PM   #92
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I think you have a good point about Paul. I find it a little bizarre that mythicists tend to think that Paul's Jesus was merely spiritual, given the small handful of times he seemingly refers to what could only be a plainly physical human Jesus. I don't want to debate those passages of Paul specifically in this thread, BUT it occurred to me that such a rhetorical point is favored among the mythicists because, if it were true that Paul's Jesus were seemingly spiritual and nothing else, then it would be a point where mythicists have explanatory power. As in: we would strongly expect that Paul's writing about Jesus would be nothing but spiritual if that really were the earliest Christian belief about Jesus. It would constitute convincing evidence that Jesus was nothing but myth.

I've never been entirely convinced of Earl Doherty's position, it does seem to me that "Paul" speaks of a Jesus who has some fleshly aspect. But the main point here is that "Paul" seemingly shows no awareness that any of the people he is talking about (the "Pillars", Cephas, etc) were actually personal disciples of a fleshly Jesus.

That (it seems to me) is the link to something non-fantastic, and to the later Gospel take, that's missing.
It is quite amazing how the Canon of the Church with the Pauline writings can be so twisted to become virtually unrecognizable.

The NT Canon is about God Incarnate, that is God in the FLESH and "Paul" did write of God's OWN Son that was God Incarnate.

Examine the mention of "God Incarnate" in Galatians 4.4
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But when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law....
In the NT CANON, Jesus could NOT have been DESCRIBED as a man. A mere man has NO theological value in the NT CANON.


The doctrine of the CHURCH MUST BE EXPECTED to be COMPATIBLE with its CANON.

An "historical Jesus" cannot be ARGUED from the NT CANON. It is virtually IMPOSSIBLE unless those who compiled the Canon were COMPLETE IDIOTS and did NOT know the doctrine of the Church.
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Old 04-16-2011, 07:38 PM   #93
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I used to be a conspiracy theorist and I debated my way out of it
I know the feeling. I was attracted for a while to the thesis that Q never existed. The first time I got into a debate about it, I got my ass kicked.

And then there was the time I tried to argue for reinstating literacy tests for voters.
Getting your ass kicked cannot make "Q" EXIST. One does not need IMAGINARY evidence to develop a theory unless they want to get their ass kicked.

Why are people, and even Scholars, claiming IMAGINARY evidence is out there somewhere that SUPPORTS "their theories"?

Has it never dawned on them that "IMAGINARY evidence" is ALWAYS in favor of the one who IMAGINES the very "evidence"?

I have NOT come across anyone who ASSERTS that there is IMAGINARY evidence out there somewhere which will definitely debunk them.

A theory NEEDS actual DATA not hypothetical imaginary sources unless you want to get your ass kicked.

We have the NT Canon and the Church writings and they are ABSOLUTELY clear about what was BELIEVED about Jesus.

There is ZERO doubt that Jesus was described as God Incarnate in Galatians 4.4, the Child of the Holy Ghost and a Virgin, the WORD that was God and the Creator.

It is CLEAR that there is PRIMA FACIE evidence of MYTH JESUS in the NT CANON.

There is NO NEED for "Q".
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Old 04-17-2011, 10:13 AM   #94
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Problem is "Paul", as he admits, never once met this man while he was on earth, never bothers to mention where or from whom he heard this belief, and never bothers to provide any further claim or evidence that any of his associates or companions had ever personally met the -man- known as 'Jesus of Nazareth' either.

As a witness for the existence of a real-life, flesh and blood man named Jesus, "Paul" simply is not.
Yes, that's it - but I think the main point is the point about it not being clear, from the "Paul" writings, that the Jesus he's talking about, was someone known personally to the other people he's talking about, the Jerusalem crowd, the Cephas, the James, the "Pillars".

If there were that link, then I think the that would be pretty decent internal evidence that would make the HJ quite a bit more plausible; then you'd have a continuity of conception about what the Jesus entity was, from its earliest manifestation to its later - i.e. that this entity gave teachings, walked about with the earliest known advocates, etc.

It's the fact that that link of personal discipleship is made in the later gospels, that gives the HJ case its prima facie plausibility. But the "silence" of that sort of connection in the "Paul" writings, is what gives one second thoughts.

Or to put it another way, if our only evidence for Christianity was the gospels, then HJ would be more viable. It's the "silence" wrt personal discipleship in the "Paul" writings, the lack of any humanly-handed-down teachings from the cult deity, and the "Paul" writings being supposedly earlier, that gums up the works.
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Old 04-17-2011, 01:30 PM   #95
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It's the fact that that link of personal discipleship is made in the later gospels, that gives the HJ case its prima facie plausibility. But the "silence" of that sort of connection in the "Paul" writings, is what gives one second thoughts.
The Gospels has NO PRIMA FACIE evidence that Jesus was a man. "Mere Existence" is NOT the criteria for the HJ argument.

MERE existence is the argument of Fundamentalists and some Christians. HJers are arguing Jesus was just a man who hardly did anything found in the NT Gospels.

People BELIEVED myths existed in antiquity.

In the Gospels, the ANGEL GABRIEL "EYEBALLED" MARY so can we ALSO claim there was an "historical" Gabriel.

Jesus as the Son of God, born of the Holy Ghost and a Virgin, is NOT the HJ argument. HJers have fundamentally REJECTED the Jesus of the NT as myth and embellished but have no actual credible evidence to support their man Jesus.

HJers MUST provide a credible source of antiquity for their MAN. Only actual credible evidence from antiquity can provide any EXPLANATORY power.
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Old 04-17-2011, 08:01 PM   #96
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The Gospels has NO PRIMA FACIE evidence that Jesus was a man.
To us moderns, an entity that walks and talks with his disciples, and gives them teachings, is a more plausible candidate for being a myth that has a man at the root of it, than one that doesn't.

To see what I mean, suppose the Christ myth we had was all grand supernatural stuff about floating around in the clouds, superheroics, etc., with nothing Clark Kentish about it at all, nothing even vaguely human - then the notion of a historical man behind the myth wouldn't make much sense would it?

It's because there are these human-seeming bits in the myth, that the HJ idea has some plausibility.

It just so happens that it's unsupported by external evidence (evidence, outside the cult texts, of a historically verified man called Jesus, who had disciples, or whatever). It also doesn't fit very well with the slightly later early Christian history (Walter Bauer), which suggests that the orthodox elements revolving around the cult figure giving teachings while on earth (apostolic succession) are later (which also fits with the gospels being later).
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