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Old 05-30-2007, 02:10 AM   #141
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Without "Christ" there would be no Christians.
Christian simply means oiled one, and even oiled thing. Do a word search and you will find the word christos applied to more than just the Joshua character.

And judging from the way Christians were described one could well make a case that they were simply a people (likely of various theologies) who doused themselves with an hallucinogenic oil. Eventually, through murder and destruction of writing, one group won out above the others and for a millennium held absolute power over much of the world through control by the State.

Joshua was as nondescript a name as John Smith is to Americans, most likely chosen for its anonymity. Now if they were called Joshuanites (or Jesusites if you prefer) maybe you would have an argument.
I think on a forum like this you'd have to give some kind evidence for the extraordinary claim re. hallucinogenic oil. I mean, it sounds "cool", but it seems a bit unlikely to me.

Anyway, I wouldn't lay too much stress on "Christos" as (AFAIK) Christians were also at times called and/or called themselves "Chrestians" ("good", "kind natured", etc.).

There's an old discussion from the IIDB archive about this subject of "Chrestus", "Christos", etc., here. I still think it bears more investigation, it's a murky area that really should be cleared up (especially considering the famous Seutonius quote). There are hints of some connection between the both terms and the Mysteries from Theosophy-influenced writers in the 19th century (Mead, Massey), but I don't know how reliable they are. I think this might be quite an important piece of the puzzle, if all these sub-pieces were gathered together in a scholarly fashion, as I hope will be done one day.

The key being: what "resonance" did these terms have for the Greeks? What associations would have come up in their mind, on hearing of someone called "Christ" or "Chreist" or "Chrestus" as a Jewish prophet?
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Old 05-30-2007, 05:26 AM   #142
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Otherwise even a casual glance would show Daniel 9:25 and 9:26 refer to a Christos, not to mention over 10 other times in the Old Testament.
Which hardly contradicts Kirby's point that no messianic pretender had ever been called "Christ" in the literature that we have.

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And that does not even count the two references in Acts that do not refer to Jesus.
Cite your references, please.
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Old 05-30-2007, 12:06 PM   #143
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....

And judging from the way Christians were described one could well make a case that they were simply a people (likely of various theologies) who doused themselves with an hallucinogenic oil. ......
I think on a forum like this you'd have to give some kind evidence for the extraordinary claim re. hallucinogenic oil. I mean, it sounds "cool", but it seems a bit unlikely to me.

...
From the archives: Jesus used cannabis
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Old 05-31-2007, 01:06 AM   #144
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I think on a forum like this you'd have to give some kind evidence for the extraordinary claim re. hallucinogenic oil. I mean, it sounds "cool", but it seems a bit unlikely to me.

...
From the archives: Jesus used cannabis
Hehe, now that is cool.

I'd just say though that it's unlikely that cannabis oil absorbed through the skin would give rise to hallucinations. It would make people feel a bit weird and receptive to ideas.

Also, I'd be wary of this because I'd think people in that region of the world (hello, Lebanon? ) would be familiar with cannabis as drug anyway, with the symptoms, etc., and not necessarily think them special or holy.

However, if they didn't know cannabis was in the oil, they might attribute their weird feeling to holiness.

At the end of the day, I think by far the bigger influence on the actual content of religion is through "visions" - what Occultists call "astral travel", which is like "lucid dreaming" (which most people have had I think), but done while awake. There's a hyper-real-seeming quality to the visions you get from this kind of practice, and a kind of coherence you don't get in dreams - entities seem to talk to you (literally it seems like you are having conversations with beings who pass the Turing Test, so to speak, so far as you can tell, and you have odd conversations with them, in which they tell you odd things usually involving symbols and numbers).

Interestingly, I was just glancing through a translation of Macrobius' commentary on The Dream of Scipio the other day, where he talks about the kinds of visions you get on the borderline between sleep and waking being the main source of religious visions. (There are mentions of this in a lot of the neo-Platonists, tucked away in obscure corners of their writings.) I think students of ancient religions and history need to re-jig the way they look at this business to take this into account, it's a real biggie, and I believe the number one source of religious matter from China to the Americas. Everything else - literature per se, philosophy per se, even mysticism per se (in the sense of Unitary visions, non-dual mysticism, oceanic feelings) is secondary, ancillary or supportive of this "fuel" of religion, which, wherever you find it, nine times out of ten, is about human beings purporting to communicate with discarnate intelligences of greater wisdom or power than themselves. Either they are lying, or fooling themselves and others (both possibilities, of course), or more charitably (at the very least) they seem to themselves to be having these conversations. (Note how a lot of ancient religious argument, even Christian vs. pagan, is "our spirits are good, truth-telling spirits, your lot are lying, deceptive spirits" - but they all accept the existence of "spirits".)

Cannabis might help jog that sort of thing along a bit, but it can be done perfectly sober too.
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Old 05-31-2007, 05:27 AM   #145
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...you are now obligated to prove that mythicism has never been subjected to peer review, which is after all, YOUR claim.
Ugh. It hasn't been subjected to peer review in established journals. There have been a few book reviews of the books by Price and Wells, mostly negative, very few positive. Anyone with access to the ATLA database could tell you this. I'm not including the now-defunct Journal of Higher Criticism since (a) it is hardly an established journal, (b) it is explicitly for the purposes of radical thinking, and (c) I'm fairly sure that they would have been hesitant to publish "mainstream" writings in their journal. I think it was peer-reviewed, but I'm not sure. I spent an inordinate amount of time searching for JM advocates on ATLA and other databases last semester, and I can assure that they have published nothing via established journals.

Can you let it die now?
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Old 05-31-2007, 06:10 AM   #146
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Two things Zeichman,
1. Define what you mean by an "established journal."
2. How you know JHC is not an established Journal.
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Old 05-31-2007, 07:02 AM   #147
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Two things Zeichman,
1. Define what you mean by an "established journal."
2. How you know JHC is not an established Journal.
1) Here are some of my personal criteria, not all are required, but at least a very good majority of these points: most importantly, individual articles would have to be searchable in databases like ATLA and WorldCat; it would have to be open to all perspectives, regardless of creed, political views, congeniality (or lack thereof) of conclusions to orthodoxy, location of minimalistic-maximalistic continuum, etc.; generally (though not always) avoids agenda-driven articles; it would be fairly well-known outside of those who have an immediate-personal-interest (as distinct from personally-interested) in its contents; at least moderately-sized academic readership; its articles would have to be cited with at least moderate frequency by non-contributors; more than 15 issues published; noteworthy scholars would have to contribute and be on the editorial board... do you want me to continue, or is this sufficient?

2) Because it filled only the last two of these criteria. I'm not saying that JHC was an illegitimate or poorly-conceived enterprise. I'm just saying it was not established. I personally would have liked to see it stay around and contribute to it, since I have a bit of an affinity for non-traditional thought, though it doesn't come out strongly on this board.
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Old 05-31-2007, 07:14 AM   #148
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2. Give me an example of someone who just passes this criteria in order for me to compare them to Jesus to understand why Jesus fails.
Off the top of my head, I’ll choose Lucretius. Like Jesus, we have little to go on about him except his being mentioned by other people. We don’t have pictures of video tape of him. Unlike Jesus, we do have an actual work that belongs to him. But what we DON’T have are radical stories of Lucretius violating the laws of nature, killing mythical beasts, or having tea with aliens. What we know of Lucretius doesn’t violate anything I believe about the real world. So the evidence of Lucretius is backed up by reality, as far as I’m concerned, and easy to accept.

Now, what if someone were to tell me that Lucretius was the son of Zeus? Oops, now I have a proposition attached to Lucretius that contradicts what I believe about the real world. Not only would I need more evidence than can be found on Wikipedia, I would now need enough evidence to convince me that Zeus exists, and then what about the rest of the Greek Gods, and why haven’t I seen any evidence of these Gods before, etc. Such a claim would count against the believability of Lucretius’ existence, and the more unsubstantiated stories about him that had cameos of Zeus the harder a time I would have believing any of them.
I think this is an excellent answer to achristianbeliever, all except the last paragraph. Shall we discount the existence of Alexander The Great because he was claimed to be a son of Zeus? Just because there are supernatural events attached to the alleged historical figure is that enough to totally discount the existence of the person? I don’t think that is necessarily reasonable.

I really have no problem accepting either mythical Jesus or historical Jesus positions. I am agnostic regarding the issue, but I lean toward there having been some historical Jew named Jesus who either started a movement or for whom a movement was begun after his death. In fact I go so far as to favor the idea that Jesus’ original teachings were correctly understood by a group known as the Ebionites who were declared heretics and wiped out by the orthodox movement.

But I could be wrong…
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Old 05-31-2007, 07:49 AM   #149
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Two things Zeichman,
1. Define what you mean by an "established journal."
2. How you know JHC is not an established Journal.
Jacob,

Do you think it accurate to characterize mythicism as part of mainstream scholarship?


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Old 05-31-2007, 08:08 AM   #150
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Do you think it accurate to characterize mythicism as part of mainstream scholarship?
No. Mythicism is not dominant so by it cannot be regarded as part of mainstream scholarship. Of course, there are mainstream scholars that favor it like Price and Thompson (yes he is mainly an OT scholar but a Biblical Scholar nonetheless) but the stance the majority of the scholars adopt toward mythicism make it appear like a private project some of its membership entertain for their own private amusement: they have never paid attention to it or discussed it in seminars and the like (But Doherty's book is in bookshelfs of main libraries - just the other day, Ben Smith got it through an interlibrary loan).
So wheras some mainstram scholars sympathize with it, it is not a mainstream theory regarding the identity of Jesus.
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