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Old 08-30-2008, 03:34 PM   #1121
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actually, each one of those events were prophesied and anyone reading the OT expectantly would have expected just that. Why are you surprised that they did not? Matthew (21:42), Mark (12:10), Luke (20:17), and 1 Pet (2:7) all explain very clearly that Jesus stated he needed to be rejected by the Jews in order to fulfill his purpose as prophesied in

(Psa 118:22) The stone which the builders discarded
has become the cornerstone.
(Psa 118:23) This is the LORD's work.
We consider it amazing!
(Psa 118:24) This is the day the LORD has brought about.
We will be happy and rejoice in it.
but regardless, tell me what you know of the Messiah they expected at AD 70. How were they planning on identifying the Messiah?
Now, who were Matthew, Mark, Luke or Peter?

I cannot find any credible non-apologetic information about these people.

In the NT, some-one called Peter walked on water, saw Jesus transfigure, (his face was shining like the sun) and an angel helped him to escape from jail.

In the NT, in a book called gMatthew, it is written that Jesus was the offspring of the Holy Ghost.

In a book called Mark, it is written that Jesus was RISEN after being dead for three days.

The author of a book called Luke wrote that Jesus was carried up to heaven after he resurrected.

All these events can hardly be true. These writers cannot be credible. And they may not have been Jews.

Again, you cannot use the NT to CORROBORATE the NT, you MUST use external non-apologetic sources.

And anyone can take verses out of context and claim it is prophecy. And none of the verses you quoted from Psalms have the words, Jesus, the Son of the God of the Jews, or that Jesus will resurrect, or that Jesus' face will shine like the sun during the days of Tiberius.

The words Jesus, the offspring of the Holy Ghost cannot be found anywhere in the entire OT.
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Old 08-30-2008, 09:32 PM   #1122
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Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
actually, each one of those events were prophesied and anyone reading the OT expectantly would have expected just that. Why are you surprised that they did not? Matthew (21:42), Mark (12:10), Luke (20:17), and 1 Pet (2:7) all explain very clearly that Jesus stated he needed to be rejected by the Jews in order to fulfill his purpose as prophesied in

(Psa 118:22) The stone which the builders discarded
has become the cornerstone.
(Psa 118:23) This is the LORD's work.
We consider it amazing!
(Psa 118:24) This is the day the LORD has brought about.
We will be happy and rejoice in it.
but regardless, tell me what you know of the Messiah they expected at AD 70. How were they planning on identifying the Messiah?
Now, who were Matthew, Mark, Luke or Peter?

I cannot find any credible non-apologetic information about these people.

In the NT, some-one called Peter walked on water, saw Jesus transfigure, (his face was shining like the sun) and an angel helped him to escape from jail.

In the NT, in a book called gMatthew, it is written that Jesus was the offspring of the Holy Ghost.

In a book called Mark, it is written that Jesus was RISEN after being dead for three days.

The author of a book called Luke wrote that Jesus was carried up to heaven after he resurrected.

All these events can hardly be true. These writers cannot be credible. And they may not have been Jews.

Again, you cannot use the NT to CORROBORATE the NT, you MUST use external non-apologetic sources.

And anyone can take verses out of context and claim it is prophecy. And none of the verses you quoted from Psalms have the words, Jesus, the Son of the God of the Jews, or that Jesus will resurrect, or that Jesus' face will shine like the sun during the days of Tiberius.

The words Jesus, the offspring of the Holy Ghost cannot be found anywhere in the entire OT.
but regardless, tell me what you know of the Messiah they expected at AD 70. How were they planning on identifying the Messiah?
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Old 08-30-2008, 09:48 PM   #1123
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Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post

Now, who were Matthew, Mark, Luke or Peter?

I cannot find any credible non-apologetic information about these people.

In the NT, some-one called Peter walked on water, saw Jesus transfigure, (his face was shining like the sun) and an angel helped him to escape from jail.

In the NT, in a book called gMatthew, it is written that Jesus was the offspring of the Holy Ghost.

In a book called Mark, it is written that Jesus was RISEN after being dead for three days.

The author of a book called Luke wrote that Jesus was carried up to heaven after he resurrected.

All these events can hardly be true. These writers cannot be credible. And they may not have been Jews.

Again, you cannot use the NT to CORROBORATE the NT, you MUST use external non-apologetic sources.

And anyone can take verses out of context and claim it is prophecy. And none of the verses you quoted from Psalms have the words, Jesus, the Son of the God of the Jews, or that Jesus will resurrect, or that Jesus' face will shine like the sun during the days of Tiberius.

The words Jesus, the offspring of the Holy Ghost cannot be found anywhere in the entire OT.
but regardless, tell me what you know of the Messiah they expected at AD 70. How were they planning on identifying the Messiah?
See "Wars of the Jews" 6.5.4 by Josephus, "Histories" by Tacitus and "Life of Vespasian" by Suetonius.
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Old 08-31-2008, 01:57 AM   #1124
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I have already given some perallels, it's up to you to show why you reject the hypothesis.
You have made claims, some of which may be justified, but you have provided little or no primary evidence to support these claims
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Originally Posted by angelo atheist View Post
Christianity was not a new and unique revelation but a Jewish adaption of the Pagan religions that pre-date Christianity by centuries.
There's an icon in Poland I think, which depicts a black Madonna with the infant Horus in her arms, which dates to centuries before Mary and infant Jesus.
I don't have the time to Google it, but you're welcome to do so if you so feel.
There is an article about the Polish Black Madonna here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bla...%C4%99stochowa and a general discussion of Black Madonnas here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Madonna With a comparison of images of Isis and Mary
here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:MaryAndHorus.JPG

It is probably correct that Christian depictions of the Madonna (from c 400 CE onwards) were influenced by the artistic conventions for depicting Isis and Horus but this is irrelevant as to the originality or otherwise of the Gospel narratives themselves.

FWIW what is apparently the earliest surviving depiction of the Madonna and Child does not IMO resemble the pagan imagery of Isis and Horus http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Madonna_catacomb.jpg

Andrew Criddle
You must be able to see a resemblance if you remove your blinkers of authenticity you seem to be placing on the gospel accounts.
Of course the Isis and infant Horus depiction is more primitive, it's after all centuries older.
At least you admit that the depiction may have been influenced by it.

I hold that the whole myth of the Christ is no more or less than the evolution of ancient myths of Pagan saviours and man-gods, some, millennia before Christianity.
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Old 08-31-2008, 02:11 AM   #1125
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Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
actually, each one of those events were prophesied and anyone reading the OT expectantly would have expected just that. Why are you surprised that they did not? Matthew (21:42), Mark (12:10), Luke (20:17), and 1 Pet (2:7) all explain very clearly that Jesus stated he needed to be rejected by the Jews in order to fulfill his purpose as prophesied in

(Psa 118:22) The stone which the builders discarded
has become the cornerstone.
(Psa 118:23) This is the LORD's work.
We consider it amazing!
(Psa 118:24) This is the day the LORD has brought about.
We will be happy and rejoice in it.
but regardless, tell me what you know of the Messiah they expected at AD 70. How were they planning on identifying the Messiah?
Now, who were Matthew, Mark, Luke or Peter?

I cannot find any credible non-apologetic information about these people.

In the NT, some-one called Peter walked on water, saw Jesus transfigure, (his face was shining like the sun) and an angel helped him to escape from jail.

In the NT, in a book called gMatthew, it is written that Jesus was the offspring of the Holy Ghost.

In a book called Mark, it is written that Jesus was RISEN after being dead for three days.

The author of a book called Luke wrote that Jesus was carried up to heaven after he resurrected.

All these events can hardly be true. These writers cannot be credible. And they may not have been Jews.

Again, you cannot use the NT to CORROBORATE the NT, you MUST use external non-apologetic sources.

And anyone can take verses out of context and claim it is prophecy. And none of the verses you quoted from Psalms have the words, Jesus, the Son of the God of the Jews, or that Jesus will resurrect, or that Jesus' face will shine like the sun during the days of Tiberius.

The words Jesus, the offspring of the Holy Ghost cannot be found anywhere in the entire OT.
I wish to add that Mohammad also rose into heaven on a flying horse. And almost all myths of messiahs also, all rose into heaven. Which if you notice, all depict a three tiered view of the world. Hades under the earth, the earth itself, and heaven above the canopy of the sky.
In other words. The earth is all there is at the center of creation.
These primitive people wrote what to them was what they understood of the world around them.
That some 21st century men can read and place any credence at all to these very primitive almost childlike fairy tales explains why this world is so much in danger of becoming extinct because of our stupidity.
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Old 08-31-2008, 07:02 AM   #1126
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Are you saying that you beleive these quotes could be from a common tradition (oral or written)
Yes, and I'd assume oral tradition absent evidence to the contrary.

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Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
and only the ones quoted citing reference are possibly from the writings in question?
Yes, but I'm not aware that either of them cited any sources. That was my point. If they did not cite a source, they cannot be used as evidence for the source's existence in their time.

Of course that doesn't prove the source's contemporary nonexistence. But a writer who doesn't cite a source can't be proof that the source did exist.
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Old 08-31-2008, 07:03 AM   #1127
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That some 21st century men can read and place any credence at all to these very primitive almost childlike fairy tales explains why this world is so much in danger of becoming extinct because of our stupidity.
These 21st century men want to go HEAVEN, they want to get ETERNAL LIFE.

They think that when the world goes extinct they are going to be with their God.
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Old 08-31-2008, 09:53 AM   #1128
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
Are you saying that you beleive these quotes could be from a common tradition (oral or written)
Yes, and I'd assume oral tradition absent evidence to the contrary.

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
and only the ones quoted citing reference are possibly from the writings in question?
Yes, but I'm not aware that either of them cited any sources. That was my point. If they did not cite a source, they cannot be used as evidence for the source's existence in their time.

Of course that doesn't prove the source's contemporary nonexistence. But a writer who doesn't cite a source can't be proof that the source did exist.
I am curious why you would assume oral tradition versus leaving it as unknown. Is there some reason for this assumption?

Is Justin Martyr citing a source when he cites the memoirs of the apostles?

~Steve
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Old 08-31-2008, 10:08 AM   #1129
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Default Josephus' writings document increased atheism...

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter, inquiring about Josephus' description of the Jews under Roman occupation, facing imminent destruction of Jerusalem,
but regardless, tell me what you know of the Messiah they expected at AD 70. How were they planning on identifying the Messiah?
Quote:
.... And here I cannot but speak my mind, and what the concern I am under dictates to me, and it is this: I suppose, that had the Romans made any longer delay in coming against these villains {i.e. the two Jewish warlords: "John", and "Simon"}, that the city would either have been swallowed up by the ground opening upon them, or been overflowed by water, or else been destroyed by such thunder as the country of Sodom perished by, for it had brought forth a generation of men much more atheistical than were those that suffered such punishments; for by their madness it was that all the people came to be destroyed.
I have not found, in reading this particular volume, V, of Josephus' magnum opus, any reference to expectation of arrival of a messiah.
Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
Based on Josephus, Wars of the Jews 6.5.4. the Jews EXPECTED A MESSIAH at around 70CE, not at the time of Tiberius.
Quote:
But now, what did the most elevate them in undertaking this war, was an ambiguous oracle that was also found in their sacred writings, how," about that time, one from their country should become governor of the habitable earth." The Jews took this prediction to belong to themselves in particular, and many of the wise men were thereby deceived in their determination.
Again, this pair of sentences does not convey a strong sense of belief in the imminent arrival of a saviour.
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Old 08-31-2008, 10:22 AM   #1130
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But now, what did the most elevate them in undertaking this war, was an ambiguous oracle that was also found in their sacred writings, how," about that time, one from their country should become governor of the habitable earth." The Jews took this prediction to belong to themselves in particular, and many of the wise men were thereby deceived in their determination.
Again, this pair of sentences does not convey a strong sense of belief in the imminent arrival of a saviour.
Now, do you see any other passage where Josephus made a strong claim that the son of the God of the Jews, born of the Holy Ghost would come to earth during the time of Tiberius, would raise the dead, transfigure, resurrect and ascend through the clouds based on Isaiah 7.14 or any other passage in the OT?

Josephus, the Jew, claimed the Jews expected a military-political Messiah, probably similar to Simon bar Kokchba who was called the Messiah around 135 CE.
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