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Old 01-21-2013, 05:01 PM   #241
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Originally Posted by Robert Tulip View Post
Doherty is just looking at the text as it stands, .... Hebrews sets out the conceptual framework of the heavenly Christ that was subsequently enfleshed in the Gospels.

....
Hi Robert,

No sir, according to Earl Doherty, Hebrews does not set out the conceptual framework of the heavenly Christ that was subsequently enfleshed in the Gospels

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Originally Posted by EarlDoherty View Post
... The epistle to the Hebrews is a document produced by a group or sect which shows no connection to anything else we know of (the content of the epistle alone will tell you that), and probably only migrated outside its own circle sometime around the middle of the 2nd century. ...
Earl Doherty
What Earl cannot grasp is that this is for all practical purposes, no different from Hebrews being written in the middle of the second century.

So what does Earl's argument amount to? That an unknown sect of Christians produced the epistle to Hebrews in the 60's CE, but it remained in total isolation from contact with all other Christianity in "its own circle" until after the mid second century. And Earl apparently assumes (without ever even realizing the issue) that this unknown sect preserved the text of Hebrews some 80 to 100 years later with no changes from that was allegedly penned in the 60's CE!

Sorry, but that is not the most parsimonious answer.

Jake
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Old 01-21-2013, 10:19 PM   #242
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Originally Posted by jakejonesiv View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Robert Tulip View Post
Doherty is just looking at the text as it stands, .... Hebrews sets out the conceptual framework of the heavenly Christ that was subsequently enfleshed in the Gospels.

....
Hi Robert,

No sir, according to Earl Doherty, Hebrews does not set out the conceptual framework of the heavenly Christ that was subsequently enfleshed in the Gospels

Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty View Post
... The epistle to the Hebrews is a document produced by a group or sect which shows no connection to anything else we know of (the content of the epistle alone will tell you that), and probably only migrated outside its own circle sometime around the middle of the 2nd century. ...
Earl Doherty
What Earl cannot grasp is that this is for all practical purposes, no different from Hebrews being written in the middle of the second century.

So what does Earl's argument amount to? That an unknown sect of Christians produced the epistle to Hebrews in the 60's CE, but it remained in total isolation from contact with all other Christianity in "its own circle" until after the mid second century. And Earl apparently assumes (without ever even realizing the issue) that this unknown sect preserved the text of Hebrews some 80 to 100 years later with no changes from that was allegedly penned in the 60's CE!

Sorry, but that is not the most parsimonious answer.

Jake
1) The epistle itself, through internal analysis, leads to a dating prior to the Jewish War. This is not, for all purposes, the same as dating it in the middle of the 2nd century. (Apparently, Jake has not yet checked out my JNGNM Appendix on the subject.)

2) The fact that no one attests to it until after the middle of the 2nd century indicates that it stayed in isolation for a virtual century (although some say that 1 Clement shows a knowledge of it--I'm not sure that this is necessarily correct).

3) There is no necessity to regard any epistle as having undergone notable change between its writing and it later being swept up in the collection of diverse documents by the (probably) Roman church when it suffered an imposed understanding in common with other diverse documents. Only a couple of documents show clear indication of layering over time, such as 1 John. Perhaps a few others suffered the odd interpolation.

All of that is based on actual evidence, on literary and historical criticism. I see that as the essence of parsimoniousness.

Earl Doherty
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Old 01-21-2013, 10:47 PM   #243
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1) The epistle itself, through internal analysis, leads to a dating prior to the Jewish War. This is not, for all purposes, the same as dating it in the middle of the 2nd century. (Apparently, Jake has not yet checked out my JNGNM Appendix on the subject.)
Your statement is completely erroneous. There is absolutely no corroborative evidence whatsoever to date Epistle Hebrews before the Jewish War.

You very well know that we cannot even assign an author to Epistle Hebrews.

Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
2) The fact that no one attests to it until after the middle of the 2nd century indicates that it stayed in isolation for a virtual century (although some say that 1 Clement shows a knowledge of it--I'm not sure that this is necessarily correct).
Your statement is a massive logical fallacy. The fact that the author and the Epistle are unknown by all other authors of the very Canon and was not quoted by them may mean it was composed AFTER the Canonised Gospels, Acts of the Apostles, the Pauline and Non-Pauline letters and Revelation.

Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
3) There is no necessity to regard any epistle as having undergone notable change between its writing and it later being swept up in the collection of diverse documents by the (probably) Roman church when it suffered an imposed understanding in common with other diverse documents. Only a couple of documents show clear indication of layering over time, such as 1 John. Perhaps a few others suffered the odd interpolation.
All of that is based on actual evidence, on literary and historical criticism. I see that as parsimonious.
That's just a conspiracy theory. Again, you have not yet established with any corroborative evidence that Epistle Hebrews was composed before the Jewish War and that it was composed BEFORE the Jesus stories were known.

We already know that there was NO character called Jesus the Christ and no claims that Jews and Roman were worshipping a Celestial Messiah before c 70 CE based on writings of Josephus, Tacitus and Suetonius.

Messianic rulers, actual physical Jewish rulers, were expected on earth c 70 CE.

See Wars of the Jews 6.5.4, Tacitus' "Histories" and Suetonius "Life of Vespasian" writings composed between c 75-115 CE.

Messianic rulers, actual physical Jewish rulers, were expected on earth c 70 CE.
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Old 01-21-2013, 11:13 PM   #244
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Hebrews sets out the conceptual framework of the heavenly Christ that was subsequently enfleshed in the Gospels.

The logic of mythic development goes from simple (heavenly Christ) to complex (Jesus of Nazareth).
There is no logic in such a "mythic development" from a heavenly cosmic crucified Christ figure to a "complex (Jesus of Nazareth)". The 'complexity', in fact the outright confusion, is with that specific mythicist theory. That theory has no legs, it does not sell, it cannot, it will not sell. i.e. It hinders rather than advances the HJ/MJ debate - and hence the search for early christian origins.

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Originally Posted by Earl Doherty View Post
Where did the crucified Jesus come from, if not from Q which had no crucifixion story? Simple. He came from scripture. Just where the epistles tell us it came from. Everything about the epistles' Jesus came from scripture,
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I said that it could be possible to see the Gospel Jesus' dying and rising dimension as not having to be based on the Pauline celestial sacrifice, but as an allegory of the believer's own fate, but that I still believe that it is more likely the Pauline faith had an influence, and my books put forward that theory.
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Even the death and rising dimension of the Gospel Jesus, which Mark added to the Q Jesus, cannot be firmly shown to be based on the Pauline Christ, though I suspect that the latter type of movement had some influence.

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Originally Posted by maryhelena View Post
If this is your position, Earl, that the crucified gospel JC came from an interpretation of scripture (OT), then the gospel JC story stands apart from the Pauline epistles; regardless of what dating is ascribed to either the gospel JC story or the Pauline cosmic JC. Dating of manuscripts is irrelevant here.

In other words: the gospel crucified JC story cannot be interpreted through the Pauline epistles. One cannot view the gospel JC story via a Pauline lens. One cannot read ones interpretation of the Pauline epistles into the gospel story. So, Earl, two unrelated JC crucifixion stories. Two crucifixion JC stories that, as it were, stand on their own two feet. Independent from one another. One JC crucifixion story set in a historical time frame. The other JC crucifixion story set in a timeless context. Now, Earl, you can interpret the Pauline cosmic JC crucifixion any which way - but this any which way - has no relevance to the gospel JC crucifixion story. They are two separate stories.

gMark, as you wrote above, added the “death and rising dimension” to the Q Jesus imaginary founder figure. gMark goes further: “For even the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many”. Thus, within gMark is a storyline that does not need any input from the Pauline epistles. The JC figure of gMark is a ‘salvation’ figure. i.e. your imaginary Q founder figure, an imaginary flesh and blood figure, is deemed to hold ‘salvation’ potential.

What then, Earl, would be achieved by this Q community were it to fuse with a Pauline cosmic JC community? It already has it’s heavenly, resurrected, ‘salvation’ figure. Paul has nothing to offer such a community. They have a straightforward life, death and rebirth/resurrection story. Why would such a community seek to negate the basis of it’s theological ideas and run with Paul’s cosmic crucified JC - as though the crucifixion sacrifice of their imaginary Q founder had no salvation value - and salvation value was only to be found in Paul’s cosmic crucified JC figure? Or was it, Earl, a case of being able to accommodate two JC crucified figures, one, according to your theory, the imaginary Q founder, and the other the crucified Pauline cosmic JC.

Logically, it’s the two crucifixion stories that held sway. In other words; an accommodation rather than a fusing of their two crucified JC figures would provide a forward movement for the two communities. That way would enable both communities to keep their respective ‘salvation’ figures. One salvation figure with relevance for flesh and blood in a historical context(albeit in your theory - imaginary flesh and blood). The other salvation figure with relevance for a timeless intellectual, or spiritual, context. A win win situation for both communities.

Bottom line in all of this: a historicizing of a Pauline cosmic crucified JC figure (a theory advanced by some mythicists) is not only illogical it is also unnecessary.
So, there you have it......Earl Doherty upholds the idea, the possibility, that ..."it could be possible to see the Gospel Jesus' dying and rising dimension as not having to be based on the Pauline celestial sacrifice"

In other words, in plain English - the gospel story about a crucified JC need not be a historicizing of a Pauline cosmic crucified christ figure.

If this is a possibility - is there another way in which to view the gospel JC story, another ahistorical way? I think there is. And that way is to view that gospel JC story as a mythologizing of Jewish history. Earl himself has acknowledged that elements of historical figures fed into the gospel JC myth.

Quote:
I can well acknowledge that elements of several representative, historical figures fed into the myth of the Gospel Jesus, since even mythical characters can only be portrayed in terms of human personalities, especially ones from their own time that are familiar and pertinent to the writers of the myths.

http://jesuspuzzle.humanists.net/rfset5.htm#Mary
The bottom line in all of this? JC was believed to have been on earth. In what shape or form is a secondary issue. The gospel primary focus, its fundamental focus, is that its JC figure was deemed to have some relevance for a historical, real time, context. The JC story is not all pie-in-the-sky. As Wells said of Doherty's ideas - "it is not all mythical".

If "elements of several ....historical figures fed into the myth of the Gospel Jesus.." then, if these figures can be identified via reflections within that gospel story.....research into early christian origins can begin to take a historical route as opposed to all the Pauline speculation that has been going on. And then - once it's history that we are dealing with - it's open season on that Josephan writer...
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Old 01-21-2013, 11:23 PM   #245
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There are strong arguments for identifying a Samaritan origin for the Epistle to the Hebrews http://books.google.com/books?id=bMZ...aritan&f=false. This would cause us to re-calibrate any arguments for a proper date of the text.
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Old 01-22-2013, 01:22 AM   #246
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There are strong arguments for identifying a Samaritan origin for the Epistle to the Hebrews http://books.google.com/books?id=bMZ...aritan&f=false. This would cause us to re-calibrate any arguments for a proper date of the text.
The Epistle to the Hebrews: Its Background of Thought (or via: amazon.co.uk) By L. D. Hurst

Why would this recalibrate the arguments for a proper date?
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Old 01-22-2013, 01:33 AM   #247
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Hebrews 6 is clear about what the foundations of Christianity are

'Therefore let us go on toward perfection, leaving behind the basic teaching about Christ, and not laying again the foundation: repentance from dead works and faith toward God, instruction about baptisms, laying on of hands, resurrection of the dead, and eternal judgment.'

The foundations of Christianity don't seem to include an earthly Jesus teaching these things.
I think there is debate among the scholars as to whether "let us go on toward perfection" is the author telling the Christians to cease teaching the milk of the word, or whether the author is only introducing his intent to move on to weightier theological issues in the book.
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Old 01-22-2013, 03:43 AM   #248
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Originally Posted by EarlDoherty View Post
1) The epistle itself, through internal analysis, leads to a dating prior to the Jewish War. This is not, for all purposes, the same as dating it in the middle of the 2nd century. (Apparently, Jake has not yet checked out my JNGNM Appendix on the subject.)

2) The fact that no one attests to it until after the middle of the 2nd century indicates that it stayed in isolation for a virtual century (although some say that 1 Clement shows a knowledge of it--I'm not sure that this is necessarily correct).

3) There is no necessity to regard any epistle as having undergone notable change between its writing and it later being swept up in the collection of diverse documents by the (probably) Roman church when it suffered an imposed understanding in common with other diverse documents. Only a couple of documents show clear indication of layering over time, such as 1 John. Perhaps a few others suffered the odd interpolation.

All of that is based on actual evidence, on literary and historical criticism. I see that as the essence of parsimoniousness.

Earl Doherty
Sir, you are in a bubble, a self referential feedback loop.

Unknown author, unknown sect, "smoking guns" unattested by anyone in antiquity--your exegisis of Hebrews is all based on "internal information" with no external confirmation. Why will you not post JNGNM Appendix on the subject on line? Is it because you propose interpolation for material that disconfirms an early date?

I would like to see you open yourself to the wider mythic case. We see indications that you could. Otherwise, we have seen it all already.

Best regards,
Jake Jones IV
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Old 01-22-2013, 07:15 AM   #249
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Why would this recalibrate the arguments for a proper date?
Well there is an intimation that sacrifices were on going in the community and with the Samaritans that has never stopped. As such the text could have been written pretty much in any period based on that argument alone.
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Old 01-22-2013, 07:17 AM   #250
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Originally Posted by Robert Tulip View Post
Hebrews sets out the conceptual framework of the heavenly Christ that was subsequently enfleshed in the Gospels.

The logic of mythic development goes from simple (heavenly Christ) to complex (Jesus of Nazareth).
Quote:
Originally Posted by maryhelena View Post
There is no logic in such a "mythic development" from a heavenly cosmic crucified Christ figure to a "complex (Jesus of Nazareth)". The 'complexity', in fact the outright confusion, is with that specific mythicist theory. That theory has no legs, it does not sell, it cannot, it will not sell. i.e. It hinders rather than advances the HJ/MJ debate - and hence the search for early christian origins.
It is already debunked that texts which do not mention the Jesus story must be composed before the Gospels or before the Jesus story.

Doherty's argument will be utterly destroyed by the Christian Apologist called Athenagoras.

Let us examine writings attributed to Athenagoras of Athens addressed to the Emperors Marcus Aurelius Anoninus and Lucius Aurelius Commodus or sometime between c 177-180 CE.

"A Plea to the Christians" was composed, c 177-180 CE, AFTER the Jesus story was known, circulated, and composed.

Now, carefully go through the Entire Texts.

There is NOT one mention of Jesus Christ at all.

There is NO story about Jesus.

[u]Athenagoras' "Plea For the Christians"
Quote:
.... for we acknowledge also a Son of God.

Nor let any one think it ridiculous that God should have a Son.

For though the poets, in their fictions, represent the gods as no better than men, our mode of thinking is not the same as theirs, concerning either God the Father or the Son.

But the Son of God is the Logos of the Father, in idea and in operation; for after the pattern of Him and by Him were all things made, the Father and the Son being one....
Athenagoras' Son of God, the Logos, appears to be theological--Not physical.

The author does NOT apply the name Jesus or 'Flesh' to the Logos.

Now, if the author and time of composition of "Plea for the Christians" were Unknown then it may be erroneously believed to have been composed in the 1st century before the Jesus story was known or developed.

Athenagoras' "Plea for the Christians" suggests the purely theological Son of God was a LATE development, as late as, c 177-180 CE, AFTER the Jesus story was known.

There is simply no evidence whatsoever the Epistle Hebrews could NOT have been composed in the 2nd century and after the Jesus story of his crucifixion on earth was already circulated.
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