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Old 08-19-2012, 12:59 AM   #11
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I didn't see in your link to Price any dates for when the Greek novels were written. Are the similarities to Christianity pre-dating Jesus or not.
The exact dates are not agreed upon. (The dates of the gospel stories are also imprecise.)

In the podcast, Ehrman does not dispute the dates. He tried to distinguish the Greek novels because the crucifixion is not followed by a resurrection. But if you read Price's essay at the link, this objection makes no sense. Price is not accusing the gospel writers of plagiarism - he is just pointing out similar literary themes.

But he clearly does know what Price is talking about and he has no reason to think that Price does not know what he is talking about. That was just a snarky put down.
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Old 08-19-2012, 02:57 AM   #12
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Of course, when 'Unbelievable' debated the existence of Muhammad, a Muhammad-mythicist was invited to speak.
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Old 08-19-2012, 02:59 AM   #13
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I didn't see in your link to Price any dates for when the Greek novels were written. Are the similarities to Christianity pre-dating Jesus or not.
So all these Greeks heard about Christianity, and thought the Christian story would make a great idea for a novel....
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Old 08-19-2012, 08:14 AM   #14
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Listening to this now. Would be much more fun with Carrier or Price on the show too. And it looks like they're going to discuss some minor details in Carrier's review (e.g. the "Pilate error"!). Boring.
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Old 08-19-2012, 08:27 AM   #15
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To be fair, Price was on the show previously, and they played some comments from that episode.
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Old 08-19-2012, 09:10 AM   #16
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Right now I'm listening to Justin Brierly in a solo discussion with Bart Ehrman defending his book on Jesus mythicism. There is a lot of trashing (IMO) of Carrier and Price (At one point Bart says Price doesn't know what he's talking about re: Greek novels). I haven't finished it yet but I'm uneasy with how Bart is allowed to characterize these guys without them being able to defend themselves. Does anyone think Justin will have Price and Carrier on to defend themselves?



http://www.premierradio.org.uk/shows...elievable.aspx
I cannot accept Ehrman as credible. Many of his statements about the evidence for an historical Jesus are completely erroneous.

Ehrman himself has EXPOSED the historical problems of the NT and then turns around and ridicule people who use the very information that he has provided to show that the Jesus character in the NT is a product of Fiction and had No real existence.

Something is radically wrong with Ehrman.

He is Agnostic about the existence of GOD yet Ridicule people who do NOT agree with his position.

Are all "Historians" Agnostics??? Is NOT Agnosticism a minority position???

If Agnosticism is a minority position why does Ehrman RIDICULE others for holding another minority position--that Jesus of the NT had NO real existence??

Ehrman calls himself an "Historian" but does anyone know if he just a "professor of theology"???
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Old 08-19-2012, 01:57 PM   #17
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From his own website.

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A graduate of Wheaton College (Illinois), Professor Ehrman received both his Masters of Divinity and Ph.D. from Princeton Theological Seminary,
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Old 08-20-2012, 01:05 AM   #18
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On page 113 of Did Jesus Exist, Bart Ehrman quotes Acts 3 saying Jesus was 'the author of life' and follows that up by claiming that that very passage supports his view that the earliest Christians did not think of Jesus as divine.

Duh, I don't get it.... 'Author of Life' 'Not divine'.

Does not compute.
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Old 08-20-2012, 06:32 AM   #19
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I didn't see in your link to Price any dates for when the Greek novels were written. Are the similarities to Christianity pre-dating Jesus or not.
The exact dates are not agreed upon. (The dates of the gospel stories are also imprecise.)
None of the novels are easy to date:

* Chariton, Chaereas and Callirhoe. According to Wikipedia, there are papyrus fragments ca. 200 A.D. It sounds fairly undateable otherwise. Probably about 100 A.D. (a guess by me: i.e. a century before the papyri)? Although this suggests 1st century BC to 2nd century AD?

* Achilles Tatius, Leucippe and Clitophon. "somewhere in the second century".

* Pseudo-Callisthenes, Alexander Romance. 3rd century A.D., apparently.

All the best,

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Old 08-20-2012, 07:59 AM   #20
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On the subject of early novels, here's a sweet little crucifixion story from the Satyricon (Petronius), apparently a 1st c. Latin novel. Do enjoy. Really!

[t2]From the end of Ch. 13,

"There was once upon a time at Ephesus a lady of so high repute for chastity that women would actually come to that city from neighboring lands to see and admire. This fair lady, having lost her husband, was not content with the ordinary signs of mourning, such as walking with hair disheveled behind the funeral car and beating her naked bosom in presence of the assembled crowd; she was fain further to accompany her lost one to his final resting-place, watch over his corpse in the vault where it was laid according to the Greek mode of burial, and weep day and night beside it. So deep was her affliction, neither family nor friends could dissuade her from these austerities and the purpose she had formed of perishing of hunger. Even the Magistrates had to retire worsted after a last but fruitless effort. All mourned as virtually dead already a woman of such singular determination, who had already passed five days without food.

"A trusty handmaid sat by her mistress's side, mingling her tears with those of the unhappy woman, and trimming the lamp which stood in the tomb as often as it burned low. Nothing else was talked of throughout the city but her sublime devotion, and men of every station quoted her as a shining example of virtue and conjugal affection.

"Meantime, as it fell out, the Governor of the Province ordered certain robbers to be crucified in close proximity to the vault where the matron sat bewailing the recent loss of her mate. Next night the soldier who was set to guard the crosses to prevent anyone coming and removing the robbers' bodies to give them burial, saw a light shining among the tombs and heard the widow's groans. Yielding to curiosity, a failing common to all mankind, he was eager to discover who it was, and what was afoot. Accordingly he descended into the tomb, where beholding a lovely woman, he was at first confounded, thinking he saw a ghost or some supernatural vision. But presently the spectacle of the husband's dead body lying there, and the woman's tear-stained and nail-torn face, everything went to show him the reality, how it was a disconsolate widow unable to resign herself to the death of her helpmate. He proceeded therefore to carry his humble meal into the tomb, and to urge the fair mourner to cease her indulgence in grief so excessive, and to leave off torturing her bosom with unavailing sobs. Death, he declared, was the common end and last home of all men, enlarging on this and the other commonplaces generally employed to console a wounded spirit. But the lady, only shocked by this offer of sympathy from a stranger's lips, began to tear her breast with redoubled vehemence, and dragging out handfuls of her hair, she laid them on her husband's corpse.

"The soldier, however, refusing to be rebuffed, renewed his adjuration to the unhappy lady to eat. Eventually the maid, seduced doubtless by the scent of the wine, found herself unable to resist any longer, and extended her hand for the refreshment offered; then with energies restored by food and drink, she set herself to the task of breaking down her mistress's resolution. 'What good will it do you,' she urged, 'to die of famine, to bury yourself alive in the tomb, to yield your life to destiny before the Fates demand it?

"'Think you to pleasure thus the dead and gone?

"'Nay! rather return to life, and shaking off this womanly weakness, enjoy the good things of this world as long as you may. The very corpse that lies here before your eyes should be a warning to make the most of existence.'

"No one is really loath to consent, when pressed to eat or live. The widow therefore, worn as she was with several days' fasting, suffered her resolution to be broken, and took her fill of nourishment with no less avidity than her maid had done, who had been the first to give way.

"Now you all know what temptations assail poor human nature after a hearty meal. The soldier resorted to the same cajolements which had already been successful in inducing the lady to eat, in order to overcome her virtue. The modest widow found the young soldier neither ill-looking nor wanting in address, while the maid was strong indeed in his favor and kept repeating:
"Why thus unmindful of your past delight,
Against a pleasing passion will you fight?"
"But why make a long story? The lady showed herself equally complaisant in this respect also, and the victorious soldier gained both his ends. So they lay together not only that first night of their nuptials, but a second likewise, and a third, the door of the vault being of course kept shut, so that anyone, friend or stranger, that might come to the tomb, should suppose this most chaste of wives had expired by now on her husband's corpse. Meantime the soldier, entranced with the woman's beauty and the mystery of the thing, purchased day by day the best his means allowed him, and as soon as ever night was come, conveyed the provisions to the tomb.

"Thus it came about that the relatives of one of the malefactors, observing this relaxation of vigilance, removed his body from the cross during the night and gave it proper burial. But what of the unfortunate soldier, whose self-indulgence had thus been taken advantage of, when next morning he saw one of the crosses under his charge without its body! Dreading instant punishment, he acquaints his mistress with what had occurred, assuring her he would not await the judge's sentence, but with his own sword exact the penalty of his negligence. He must die therefore; would she give him sepulture, and join the friend to the husband in that fatal spot?

"But the lady was no less tender-hearted than virtuous. ‘The Gods forbid,' she cried, ‘I should at one and the same time look on the corpses of two men, both most dear to me. I had rather hang a dead man on the cross than kill a living.' So said, so done; she orders her husband's body to be taken from its coffin and fixed upon the vacant cross. The soldier availed himself of the ready-witted lady's expedient, and next day all men marveled how in the world a dead man had found his own way to the cross." [/t2]
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