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Old 06-06-2006, 08:05 PM   #601
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Originally Posted by gurugeorge
Remarkable sure, but remarkable enough to be God - especially in a Jewish setting? No. It just doesn't make sense to me I'm afraid. I can accept a famous person who'd done notable things in the ancient world being deified by their followers, maybe even a famous Jewish person being deified by gentiles. I just can't get an obscure person who made no impact on the bigger world being deified by his Jewish followers only shortly after their death.
But maybe his Jewish followers didn't deify him. Maybe it was Gentile followers who did that.
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Old 06-06-2006, 08:10 PM   #602
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Originally Posted by Didymus
But my mention of Palestinian Jews was in the context of a comparison of the scale of evidence for and against a historical Jesus. Not only did Palestinian Jews not accept his divinity, there's no evidence that they even knew who he was supposed to be! To the contrary, as we see in the ben Pandera legend about Jesus being the illegitimate son of a Roman soldier. That, among other things, suggests to me that neither the founders of Christianity nor the first Christians lived in Palestine.
The ben Pandera legend sounds to me like the sort of story that might be deliberately fabricated to discredit religious enemies, and in that case it's just as likely that the fabricators didn't care about its veracity. It's possible that they knew perfectly well what their enemies said about Jesus, and were seeking to muddy the waters with the ben Pandera story.
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Old 06-06-2006, 08:12 PM   #603
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Originally Posted by Sparrow
You're going to make me mention you know who just to invoke Godwin's Law aren't you?
I'm sorry, you're seeing a connection that I'm not seeing. Are we going from circles to tangents?
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Old 06-06-2006, 08:15 PM   #604
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
Of course it would.

"I don't know how that particular reading group started but they were apparently not uncommon."

Likewise:

"I don't know how that particular group of messianic reinterpreters started but they were apparently not uncommon."

It seems unreasonable to expect more or to consider the absence of more specific evidence to be significant.
Typically, a reading group is deliberately organised by one or two people. Are you positing the same of messianic reinterpreters? If so, why would this founder or founders vanish into obscurity? And what would be their motivation? Why would they think that messianic visions could more readily be obtained in groups? Or if that wasn't the reason, what was?

And were groups of messianic reinterpreters common (or 'not uncommon', if you think there's a difference)? How do you know?
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Old 06-06-2006, 08:21 PM   #605
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Originally Posted by gurugeorge
I should add here that which you think is more likely probably partly depends on what you understand about religion in general, and what you've experienced of what religious cults are like. In my younger, more religiously and sociologically curious days, I investigated all sorts, from scientology to UFO cults. There are thousands of cultlets around today, many (probably most) of which are originated in someone getting a "message" of some kind from a purported discarnate intelligence. That's how it's always been, that's (mostly) how people do religion. Islam is like that, many ancient Greek cults were like that (e.g. the Oracles). Even Buddhism has it (e.g. the Vajrayana), even Daoism has it (e.g. the origins of the Celestial Masters sect). When you look at how prevalent this mode of religious origin is, it makes the MJ hypothesis by far the most likely starting hypothesis (especially granted the undecidability of which HJ of the many possible HJs is supported by non-partisan evidence).
If Christianity began, not with a flesh-and-blood Jesus, but with somebody purportedly getting a 'message' from a discarnate Christ, then who was that key somebody, and why is his identity obscure? Is that obscurity likely on the evidence from other religions? It's the flesh-and-blood Mohammed who's recognised as the founder of Islam.
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Old 06-06-2006, 08:22 PM   #606
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
You somehow managed to completely misunderstand what I wrote.

What you should have understood is that, given my respect for Carrier's knowledge of the subject matter and my own agnostic tendencies, I intend to keep my mind open until after I've read his book.
Fair enough. And sorry for the misunderstanding.
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Old 06-06-2006, 08:29 PM   #607
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Originally Posted by Didymus
If Paul really thought that the Pillars had followed Jesus in Galilee for three years, that they had known his mother and the other disciples, had witnessed all the healings, feedings and other miracles, had witnessed his encounters with the Pharisees and Herodians, had received personal visitations from the Risen Christ, had been privy to all his teachings, both public and private, and which included matters which were actively in dispute (circumcision, eating companions), YES, it would have been reasonable for Paul to have mentioned some small something about all that, especially in the context of meetings with those very apostles regarding those very disputes.
But perhaps not, if Paul were deliberately propagating doctrine in conflict with that upheld by the Pillars, without having the same sort of authority that they did. In which case, it might have been reasonable for him to say, in effect: Oh, yes, the Pillars. Well, I did meet them. And we didn't exactly agree, but we decided not to interfere with each other.Now, moving right along ...
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Old 06-06-2006, 08:48 PM   #608
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Originally Posted by J-D
But the question 'was there a real King Arthur?' is a reasonable one, and the answer 'Yes' is not obviously impossible. There may have been a real King Arthur, although obviously most of the legends about him can't be true.
Substitute "Jesus" for "King Arthur" in that second sentence, and you've got my position exactly. Yes, it seems likely someone stirred up the Jews, caused a bit of a ruckus, and was likely killed for it. Considering the sheer number of small mystery cults that have sprung up through the ages, it isn't even hard to imagine such a charismatic being made the object of a cult. Even a cult like it grabbing the ear of the emporer isn't unprecedented - it happened in Egypt at one point, as well (The Sun Cult and Amenhotep IV); the only difference is that the Christians managed to get a better grip than the Sun Cultists, and the religion continued after Constantine's death.

What baffles me is this - if it so obvious that the legends surrounding the likes of Arthur, Robin Hood, and Gilgamesh are full of embellishments and fantasy, then why is it so difficult for people to recognize the same quality in Jesus' story, especially considering all of the internal and dating problems?
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Old 06-06-2006, 10:26 PM   #609
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Originally Posted by J-D
So, is ‘messiah-seeking’ more like reading or more like playing poker?
It is like both in that persons who have strong feelings about them are likely to talk about their interest and seek out others with similar interests but it is probably more like reading than poker in that the former is essentially a solitary endeavor while the latter requires a group.

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So if you’re going to posit the existence of a group of messiah-seekers, I don’t think it’s ridiculous to ask who brought the group together, and why.
IMO, a far better analogy would be a Bible study group. I would suggest that any messiah-seeking group would, likewise, originate in a communal worship service.

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If the emotionally charged atmosphere is the product of somebody’s vision, then the vision can’t be the product of the emotionally charged atmosphere.
You asking about the collective hallucination and the initial reported experience is what inspires the response by others.

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One of them had to come first.
Yes, that is typically how collective hallucinations begin. A single, fantasy-prone individual has an experience and shares it with others who are generally also fantasy-prone.

I don't want to encourage people to try it but the same sort of thing is really quite easy to do intentionally with very little training. I've introduced false memories/perceptions with very little effort and it is disturbingly difficult to convince the "victims" of the deception afterward that they have been duped. If you are telling your audience what they want to believe, they will tend to see, hear, feel or recall what you tell them rather than what they actually perceived or experienced. Magicians and con men make a living off this psychological tendency in their fellow humans.

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And how likely is that people would respond to one or two original visionaries by coming to believe that they have had a similar vision?
If they considered themselves fellow "visionaries", it seems to me quite likely. It would largely depend on how much they wanted the reported experience to be true and how much they wanted to share it. Given the context of a group of devout Jewish Scripture-studying, messiah-seekers, I would think the ground would be quite fertile.

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Typically, a reading group is deliberately organised by one or two people. Are you positing the same of messianic reinterpreters?
I don't think the folks who wrote the DSS got together by accident, no.

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If so, why would this founder or founders vanish into obscurity?
I consider Cephas (the first to have the experience according to Paul) to have vanished into obscurity. Though, IMO and assuming James had an established reputation among his fellow Jews, I tend to consider him more influential in the subsequent growth.

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And what would be their motivation?
I think I already addressed this. Faith in Judaism confronted with the apparent failure of traditional Jewish expectations.

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Why would they think that messianic visions could more readily be obtained in groups? Or if that wasn't the reason, what was?
I don't think we have to assume they were trying to have visions. The more "heads" trying to figure out what went wrong and/or what should be expected are more likely to obtain an answer.

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And were groups of messianic reinterpreters common (or 'not uncommon', if you think there's a difference)? How do you know?
I would think that only groups would result in preserved texts and religions movements.

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And sorry for the misunderstanding.
No problem.
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Old 06-07-2006, 04:40 AM   #610
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Originally Posted by Donnmathan
What baffles me is this - if it so obvious that the legends surrounding the likes of Arthur, Robin Hood, and Gilgamesh are full of embellishments and fantasy, then why is it so difficult for people to recognize the same quality in Jesus' story, especially considering all of the internal and dating problems?
For many, it isn't difficult at all. However, legends surrounding the likes of say, Alexander the Great or (for a more modern-day example) Davy Crockett are also full of embellishments and fantasy. The mere presence of legends is not enough to say that someone is unhistorical or even enough to say that one's historicity is in doubt. In the case of Jesus, the dating problems just aren't that big. J-D pointed out in his example of the border ballads that the existence of contradictions in embellished accounts do not necessarily imply a lack of historicity in the outline of the accounts. The legendary nature of the accounts is insufficient grounds on its own to decide in favor of ahistoricity.
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