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Old 09-30-2007, 12:04 AM   #11
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The events, sure. The post-factum explanations that it was all what Jesus "planned", no. Exactly what he expected to happen when he went to Jerusalem isn't clear. But I'd say getting arrested and crucified wasn't part of it.
I guess what I don't get is where you draw the line as to what you think happened and what you think didn't since the only accounts we have seem to portray it this one way.
We have multiple accounts, not "one" account. Gospel 1 (Mark), Gospel 2 (Matthean sources), Gospel 3 (Lukan sources), Gospel 4 (Johannine and related sources), Paul, Josephus...
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Old 09-30-2007, 02:35 AM   #12
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I guess what I don't get is where you draw the line as to what you think happened and what you think didn't since the only accounts we have seem to portray it this one way.
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We have multiple accounts, not "one" account. Gospel 1 (Mark), Gospel 2 (Matthean sources), Gospel 3 (Lukan sources), Gospel 4 (Johannine and related sources), Paul, Josephus...
All had the gospel of Mark in front of them. Apart from Paul and Josephus. Then there is the question of the ''Q'' document, if it existed. There may have been one source and a multitude of interpretations for all we know.
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Old 09-30-2007, 06:46 AM   #13
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Why is it a "conspiracy theory" to think someone wrote a fictional story? A story whose characters' names alone give away the whole show (Barabbas=Son of the Father, Judas=Judah, Jesus=Yahweh saves). Actually, by arguing that the story is a literary creation, I'm taking it OUT of the realm of a conspiracy theory. Perfectly choreographed coincidences and allegorical names are par for the course in literature.
It's also "par for the course" for the whole ancient world - how many times is it pointed out that Yeshua is a very, very common name.

Finally, the "story" that you find in the gospel accounts is much later than the earliest Christian sources - namely Paul, and even then he describes a thriving religion already. It's like saying that Lincoln's assassination was modeled from Kennedy's.
I realize that Jesus was a very common name. It's still suspicious that Christianity's savior figure just happens to have that name.

Your last comment seems to be making the mythicist case for me: that the "story" comes after Paul.
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Old 09-30-2007, 07:00 AM   #14
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I guess what I don't get is where you draw the line as to what you think happened and what you think didn't since the only accounts we have seem to portray it this one way.
We have multiple accounts, not "one" account. Gospel 1 (Mark), Gospel 2 (Matthean sources), Gospel 3 (Lukan sources), Gospel 4 (Johannine and related sources), Paul, Josephus...
Again, this seems to be making my case for me. Not one of these "independent" gospel accounts records a Jesus who DOESN'T perform miracles, doesn't get himself executed during Passover in time to be the Lamb of God and doesn't rise from the dead.

Hence, I'm trying to figure out at what point secular historians stop throwing the baby out with the bathwater and come up with what they believe is a "true" Jesus. With historical figures like Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar, I would say that less than 5% of what we read about them is implausible or rooted in the supernatural. With Jesus, that percentage goes way up, so much so that the implausible and the supernatural become utterly entwined with the few "naturalistic" elements of his life. It's not like we have any rationalistic accounts of his life on which to base a plausible biography.

It seems to me that when ALL the accounts of a person's life are this steeped in the fantastical and the absurd, perhaps that's an indication that no real person lies at the root of the story.
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Old 09-30-2007, 07:09 AM   #15
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How plausible is it that a preacher from Galillee with a fairly sizable following would be able to engineer events so successfully that he would wind up being "sacrificed" on Passover Week so he could become the symbolic "Lamb of God" who takes away the sins of the world?
Swarms of people in Jerusalem at Passover, unrest amongst the populace about Roman occupation, and toey Roman officials. How much would it take to get someone crucified? Not a lot, I'd think. Passover would be the most likely time for someone to get themselves crucified, if they wanted to plan it. Or even if they didn't want to plan it. All they'd need to do is bare their bum or complain about the prices of birds in the Temple grounds.
Is there any evidence that there were more crucifixions during passion week?
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Old 09-30-2007, 07:09 AM   #16
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How plausible is it that a preacher from Galillee with a fairly sizable following would be able to engineer events so successfully that he would wind up being "sacrificed" on Passover Week so he could become the symbolic "Lamb of God" who takes away the sins of the world?
Why would anyone want to do that?
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Old 09-30-2007, 10:00 AM   #17
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All had the gospel of Mark in front of them. Apart from Paul and Josephus. Then there is the question of the ''Q'' document, if it existed. There may have been one source and a multitude of interpretations for all we know.
Matthew and Luke share a source - whatever that source is, it's Q. Goodacre does not have me convinced of Luke using Matthew, and its nearly impossible the other way around. Therefore that's yet another source. Also, Matthew and Luke have other information other than what's in Mark - the mere fact that two independent traditions both mention a virgin birth (and got there in a different way) while the earlier traditions don't means that there was a line of tradition going on.

And do you have evidence that John used Mark? Some scholars support that notion, but I don't think there's too much to that - I could be wrong.
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Old 09-30-2007, 10:03 AM   #18
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I realize that Jesus was a very common name. It's still suspicious that Christianity's savior figure just happens to have that name.
Ever think it may have been the other way around? You should know from logic that correlation does not equal causation.

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Your last comment seems to be making the mythicist case for me: that the "story" comes after Paul.
Well, only in their current forms. Some scholars think Thomas goes to pre-Paul or at the same time of Paul, and likewise with Q, and not many scholars at all are convinced that the gospels modeled themselves after Paul. Coming later does not mean that they borrowed from. Their traditions lie elsewhere.
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Old 09-30-2007, 10:05 AM   #19
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Again, this seems to be making my case for me. Not one of these "independent" gospel accounts records a Jesus who DOESN'T perform miracles, doesn't get himself executed during Passover in time to be the Lamb of God and doesn't rise from the dead.
Thomas?

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Hence, I'm trying to figure out at what point secular historians stop throwing the baby out with the bathwater and come up with what they believe is a "true" Jesus. With historical figures like Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar, I would say that less than 5% of what we read about them is implausible or rooted in the supernatural. With Jesus, that percentage goes way up, so much so that the implausible and the supernatural become utterly entwined with the few "naturalistic" elements of his life. It's not like we have any rationalistic accounts of his life on which to base a plausible biography.
What's your point? So its more infused with legend - we've done that before. Alas, the name escapes me, but there was this monk...

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It seems to me that when ALL the accounts of a person's life are this steeped in the fantastical and the absurd, perhaps that's an indication that no real person lies at the root of the story.
Thomas? Layers of Q?
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Old 10-01-2007, 05:43 AM   #20
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All had the gospel of Mark in front of them. Apart from Paul and Josephus. Then there is the question of the ''Q'' document, if it existed. There may have been one source and a multitude of interpretations for all we know.
Matthew and Luke share a source - whatever that source is, it's Q. Goodacre does not have me convinced of Luke using Matthew, and its nearly impossible the other way around. Therefore that's yet another source. Also, Matthew and Luke have other information other than what's in Mark - the mere fact that two independent traditions both mention a virgin birth (and got there in a different way) while the earlier traditions don't means that there was a line of tradition going on.

And do you have evidence that John used Mark? Some scholars support that notion, but I don't think there's too much to that - I could be wrong.
Scholars date John in the late 90s and see it as evidence for a distinct Christian community that developed it's own views of Jesus more or less independently. I read somewhere that the Gospel of John should not have been included with the synoptic gospels, because he speaks of Jesus being God himself made flesh. ''In the beggining was the word, and the word was with God, and the word was God. Nothing was made without the word''[or similar] He described Jesus as the bread of life.
All told, John's story seems to be about the manifestation of a god, not about the historical Jesus of the synoptics. It's so different to Mark, that I doubt he acknowledged it's existence. If he knew of it's existence, he ignores it.
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