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Old 04-04-2007, 03:48 PM   #481
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
Since that wasn't spin's argument, you need to discard your mistaken interpretation of his position... Anybody who accurately understood spin's original claim can see that Matthew 22:15-18 is irrelevant to it.
If it was misinterpreted or irrelevant, then why did spin come up with a fallback idea of 'fatigue' to try to explain Matthew 22 away ? If it was irrelevant, such would not be a necessary (rather absurd spinism) cover story.

(After it was pointed out that he was wrong to try to peg the Herodian-Pharisee alliance as a Markan uniqueness.)

You folks are funny when you get caught in a blunder.
You simply cannot acknowledge anything.

Shalom,
Steven
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Old 04-04-2007, 03:56 PM   #482
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Originally Posted by spin
Anybody can see that you don't know what you're talking about. If I knew that there were no parallels to Mk 3:6 Herodians, do you honestly believe that, despite the fact that you'd quoted the bloody thing before that one wouldn't know that Matt does use Herodians once? You are kidding yourself.
Please try to speak coherently.

You seem to be admitting that you hid Matthew 22 in your original presentation. And we see you use the 'fatigue' nonsense as a cover story to try to 'explain away' the Matthew reference. The only fatigue would be upon those who have learned not to trust your presentations, to know that they are frequently manipulated in such a manner.

Deliberately omitting Matthew 22 when you actually knew Matthew references the Herodian-Pharisee alliance makes you look that much smaller and less trustworthy in your presentations.

Better if you had missed it and made an error, as in Sinaiticus having Luke 3:36. Then we might be able to take your future presentations as possibly forthright and complete. When such an omission is deliberate .. caveat emptor.

Shalom,
Steven Avery
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Old 04-04-2007, 04:17 PM   #483
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13 View Post
You can't explain how to eliminate possibility 3, can you?
I didn't want to belabor the point, but possibilty 1 is my selection, after investigation. All versions of Jesus the Christ are historically false.

And the possibilities listed (1-7) were posted in response to an erroneous poster who coud only come up with 2 possibilities.
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Old 04-04-2007, 04:21 PM   #484
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Here's spin's original post that praxeus quotes:

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
The writers of Matt (12:14) and Luke (6:11) obviously agree: they left out the reference to the Herodians found in Mk 3:6.


spin
It followed posts that mentioned Matt 22. There is no evidence that spin was trying to conceal the existence of Matt 22.
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Old 04-04-2007, 04:30 PM   #485
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There are no real men behind mythological figures, as the word myth implies.
Most people would disagree with you. We know of real historical figures who have been mythologized - George Washington and Alexander the Great spring to mind.

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Can you tell when this real man was born, or anything at all? Which century do I look for this real man?
If the chronology of the NT is not true, or cannot be trusted, where do I begin?
This is where the historical Jesus crowd are vulnerable - but you have to engage them on their own terms and stop the broken record approach.

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How does one explain all the mythical gods of the Greeks, how does one explain the Egyptian gods, how does one explain the Hindu Gods, how does one explain the Gods of Shintoism and how does one explain Mormonism

To explain all of them, you read their Bibles, religious doctrines or scriptures, contemporary relevant extra-biblical writings, archaelogical findings, and other material and you make an assesment whether or not in your opinion the Gods described are mythical or not.

It is amazing that it is so easy to see mythology in other religions, yet, even though the Christian Bible is filled with myth, and confirmed to be, some still look for an unborn unknown figure, which the unknown mother cannot explain.?
Let's just assume that all gods are mythological. But Joseph Smith was not mythological. Mohammed was probably not mythological, although most of us do not believe that he rode his horse directly to heaven. Is Jesus like Mohammed and Joseph Smith, with a large accretion of myth, or is he more like Krishna?

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How many times do I have to show, with excerpts from the NT, that Jesus the Christ pre-existence as the Word is fictional, that his birth is fictional, his baptism is fictional, his temptation is fictional, his miraculous acts are fictional, his transfiguration is fictional, his resurrection is fictional and his ascension is fictional?
Was the sermon on the mount fictional? There's nothing supernatural there. How about the crucifixion?

Quote:
My assesment of Jesus the Christ was not done by taking into account those who are true believers or non-believers, if so, no investigation would be neccesary.

And so far no HJer, believer or non-believer, has been able to show that a character called Jesus the Christ ever lived as a real person in the first century or any century, who was crucified, buried in a sealed tomb under guard, and then vanished when visited by his followers.
It's easy to win the argument if you define the terms yourself.
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Old 04-04-2007, 04:36 PM   #486
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto
Here's spin's original post that praxeus quotes: .. It followed posts that mentioned Matt 22. There is no evidence that spin was trying to conceal the existence of Matt 22.
Toto, please.

Whatever was spin's motivations (we surely would not want to speculate on that) it is clear that Matthew 22 fully refutes the idea that Matthew "left out" the Herodian-Pharisee alliance in the verse spin referenced because Matthew did not accept the alliance as historical and credible (the context of the discussion).

And that appears to be why spin belatedly came up with the 'fatigue' silliness. Matthew 22 simply refutes his position he was taking. Which would be one very possible reason why spin omitted Matthew 22 from the post above.

The Skeptic Protection Society would do better with substantive posts than trying to look for an out on a little error like this. The apologetics and excuses are far worse than the original error.

Here is a question ..

Do you really think that the Herodian-Pharisee tactical alliance against Jesus is so hard to comprehend ? Getting together to try to find a way to trip Him up, that mini-alliance of convenience ? Is that really so difficult for the skeptic apologists here ?

Shalom,
Steven Avery
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Old 04-04-2007, 04:38 PM   #487
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Originally Posted by Toto View Post
What you need to address, if you want to be relevant, is whether there was a real man behind the mythological Jesus the Christ. This man could have been a wandering preacher from Galilee who was crucified, and whose friends founded a new religion about him. Can you derive the existence of such a person from the collection of myths and bits of early history? Or, if you can't, how do you explain the rise of early Christianity?

But the only people who think that gospel Jesus was real are true believers, and most of the people here who think there was a historical Jesus are not true believers, or at least not that sort of true believer.
That Toto is precisely the reason that I believe that it is important
to be honest and open about one's "beliefs concerning chronology"
since this is a small and necessary step in unravelling the depths
of BC&H.

Whether posters here belief in a gospel version of an "HJ" or whether
they believe in some other (BC&H Version 18.7.23) "HJ" in order to
separately explicate the rise of early christianity they each must
present a chronology.

Since spin wont respond to my question as to "Which chronology
does the BC&H poster spin favour?", I'd like to ask you whether
you think my reasons for asking this question are sound and fair.

And if so, I'd guess that most BC&H "scholars" are constrained to
the mainstream chronology of a first century beginning of christianity.
Is this more or less correct? Thanks.
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Old 04-04-2007, 04:45 PM   #488
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Originally Posted by praxeus View Post
Toto, please.

Whatever was spin's motivations (we surely would not want to speculate on that) it is clear that Matthew 22 fully refutes the idea that Matthew "left out" the Herodian-Pharisee alliance in the other passage he referenced because Matthew did not accept the alliance as historical and credible (the context of the discussion).

...

Shalom,
Steven Avery
You spent an inappropriate amount of time accusing spin of bad motives, with no basis.

One omission, and one non-omission, does not prove your case and disprove the contrary.

The concept of "fatigue" is well accepted when one source copies from another, as Matthew did from Mark. You are only making yourself look uninformed, "much smaller and less trustworthy" in your own words.
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Old 04-04-2007, 04:54 PM   #489
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
...

And if so, I'd guess that most BC&H "scholars" are constrained to
the mainstream chronology of a first century beginning of christianity.
Is this more or less correct? Thanks.
I can think of at least two alternate chronologies.

There is the possibility that Jesus was originally a Jewish prophet from around 100 BC. Paul and the first century Christians thought that they saw his spiritual return in the mid to late first century; 2nd century Christians (namely Mark) created a story of this Jesus, which was placed in the time of Pilate for reasons we don't completely understand.

Alternatively, there is Harold Leidner's chronology, which sees Paul as starting his ministry as a messianic Jew in the first century with no knowledge of a historical Jesus; he survives the Jewish War and continues preaching, and gradually a "historic Jesus" is created and projected back into the first half of the first century as a personalization of the suffering of the Jewish people. At some time in the second century, belief in the historical truth of the story of this Jesus was made an item of orthodoxy.

I'm sure there are other possibilities.
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Old 04-04-2007, 04:58 PM   #490
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Originally Posted by Toto
The concept of "fatigue" is well accepted when one source copies from another, as Matthew did from Mark..
You are extrapolating so many different conceptions that you have absurdity upon conjecture upon nonsense.

You claim to go 'into the head' of Matthew (after assuming Markan priority and whatever else). He didn't have his yerba mate. And you assume Matthew did not write carefully and accurately. Didn't check his work. And you assume that Matthew originally had Herodian in two places and 'fatigued' the omission of one. Maybe you have Matthew's notes where he indicated 'I will try to take this out tomorrow.. after I get some rest'.

Anything goes in Skeptic-in-Wonderland.

You actually base skeptic-apologetic theories upon nonsense like this and expect to be taken seriously ?

It is much simpler to actually work with the Bible text. The neverland world of supposition and interpolation makes the skeptics look so silly. And you seem to wonder why Christians don't engage you in more dialog ? Skeptics, heal thyself.

====

Now, Toto, back to the substance.
Do you yourself really have any difficulty with a Herodian-Pharisee tactical alliance against the man Jesus who was stirring up so much 'trouble' ?

Or do you actually agree with me on the substance here - but you are concerned with how spin looked when he omitted the Matthew verse and came up with the fatigue cover story ?

Shalom,
Steven
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