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Old 06-24-2004, 01:40 PM   #71
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Originally Posted by Mageth
NOGO, with all due respect, you appear to be projecting a modern, rationalistic worldview (logos) back onto the people of the First Century, who generally viewed the world, and religion, through mythos.
Mag, with all due respect, you appear to be strong on generalities but when presented with a specific example you cannot refute it.
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Old 06-24-2004, 01:54 PM   #72
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Originally Posted by dado
not true. culture is demonstrably self-referential, Paul's story "works" because the myth (literally) exists even though it is not (literally) true. all that is required is that Paul's readers be familiar with the myth - the truth of the myth is not necessary for Paul to make his point.

with respect to transmission of meaning, it is no different than a movie sequel: the original only has to exist to lay a foundation for the follow-on, it does not have to represent historical fact. mere existence is enough to lay foundation for future meaning.
Let me see if I understand this.

Paul believed that the Garden of Eden Story was untrue.
He needed a mission for his saviour.
He created a story.
People were guilty by association and made to feel guilty for being human.

He spread the story.

People listened to the story.
They knew that that the Garden story was a myth.
But it was a good story.
So they stopped asking themselves why they need a saviour,
started feeling guilty for being human and converted to Christianity en masse.
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Old 06-24-2004, 02:05 PM   #73
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Originally Posted by dado
oh the irony of a literalist making such a statement...
Did you read my statement literally to arrive at such a conclusion?

There is indeed irony but not where you think.
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Old 06-24-2004, 02:11 PM   #74
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Originally Posted by NOGO
Mag, with all due respect, you appear to be strong on generalities but when presented with a specific example you cannot refute it.
My intent was not to "refute" a specific example. I was pointing out that you are projecting the modern rationalistic mindset onto the people of the First Century which didn't view the world that way. But if you insist:

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We do not know if it mattered to them or not. What we do know is that they spoke about the stories as if they were fact.
Perhaps, but that does not tell us if they thought the stories were to be understood as literal history or as mythic tales that included metaphorical truth, as has been pointed out, I believe.

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Paul could not tell people that Jesus was sent to correct man's error in the Garden of Eden and at the same time tell them Adam never existed and he did not eat of the apple and there was no such thing as the Garden of Eden.
Who here has said that Paul told people that Adam never existed etc?

In any case, in mythos, Paul would be referring to the metaphorical truth of the myths, both ancient and the ones he was spinning, without insisting that they were literally true. That's the method of mythos - wrapping concepts that are hard to grasp in "historical" stories that are not intended to be interpreted or understood literally but metaphorically.

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For Paul's myth to hold the Garden story has to be history, which makes Jesus' story history, which gives people assurance that the promise of salvation is going to be HISTORY. ie Real!
Once again, simply not true. Working within mythos, Paul and his audience would understand that the "Garden story" described metaphorical truths wrapped in an "historical" account which it is not necessary to understand as literal history. The new Jesus myths Paul was spinning (if one accepts them as such) included metaphorical truth that depended on or looked back to the metaphorical truths derived from the "Garden story". Under mythos, it's not necessary to understand or interpret either as literal history. Doing that (insisting on a literal, historical interpretation) is understanding the Bible through the modern, rational mindset (logos).

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Just look today...
why do you think that Christians cannot accept that Jesus never existed as a man?
Because they're working under the modern, rational mindset (logos) and don't understand mythos.

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Deeper meaning is fine but if the foundation is vapor you have nothing.
Again, your logos is showing.
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Old 06-24-2004, 02:20 PM   #75
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You're still missing the point, and looking only through logos.

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Originally Posted by NOGO
Let me see if I understand this.

Paul believed that the Garden of Eden Story was untrue.
That's not what he said. He said the myth is not literally true. That does not mean that Paul didn't consider the myth metaphorically true.

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They knew that that the Garden story was a myth.
Remember: myth=false is a modern, and inappropriate, application or definition of "myth" in the context of mythos. The people could understand the myth as not literally true but still accept it as providing metaphorical truths.
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Old 06-24-2004, 02:26 PM   #76
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Referenced by Toto
In short, Hays argues that Paul employs an ecclesiocentric hermeneutic that springs from his conclusion that the church-an unlikely combination of Jew and Gentile Christians-is the goal or focus of God's redemptive activity revealed through the death, burial, and resurrection and witnessed to by the Law and the Prophets. This conclusion allows him to shape his interpretation of the Old Testament Scriptures he quotes or alludes to in his letters in surprising ways that, while speaking directly to the issues important to the churches to whom he is writing, would cause him to flunk most seminary courses on exegesis.

I agree.
Paul starts with a conclusion and then reads whatever he needs to read into the scriptures.

Most believers do exactly that even today. They do not allow the text to tell them what it says they project they beliefs into the texts.

This however does not deny that Paul believed scriptures to be true.

For example.

Paul tries to disinherit the Jews to a promise made by Yahweh to Abraham.
He jumps on a single word "seed" which was singular in his Greek Bible and concludes that this cannot mean the Jews because they are many. So it must be Jesus. Christians, therefore, inherit the promise through Jesus.

That is real freedom to interpret.

But why would Paul do that?


He must have believed that Yahweh actually existed.
He must have believed that Abraham actually existed.
He must have believed that a promise was made.
He must have believed that Yahweh had a plan for humanity and that this plan was somehow hidden in the Hebrew scriptures for him to see, if only Yahweh would allow him.

This must be the basis of his effort.
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Old 06-24-2004, 05:56 PM   #77
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Originally Posted by NOGO
Paul believed that the Garden of Eden Story was untrue.
i have no idea what paul believed to be true. none of us do, with any certainty. what i know is that one story being based on another story does not in any way imply a literal acceptance of the earlier story, nor does it imply the earlier story can't "mean" something entirely different.

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So they stopped asking themselves why they need a saviour
right there is the kernel of your internal contradiction: the garden of eden story in no way implies the need for a savior. in fact there is no savior at all in judaism, mostly because there is no need for one because there is nothing from which to be saved. that paul was able to get a conclusion directly at odds with the hebrew texts argues against your theory, not for it.
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Old 06-24-2004, 05:59 PM   #78
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Originally Posted by NOGO
They do not allow the text to tell them what it says they project they beliefs into the texts.
it is impossible to do otherwise with millenia old material for the same reason it is impossible to hear a Mozart symphony the way Mozart heard it: we cannot discard our context and don the mantle of "their" context. everybody reading these texts - all texts - projects their beliefs because reading is by definition an interpretive act.
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Old 06-25-2004, 12:35 AM   #79
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Originally Posted by Mageth
For someone supposedly very concerned with the historical life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, Paul's writings are strangely devoid of specific details of the events, wouldn't you say?
I don’t think that they are “strangely devoid� of specific details. Of the letters we have, none of them was meant to be a synoptic gospel as far as I know, and the fact pastoral letters (and other letters) don’t contain lots of specific historic details shouldn’t surprise anyone (so their absence doesn’t strike me as “strange�). The point of a pastoral letter, I would have thought, is to minister to, encourage and direct people, not give a history lesson.

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And it's questionable as to whether Paul was arguing for a physical resurrection or a spiritual/metaphorical resurrection, IMO.
There is absolutely no question he was arguing for a physical resurrection, IMO.

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In any case, whether Paul thought the events were literally true or not, he certainly mythologized them - he interpreted them through mythos, not logos.
I wonder what you mean by “mythologized�, could you give examples where he does this so I can get a sense of what you mean by the term “mythologized�? And what exactly do you mean by “he interpreted them through mythos, not logos�.
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Old 06-25-2004, 01:06 AM   #80
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Originally Posted by LP675
. . .
There is absolutely no question he was arguing for a physical resurrection, IMO.

. . .
Richard Carrier will be publishing an article on this, arguing that Paul believed in a spiritual resurrection. There are some threads on this.
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