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Old 11-27-2007, 05:50 AM   #21
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The really interesting thing is that both Suetonius and Tacitus, men of very different temperaments and from different generations, but both highly biased political propagandists, both mention that the problem with "Christians" had something to do with "superstition."

This suggests that they are indeed talking about the same movement in the empire, that the movement was "religous" in nature, and that it struck Roman sensibilities as odd and "irrational" -- unlike the sunny "rationalism" of emperor worship, and the unambiguous simplistic social gods of the Roman pantheon.

Further it suggests that the values of this religious movement struck the highly nostalgic and traditional Tacitus as somehow threatening to Rome's militaristic, materialistic, and pragmatically exploitative values.

Based on this, and the fact that Seutonius found this to be a "new" superstition (not an "old" one, as Judaism would have been considered), it seems to me Tacitus, Suetonius and Paul are all talking about the same movement.

Does anybody know what threat the mimes and their "partisans" posed to the Empire? What a rich, bizarre detail! Where they going to overthrow the military with imaginary swords?
I was reading Horaces Satires the other day and found an interesting parallel,sadly I can't find an online source so you will in effect have to take my word for it or look it up in the book itself


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1.2
Ambubaiarum collegia, pharmacopolae,
mendici, mimae, balatrones, hoc genus omne
maestum ac sollicitum est cantoris morte Tigelli
From an old translation in Smart's Horace (my copy has been rebound so I don't have a date for this edition )

Quote:
The tribes of female flute players ,quacks,vagrants,mimics,blackguards :all this set is sorrowful .....
Satire Book 1:2 Line 1 onwards

Now in the notes it says

Quote:
Mendici ,mimae,balatrones The priests of Isis and Cybele were beggars by profession and under the veil of religion were often guilty of the most criminal excesses Mimae were players of the most debauched and dissolute kind :...
So perhaps if the early Christian preachers were also beggars which it is not unreasonable to presume then either they were guilty of similar criminal acts or maybe just considered guilty by association .
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Old 11-27-2007, 08:13 AM   #22
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All the activities fall within the usual general class of moral abuses, which the Censor magistrate might clamp down on; undue luxury, new foreign superstitions, philosophers (although not here, interestingly), and the usual suspects -- actors, pimps, and charioteers.
I agree with Roger here. It appears to me that punishing Christians was simply another of Nero's "reforms," even though we now might not consider it to belong with the others.

Apart from that, I've never seen the question of motive convincingly addressed. Whereas motive is relatively easy to infer in many cases, what is the motive for this passage? Surely it wasn't added in anticipation of HJ/MJ debates two millenia hence. And just as surely, it wasn't written to reflect the high esteem in which Christians were held in Nero's time. In other words, it seems unlikely to have been inserted by a Christian. So why?

Cheers,

V.
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Old 11-27-2007, 09:03 AM   #23
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All the activities fall within the usual general class of moral abuses, which the Censor magistrate might clamp down on; undue luxury, new foreign superstitions, philosophers (although not here, interestingly), and the usual suspects -- actors, pimps, and charioteers.
I agree with Roger here. It appears to me that punishing Christians was simply another of Nero's "reforms," even though we now might not consider it to belong with the others.

Apart from that, I've never seen the question of motive convincingly addressed. Whereas motive is relatively easy to infer in many cases, what is the motive for this passage? Surely it wasn't added in anticipation of HJ/MJ debates two millenia hence. And just as surely, it wasn't written to reflect the high esteem in which Christians were held in Nero's time. In other words, it seems unlikely to have been inserted by a Christian. So why?
There is a paper somewhere by Robin Birley in which he suggests that Tertullian's Apologeticum may have been written with an eye to rebutting this passage, although he nowhere mentions Annals (he does call Tacitus a liar in Ad nationes). If so it wasn't seen as pro-Christian (and nor was Pliny's Letter and Trajan's reply, which Tertullian also mentions).

All the best,

Roger Pearse
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Old 11-27-2007, 05:30 PM   #24
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I believe the interpolation argument has been widely made, with all due respect to spin.

This is something of a last bastion of ancient conspiracy theorists,
Typical effete apologetic excuse for rhetoric.

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... which tend to impute incredible efficiency to the purported conspirators. The idea that some Christian cleric combed through Suetonius in order to insert a single referernce to a supposititious persecution of Christians in a list of other Imperial edits (especially ones involving the suppression of riotous behavior --
Riotous behavior, christians? Ridiculous. The text says it was supposedly their "mischievous religion". Besides, they weren't suppressed: they were executed. The others got ordered to stop or were banished for their naughty behavior.

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In any case, as Roger points out, in fact the suppression of Christianity fits in perfectly. The conduct outlawed involved appeals to emotion and disorder, and that's exactly what a superstitio like Christianity did as far as the Roman authorities were concerned. It was an appeal to excessive emotion, and excessive public emotion led to disorder, and disorder lead to a threat to Imperial authority. This is why Suetonious looks down upon Nero's single superstitio -- his fetish for the "little girl" statue that saved his life by exposing a plot against him. Clearly Suetonius thinks this is just one more (ironic) example of Nero's unbalanced mind.
Loved the diatribe. Given the crazy ideas that people later had about christianity -- sacrificing babies, worshiping ass-headed gods --, it's not likely that they were flaunting their new beliefs to the world for anyone to know about them. Christians don't fit in to the list of criminal financial disturbances. And any classicist would know that Nero was always slow to impose death.

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By the way, the irrationality of Christianity is a leitmotif used by various critics of the 1st and 2nd century. Galen and Celsius both frown upon the "illogic" and childishness of Christians.
Typically irrelevant.

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If a cleric were interpolating a banning of Christianity, he would not have emphasized the newness and emotionalism of it. From a cleric's perspective, Christianity was as old as the Old Testament, and reasonable as can be. And it's hard to believe such a propagandist could so effortlessly take on the persona of the gossipy Roman flunky, Seutonius.
At least get Suetonius right. He wasn't a Roman flunky, but a patrician crony (who was probably very popular for his literary efforts). And you're in no position to know what an interpolator should or should not have written. You are merely conjecturing on no basis whatsoever.


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Old 12-03-2007, 10:40 PM   #25
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I have just gone through the passage of Annals 15.44 by Tacitus and I have now noticed, quite belatedly, that there is no mention whatsoever of Christus being crucified under Pilate. Tacitus only stated that Christus was put to death by Pontius Pilate.

Annals 15.44,".........Christus, the founder of the name, was put to death by Pontius Pilate......."

Now, this Christus may have been beheaded or killed in some other fashion, unless it can be shown that Pilate only used crucifixion for execution.

This is another indication that the Christians of Christus may not be the Christians of "Paul's" Jesus.
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Old 12-04-2007, 05:39 PM   #26
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Originally Posted by Gamera View Post
The really interesting thing is that both Suetonius and Tacitus, men of very different temperaments and from different generations, but both highly biased political propagandists, both mention that the problem with "Christians" had something to do with "superstition."

This suggests that they are indeed talking about the same movement in the empire, that the movement was "religous" in nature, and that it struck Roman sensibilities as odd and "irrational" -- unlike the sunny "rationalism" of emperor worship, and the unambiguous simplistic social gods of the Roman pantheon.

Further it suggests that the values of this religious movement struck the highly nostalgic and traditional Tacitus as somehow threatening to Rome's militaristic, materialistic, and pragmatically exploitative values.

Based on this, and the fact that Seutonius found this to be a "new" superstition (not an "old" one, as Judaism would have been considered), it seems to me Tacitus, Suetonius and Paul are all talking about the same movement.

Does anybody know what threat the mimes and their "partisans" posed to the Empire? What a rich, bizarre detail! Where they going to overthrow the military with imaginary swords?
I was reading Horaces Satires the other day and found an interesting parallel,sadly I can't find an online source so you will in effect have to take my word for it or look it up in the book itself




From an old translation in Smart's Horace (my copy has been rebound so I don't have a date for this edition )

Satire Book 1:2 Line 1 onwards

Now in the notes it says

Quote:
Mendici ,mimae,balatrones The priests of Isis and Cybele were beggars by profession and under the veil of religion were often guilty of the most criminal excesses Mimae were players of the most debauched and dissolute kind :...
So perhaps if the early Christian preachers were also beggars which it is not unreasonable to presume then either they were guilty of similar criminal acts or maybe just considered guilty by association .

Thanks for the reference. This is part of the leitmotif against Christianity that I noted. Roman elites viewed it as emotional and hence a danger to order. In addition, Christians were associated with vagabonds and other disreputably people, not only because the evangelists were vagrant, but because Christians set about rising money for the poor in an organized fashion. This most have been seen as a threat to Roman authority. The equivalent of a modern soup kitchen would have been highly suspicious to the Roman elite.
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Old 12-04-2007, 05:45 PM   #27
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Typical effete apologetic excuse for rhetoric.
Spin = No substance, once again.

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Riotous behavior, christians? Ridiculous. The text says it was supposedly their "mischievous religion". Besides, they weren't suppressed: they were executed. The others got ordered to stop or were banished for their naughty behavior.
They were grouped with those who engaged in riotous behavior because of their emotionalism in worship and in doctrine, which was suspect.

Quote:
Loved the diatribe. Given the crazy ideas that people later had about christianity -- sacrificing babies, worshiping ass-headed gods --, it's not likely that they were flaunting their new beliefs to the world for anyone to know about them. Christians don't fit in to the list of criminal financial disturbances. And any classicist would know that Nero was always slow to impose death.
Not in this case. I love it when spin reads texts, discerns a rule, and then applies the rule to the text to normalize it of all excemption to the rule. It is typical of bad philology, which is rife in naive historical circles. No serious scholar does that anymore.

Quote:
Typically irrelevant.
The fact that other contemporary classical reference to Christianity include the same attack as that in the text at issue is "irrelevant" to the authenticity of the passage? Only in spinville.

Quote:
At least get Suetonius right. He wasn't a Roman flunky, but a patrician crony (who was probably very popular for his literary efforts). And you're in no position to know what an interpolator should or should not have written. You are merely conjecturing on no basis whatsoever.
Look who's talking. The burden is on you. The texts says what it says. You have just admitted that your interpolation theory is pure speculation.
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Old 12-04-2007, 06:58 PM   #28
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Originally Posted by Gamera View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin;4991587QUOTE
Typical effete apologetic excuse for rhetoric.
Spin = No substance, once again.
Typical pot looking for kettle.

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Originally Posted by Gamera View Post
They were grouped with those who engaged in riotous behavior because of their emotionalism in worship and in doctrine, which was suspect.
Would you turn off the effluence and attempt to look at your eisegesis for what it is? Your above comments have nothing to do with
afflicti suppliciis Christiani genus hominum superstitionis novae ac maleficae
Can you see how your stuff is related to the comment about christians? No, I thought not. :wave:

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Originally Posted by Gamera View Post
Not in this case. I love it when spin reads texts, discerns a rule, and then applies the rule to the text to normalize it of all excemption to the rule. It is typical of bad philology, which is rife in naive historical circles. No serious scholar does that anymore.
You continue to create reasons to opt out of what evidence indicates. In this case you assume the veracity of what is under question in order to contravene new evidence which negates the veracity of what you assume as veracious.

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Originally Posted by Gamera View Post
The fact that other contemporary classical reference to Christianity include the same attack as that in the text at issue is "irrelevant" to the authenticity of the passage? Only in spinville.
The old joke is: how do you know when a lawyer is Lying? He moves his lips. :Cheeky:

Would you like to show the relevance of Galen and Celsus, given what the text actually says about christians (you know, "new and evil")?

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Originally Posted by Gamera View Post
Quote:
At least get Suetonius right. He wasn't a Roman flunky, but a patrician crony (who was probably very popular for his literary efforts). And you're in no position to know what an interpolator should or should not have written. You are merely conjecturing on no basis whatsoever.
Look who's talking. The burden is on you. The texts says what it says. You have just admitted that your interpolation theory is pure speculation.
In the past I have supplied information on the subject.

You have surreptitiously changed the subject from your ridiculous conjecture about an interpolator should be writing about to whatever it was that passed through those lips. I guess that means that you accept the ridiculousness of your conjecture.

Now we are left with your attempts to make the reference to execution of christians fit its context, a list of urban administration matters. Have you got anything better, something that reflects the text?


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Old 12-05-2007, 11:07 AM   #29
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Would you turn off the effluence and attempt to look at your eisegesis for what it is? Your above comments have nothing to do with
afflicti suppliciis Christiani genus hominum superstitionis novae ac maleficae
Can you see how your stuff is related to the comment about christians? No, I thought not. :wave:
Focus, focus. Superstitio is related to an emotional irrational belief, as Suetonius makes clear shortly thereafter in discussing Nero's own fetish object, which he also calls a supersitio.

I gave you the citation, but I guess it was too much to ask you to read it. I do it again.

56 He utterly despised all cults, with the sole exception of that of the Syrian God,159 and even acquired such a contempt for her that he made water on her image, after he was enamoured of another superstition, which was the only one to which he constantly clung. For he had received as a gift from some unknown man of the commons, as a protection against plots, a little image of a girl; and since a conspiracy at once came to light, he continued to venerate it as a powerful divinity and to offer three sacrifices to it every day, encouraging the belief that through its communication he had knowledge of the future. A few months before his death he did attend an inspection of victims, but could not get a favourable omen.

http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/...ars/Nero*.html



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You continue to create reasons to opt out of what evidence indicates. In this case you assume the veracity of what is under question in order to contravene new evidence which negates the veracity of what you assume as veracious.
Ah, no substance.

Quote:
The old joke is: how do you know when a lawyer is Lying? He moves his lips. :
Ah, no substance, and no comic ability.

Quote:
Would you like to show the relevance of Galen and Celsus, given what the text actually says about christians (you know, "new and evil")?
Yes, read them. Galen and Celsus says Chrisitanity is evil because they are childish and illogical. Read, read.


Quote:
You have surreptitiously changed the subject from your ridiculous conjecture about an interpolator should be writing about to whatever it was that passed through those lips. I guess that means that you accept the ridiculousness of your conjecture.
I do think conjecture about interpolation is mostly ridiculous, yes. What's your position on that again?

Quote:
Now we are left with your attempts to make the reference to execution of christians fit its context, a list of urban administration matters. Have you got anything better, something that reflects the text?
Yes, we have Suetonius, Galen and Celsus all criticizing Christianity for being emotional, and hence threat to public order -- just like the other groups Nero attacked. Go figure.

When you can rebut this, get back to us.
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Old 12-05-2007, 04:18 PM   #30
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Would you turn off the effluence and attempt to look at your eisegesis for what it is? Your above comments have nothing to do with
afflicti suppliciis Christiani genus hominum superstitionis novae ac maleficae
Can you see how your stuff is related to the comment about christians? No, I thought not. :wave:
Focus, focus. Superstitio is related to an emotional irrational belief, as Suetonius makes clear shortly thereafter in discussing Nero's own fetish object, which he also calls a supersitio.

I gave you the citation, but I guess it was too much to ask you to read it. I do it again.

56 He utterly despised all cults, with the sole exception of that of the Syrian God,159 and even acquired such a contempt for her that he made water on her image, after he was enamoured of another superstition, which was the only one to which he constantly clung. For he had received as a gift from some unknown man of the commons, as a protection against plots, a little image of a girl; and since a conspiracy at once came to light, he continued to venerate it as a powerful divinity and to offer three sacrifices to it every day, encouraging the belief that through its communication he had knowledge of the future. A few months before his death he did attend an inspection of victims, but could not get a favourable omen.

http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/...ars/Nero*.html





Ah, no substance.



Ah, no substance, and no comic ability.



Yes, read them. Galen and Celsus says Chrisitanity is evil because they are childish and illogical. Read, read.




I do think conjecture about interpolation is mostly ridiculous, yes. What's your position on that again?

Quote:
Now we are left with your attempts to make the reference to execution of christians fit its context, a list of urban administration matters. Have you got anything better, something that reflects the text?
Yes, we have Suetonius, Galen and Celsus all criticizing Christianity for being emotional, and hence threat to public order -- just like the other groups Nero attacked. Go figure.

When you can rebut this, get back to us.
Christ, Gamera, nothing new in this entire waste of space. You couldn't even cite Galen or Celsus, so you could make a point. And as to superstitio, check out a decent Latin dictionary. OLD tells you that the Romans used it "more or less disparagingly to foreign or non-orthodox religious practices or doctrines". You're pushing too hard on a single word which obviously doesn't support you.


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