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Old 10-19-2008, 12:07 AM   #11
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Here is an excellent website about the origins of Christianity:
http://www.pocm.info/
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Old 10-19-2008, 07:27 AM   #12
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In any discussion of the Synoptic "Little Apocalypse" (Mark 13, Matt 24, Luke 21) it should not be forgotten that a prominent trope found throughout ancient literature (including classics known to those literate in Greek, and novellas from the era of the gospels) was the "divinely inspired prophecy" warning of great dangers before the happy plot denouement. Lead characters and/or their followers were to come face to face with death through repeated horrific tests and genuinely risked failure and death before/if they came through. It is found in well-known epics about Odysseus, Aeneas, Jason, and many characters in the "novels" from certain Hellenistic and Roman times.

That such an "apocalyptic prophecy" should be put in the mouth of Jesus on the eve of his passing through death, with its warning to his disciples who must themselves do likewise, is quite in keeping with the literary and narrative tastes and expectations of the times. In support of this is the mimicking of the images of sun and moon going dark, famines and wars, etc etc -- all these are typical "apocalyptic" metaphors and tropes found throughout both Jewish and Greek literature from the days of Isaiah and Hesiod. They are drawn from the literature well-known at the time, not from "current news events".



Neil
Hi Neil

I'm not sure exactly what you are arguing.

Are you saying that Jesus was not an "apocalyptic prophet" because "apocalyptic prophet" is an invalid category, involving a false distinction between supposedly apocalyptic prophets and supposedly non-apocalyptic prophets ?

Or are you saying that although there were genuine "apocalyptic prophets", eg the author of Daniel, Jesus is not represented in the Gospels as having a similar message, and is instead represented as a different type of prophet ?

Andrew Criddle
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Old 10-19-2008, 09:45 AM   #13
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Yes, I am "reading" literary traditions "into" the gospels here, particularly Mark's. But I am attempting to show that the apocalyptic reading is equally a "reading into" the sayings and actions found in this gospel in particular.
Since this is all that really matters to my point, I've snipped the rest.

The apocalyptic reading is, arguably, a "reading into," conducted by the author of Mark. I've never found that argument persuasive, but that's neither here nor there for the moment. The author of Mark may have read an apocalyptic context into sayings he received.

It is not "reading into" by the modern exegete. It's simply what the story is. If you find the "apocalyptic prophet" model unpersuasive, you aren't arguing that the modern exegete doesn't understand what Mark is saying, you're arguing that Mark didn't understand what was meant.

The author of the blogpost isn't "reading into" anything.

Regards,
Rick Sumner
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Old 10-19-2008, 11:37 AM   #14
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Hi all,

I have been trying to research and understand Jesus. I have been impressed with some Earl Doherty's writings, however, I think that the view of Jesus as an apocalyptic prophet has some merit (and also leads me to believe that there was a historical Jesus after all). Bart Ehrman has expounded on this in a book called "Jesus". An excellent blog post about the topic can be found here:
http://exapologist.blogspot.com/2007...y-i-think.html
Jesus of the NT, as presented, was a mythical apocalyptic prophet and also a god, the mythical son of the God of the Jews.

In order to believe the Jesus of the NT was a real human apocalyptic prophet, there MUST be some external credible source to locate this Jesus, or some credible source that show there were prophecies directly linked to this 1st century entity.

There are none. There is nothing to believe.
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Old 10-19-2008, 12:49 PM   #15
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The author of Mark may have read an apocalyptic context into sayings he received.
Are not the "sayings" an explanation brought in to explain the time gap from the thirties to at least the sixties when Mark is thought to have been written? Would we even be thinking about oral traditions if this gap had not been pointed out?
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Old 10-19-2008, 02:52 PM   #16
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The author of Mark may have read an apocalyptic context into sayings he received.
Are not the "sayings" an explanation brought in to explain the time gap from the thirties to at least the sixties when Mark is thought to have been written? Would we even be thinking about oral traditions if this gap had not been pointed out?
Sayings about the reversal of the status quo? I don't think so.

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Rick Sumner
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Old 10-19-2008, 06:02 PM   #17
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The reason I think that Jesus was a historical person is due to the teachings of the Ebionites. They taught that Jesus was a normal human being - albeit a prophet - and rejected his divinity, virgin birth, and his resurrection. They also taught that only Jesus' relatives were the true leaders of the church like James.

The Ebionites seem to be a thorn in the side of both MJers and Pauline Trinitarian (ie modern) Christians alike, IMO.
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Old 10-19-2008, 06:11 PM   #18
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The reason I think that Jesus was a historical person is due to the teachings of the Ebionites. They taught that Jesus was a normal human being - albeit a prophet - and rejected his divinity, virgin birth, and his resurrection. They also taught that only Jesus' relatives were the true leaders of the church like James.

The Ebionites seem to be a thorn in the side of both MJers and Pauline Trinitarian (ie modern) Christians alike, IMO.
And the reason I think Jesus was a mythical apolyptical preacher is due to his MOTHER. According to the NT, his MOTHER is the witness to his fatherless conception.

Now, who do you believe his mother or the Ebionites?
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Old 10-19-2008, 07:01 PM   #19
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apocalyptic prophet
They make for the best religious inspirations though yes?
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Old 10-20-2008, 01:45 AM   #20
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It is not "reading into" by the modern exegete. It's simply what the story is. If you find the "apocalyptic prophet" model unpersuasive, you aren't arguing that the modern exegete doesn't understand what Mark is saying, you're arguing that Mark didn't understand what was meant.
You've lost me I'm afraid. Are you saying there is only one interpretation of Mark that is correct and that is the end of the matter? That you don't need to address any of the points I made because I am "simply wrong" to see anything but apocalyptic associations in Mark? If so, I so admire the economy of your argument!

Neil
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