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Old 06-15-2007, 12:38 PM   #21
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Christianity overwhelmed the Roman Empire in a short amount of time.
300 years is "a short amount of time"?
Yep, in the great scheme of western history. To grow from a bizarre jewish cult in Judea to the official religion of the Empire in three centuries is utterly remarkable by any standard.
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Old 06-15-2007, 12:42 PM   #22
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That's pretty amazing, considering the number of people's lives affected by him. Why are there no contemporary written sources about him???!!
There are no surviving contemporary sources. The sources that do survive make reference to contemporary writings about him. Almost nothing in the way of documentary evidence has survived from that period.

For Jesus, we have no reliable indication that there were ever any contemporary written sources. <snip>
Yeah, and although this still isn't a smoking gun for an historical Alexander, it tells us that, comparatively, the case for him is stronger than it is for an historical Jesus; at least in this respect.

Furthermore, the lack of surviving contemporary sources may change. There's a contemporary Babylonian cuneiform inscription on a tablet (apparently a diary), saying "the King died today", and written in the year Alexander is supposed to have died. While it's not conclusive that the tablet actually refers to Alexander, it would be an unlikely coincidence if it didn't... Because the Babylonians wrote so much on clay tablets, which last longer than papyrus, and because we're finding possibly relevant inscriptions from the same period, there's a good chance we'll actually find contemporary accounts of him, assuming he was real.

By the way, does anyone know if the Arab and Persian legends about Iskandar are independent of our Greek and Roman sources? Is there any way to tell?
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Old 06-15-2007, 12:49 PM   #23
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In fact, my understanding is that the site where the village of Bethany was thought to be, is now called el-ÊAzariye, so called from the memory of Lazarus (The initial letter of the name Lazarus is elided in Arabic after the l of the article). Now, Bethany is identified in the gospel fo John as the village of Lazarus, whom Jesus purportedly brought back from the dead. John 11:1-46

Does anybody know if the current scholarship supports this interpretation, which seems to support the historicity of Jesus in the same way eponymous cities support Alexander's historicity.
It would not support Jesus' historicity unless you can show that it was renamed by someone who knew Jesus and knew about the Lazarus episode, and not by later Chistians who only knew the story.

Bethay

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If Bethany is not a Hebrew word, if Bethany is not found in Hebrew dictionaries, if Bethany does not exist anywhere in Tenach and if the definition of Bethany cannot be determined nor agreed upon by non Jewish scholars and translators then what does this say about the New Testament? Does Bethany exist? Did Bethany ever exist? This casts much doubt on the credibility of the New Testament, its writers, its translators and its scholars.

Thayer states that Origen {an early church father who is generally considered the greatest theologian and biblical scholar of the early Eastern church by non Jewish scholars} confesses "that in his day {185 CE- 254 CE} nearly all the codd. {manuscripts} {then} read {Bethany}, declares that when he journeyed through those parts he did not find any place of that name."

The point is that Bethany like so many other words, claims, suggested quotes and statements of the New Testament is not verifiable and is very questionable

Thanks for the link.

I'm still unclear whether the claim for the site of Bethany was made based on the current arabic name refering to Lazarus, or whether the two are independent of each other.

If independent, then of course, that provides some very credible support for something remarkable happening in Bethany involving one Lazarus. Further, even if the arabic name is the basis for the conclusion that it is the NT Bethany, some story about a Lazarus must have been significant enough for the local Arab population, who were presumably Muslims and not Christians, to refer to Lazarus. It suggests at the very least a local tradition about something remarkable about a Lazarus. I'm not aware of any other story from that time and that area involving a Lazarus, except John's rendition of his resurrection from the dead at the hands of Jesus. So, this is indeed some evidence of Jesus's historicity.

Let me suggest that one can also throw into doubt the various eponymous arguments about Alexander. Obviously, once Alexander became a important historical figure, there would be an incentive to rewrite history to glom onto his name, by changing the names of cities or producing false etymologies to make a city's name fall into line with the great Alexandrine expansion. Etc.

Again, I'm not saying that happened, but if you are going to scrutinize Bethany with such a jeweler's eye, similar scrutiny should be applied to the claim that Alexander's empire was self-evidently in existence shortly after his purported life.
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Old 06-15-2007, 12:52 PM   #24
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300 years is "a short amount of time"?
Yep, in the great scheme of western history. To grow from a bizarre jewish cult in Judea to the official religion of the Empire in three centuries is utterly remarkable by any standard.
According to Rodney Stark, the growth of Christianity in the Roman Empire followed the growth rate of most modern new religious movements, which recruit new members primarily through personal contact with converts. There was nothing remarkable about the growth of Christianity.
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Old 06-15-2007, 12:53 PM   #25
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There are no surviving contemporary sources. The sources that do survive make reference to contemporary writings about him. Almost nothing in the way of documentary evidence has survived from that period.

For Jesus, we have no reliable indication that there were ever any contemporary written sources. <snip>
Yeah, and although this still isn't a smoking gun for an historical Alexander, it tells us that, comparatively, the case for him is stronger than it is for an historical Jesus; at least in this respect.

Furthermore, the lack of surviving contemporary sources may change. There's a contemporary Babylonian cuneiform inscription on a tablet (apparently a diary), saying "the King died today", and written in the year Alexander is supposed to have died. While it's not conclusive that the tablet actually refers to Alexander, it would be an unlikely coincidence if it didn't... Because the Babylonians wrote so much on clay tablets, which last longer than papyrus, and because we're finding possibly relevant inscriptions from the same period, there's a good chance we'll actually find contemporary accounts of him, assuming he was real.

By the way, does anyone know if the Arab and Persian legends about Iskandar are independent of our Greek and Roman sources? Is there any way to tell?

This is exceedingly tendentious. The NT authors purport to be eyewitnesses or claim access to eyewitnesses. This is no different from the claims of the authors concerning Alexander. The difference lies in the ms history. Christian mss are simply closer in time and better attested to than the mss refering to Alexander, which if I remember correctly, aren't within a 1,000 of the Macedonian's life, and whose origins are obscure.
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Old 06-15-2007, 12:54 PM   #26
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Yep, in the great scheme of western history. To grow from a bizarre jewish cult in Judea to the official religion of the Empire in three centuries is utterly remarkable by any standard.
According to Rodney Stark, the growth of Christianity in the Roman Empire followed the growth rate of most modern new religious movements, which recruit new members primarily through personal contact with converts. There was nothing remarkable about the growth of Christianity.
I'm not refering to a growth rate. I'm refering to its rise from a persecuted cult to official religion of the Empire. That just doesn't happen everyday or every three centuries, as far as that goes.
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Old 06-15-2007, 01:07 PM   #27
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Thanks for the link.

I'm still unclear whether the claim for the site of Bethany was made based on the current arabic name refering to Lazarus, or whether the two are independent of each other.

If independent, then of course, that provides some very credible support for something remarkable happening in Bethany involving one Lazarus. Further, even if the arabic name is the basis for the conclusion that it is the NT Bethany, some story about a Lazarus must have been significant enough for the local Arab population, who were presumably Muslims and not Christians, to refer to Lazarus. It suggests at the very least a local tradition about something remarkable about a Lazarus. I'm not aware of any other story from that time and that area involving a Lazarus, except John's rendition of his resurrection from the dead at the hands of Jesus. So, this is indeed some evidence of Jesus's historicity.
If they were Muslims, the year was after 600 CE and the local muslim-arabs must have had a long historical memory. It's more likely that the local population were Christians when the city was named. Lazarus might have been a local bigwig. There's no reason to assume that the town was named after him because he was raised from the dead there.
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Old 06-15-2007, 02:04 PM   #28
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Thanks for the link.

I'm still unclear whether the claim for the site of Bethany was made based on the current arabic name refering to Lazarus, or whether the two are independent of each other.

If independent, then of course, that provides some very credible support for something remarkable happening in Bethany involving one Lazarus. Further, even if the arabic name is the basis for the conclusion that it is the NT Bethany, some story about a Lazarus must have been significant enough for the local Arab population, who were presumably Muslims and not Christians, to refer to Lazarus. It suggests at the very least a local tradition about something remarkable about a Lazarus. I'm not aware of any other story from that time and that area involving a Lazarus, except John's rendition of his resurrection from the dead at the hands of Jesus. So, this is indeed some evidence of Jesus's historicity.
If they were Muslims, the year was after 600 CE and the local muslim-arabs must have had a long historical memory. It's more likely that the local population were Christians when the city was named. Lazarus might have been a local bigwig. There's no reason to assume that the town was named after him because he was raised from the dead there.

Well, we would need a onomastic study to make any headway here. If the name is rare then presuming the town is named after a big wig would be unsupported.

What we do know is that we have a story about a Lazarus, that takes place in more or less that area, involving a remarkable event and involving Jesus. Unless there is other evidence on the table, this seems to provide some support, however attenuated, of Jesus' historicity. Or at least it is of the same or similar quality as the eponymous evidence relating to Alexander, which was my original point.

By the way, a 600 year old tradition is hardly unusual in that area of the world. We have longer traditions than that concerning Jesus' tomb, etc. The point isn't whether the tradition is true, but that it exists at all.
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Old 06-15-2007, 06:53 PM   #29
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<snip> The NT authors purport to be eyewitnesses or claim access to eyewitnesses. <snip>
Well that doesn't sound right. AFAIK, the authors of Mark and Matthew don't make any such claim, and the author of Luke says he wasn't an eyewitness. Only the author of John even implies that he was, and that seems unlikely given the book's late dating and apparent dependence on Mark. Since the gospels are the only books with more than a trace of biographical information about Jesus, they're the ones that count for HJ/MJ purposes.

Now some of the epistles may (for all I know) purport to be written by eyewitnesses. However, the only ones whose authenticity is widely accepted are some of Paul's, and he of course does not claim to have seen Jesus... Then there's Acts, which was almost certainly written by the same person as Luke, who, again, says he wasn't an eyewitness. That leaves Revelation, which identifies its author as John, but does not make clear which John, nor whether he witnessed anything. And, like GJohn, it was probably written too late.

I'm not aware of any NT book which plausibly claims to have been written by an eyewitness.


As far as access to eyewitnesses, the author of Luke and Acts does not claim it. He only says he investigated matters... Paul says he has access to the original disciples, but does not relay much, if any, biographical information about Jesus that he got from them. Furthermore, the dating of all the NT books (other than Paul's letters) makes it unlikely that they are even second-hand.
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Old 06-15-2007, 08:28 PM   #30
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The question is whether a founder of a religion existed or not. Joseph Smith existed, there's little doubt about that. So the analogy between Christianity and Mormonism seems to support the historicity of Jesus, not rebut it.
Joseph Smith is not analogous to Jesus Christ, more like Saul/Paul. Both Joseph Smith and Saul/Paul claim to have visions of a character called Jesus and developed doctrines about this mythical character, bearing in mind that this character have fundamental differences in Mormonism.

Mormonism is a religion based on mythical characters called God and Jesus Christ, not Joseph Smith. Valentinus and Marcion, according to Irenaeus, did actually exist, yet these Christians claim that Jesus was not a real human being.

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As to the supernatural claims of Mormonism and Christianity, are they really the issue? I don't think so. One can conclude that Jesus was an historical figure without accepting the supernatural claims about him, just as one must accept the historicity of Joseph Smith, regardless of the supernatural claims he made about angels and golden tablets.
Billions of people accept Jesus by faith and a few reject Jesus by reason.

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In short, invoking Mormonism is a losing argument for the JMers.
No one can prove Jesus exist, so JMers cannot lose any argument with respect to Jesus.
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