FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 04-16-2013, 06:56 PM   #111
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Auburn ca
Posts: 4,269
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Robert Tulip View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by outhouse View Post
I asked you to find a passage in Gmark that can be attributed to Isis.
Since there is no virgin birth in the Gospel of Mark, that might be hard. I have provided the clearest example in the Gospels, which happens to be in John. The Egyptian myth is used as the template. This is obvious for anyone who is not wearing blinkers.

Could you please pay attention?

Did I ask for the virgin birth? Hell no!



Mark mentions Mary once by name, and mentions of her once more. And in no way shape or form is there anything remotely even with imagination, anything that can be tied to Isis, in any way shape or form.




Mark is the earliest tradition and has built a very human Mary that is in no way a deity like Isis in any shape or form. The first tradition is that of a mother.


In the second century they were still debating pagan and OT influence for the virgin birth mythology, and no where in these early arguments is Isis named, why? Justin Martyr goes into detail about this.



There is no direct connection.
outhouse is offline  
Old 04-16-2013, 09:12 PM   #112
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Canberra, Australia
Posts: 635
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by outhouse View Post
Could you please pay attention? Did I ask for the virgin birth? Hell no!
If you want a serious conversation I suggest you be less rude. The absence of the virgin birth from Mark is relevant, given the trope of Isis as virgin mother. You are asking for evidence in a place where we are unlikely to find it. That shows nothing.
Quote:
Originally Posted by outhouse View Post
Mark is the earliest tradition and has built a very human Mary that is in no way a deity like Isis in any shape or form. The first tradition is that of a mother.
That is fatuous. Mark may be the first Christian gospel, but his ideas rest upon extremely ancient mythological traditions of a dying and rising saviour. The scale, age and influence of the Isis tradition, already old beyond counting at the time the Gospels were constructed, made it a useful template for Christian ideation. The queen of heaven motif in the Apocalypse is far older than Mark, and provides illustration of continuity between pagan myth and the Christian fiction.
Quote:
Originally Posted by outhouse View Post
In the second century they were still debating pagan and OT influence for the virgin birth mythology, and no where in these early arguments is Isis named, why? Justin Martyr goes into detail about this. There is no direct connection.
I have previously commented on this fatuous point of why early Christians did not acknowledge their sources, and am happy to repeat myself in the face of apparent inability to assimilate simple ideas. There was a cultural war between Christianity and pagan religion. Therefore, if Christianity found ideas within pagan religion that it considered useful, it had to alter them to conceal their origin. The Lazarus story in John is an excellent example, as is the Queen of Heaven in Revelation.

Justin Martyr was a fool. His 'devil got there first' explanation for the apparent borrowing by Christianity shows the bereftitude of his intellect. Perfect for the church. By citing an author such as Justin who actually believed that Jesus was born with no human father, you are digging yourself into a hole in regard to analysis of how the myth actually evolved. Orthodox miraculous debates are not of any scientific merit.
Robert Tulip is offline  
Old 04-16-2013, 10:14 PM   #113
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Auburn ca
Posts: 4,269
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Robert Tulip View Post
If you want a serious conversation I suggest you be less rude.
If you want a serious conversation, quit dodging questions.

It would normally not bother me, but I'm seeing a pattern of this. Could we stop it then?

Quote:
You are asking for evidence in a place where we are unlikely to find it. That shows nothing.
Your wrong here again.


It shows the earliest members of the movement that would evolve into Christians did not use Isis in any shape or form in relation to Mary.

Just the opposite of Isis, in Mark, Mary is very human and not considered a deity.



Quote:
That is fatuous.
As has been every reply of yours in this thread.


Quote:
Mark may be the first Christian gospel, but his ideas rest upon extremely ancient mythological traditions of a dying and rising saviour.

Sorry but that is not what is written in Mark.

I will tell you what is though, because its obvious you missed it completely.

A Galilean traveling teacher and healer who is baptized in the Jordan by JtB, gains a few followers of his own and teaches and heals in villages. He travels to Jerusalem for Passover where he causes trouble in the temple and was placed on a cross to die.


The tradition lies firmly in the OT which is obviously the foundation and influence of a Messiah created by these Hellenistic Jewish Proselytes who compiled earlier sources to create Gmark.


dying-rising gods are blown out of proportion for skeptical polemic.


Quote:
The scale, age and influence of the Isis tradition, already old beyond counting at the time the Gospels were constructed, made it a useful template for Christian ideation.
False

There is no evidence for this, as matter of fact, Gmark which is the foundation for the gospels and Christianity, has no comparison at all in any way shape or form for this.

Quote:
The queen of heaven motif in the Apocalypse is far older than Mark, and provides illustration of continuity between pagan myth and the Christian fiction.
Queen of heaven is also a OT term for Asherah.

And this "queen of heaven" didn't come from Isis. the term in Gluke is Queen Mother. And that is due to her relationship with the son of god.

Its well known mythology surrounding Asherah, but even then, we know Mary's queen of heaven didn't originate from this OT passage regarding Asherah.

Thus there is no illustration of continuity between pagan myth and Christianity the way you intend to pervert it so badly.

Quote:
Christian fiction.
Sure there is, and a lot of it too.

Quote:
There was a cultural war between Christianity and pagan religion.
Stop, your repeating a pattern of poor work here.

When? at what time was this war going on? You need to be specific if you want to build anything that will stand up.

When the gospels were being written there was no war going on with pagans. The movement was trying to survive, and had a war going on with Judaism.

You understand that?, we have evidence of a little cultural war, and it wasn't with pagans. The only pagans we know about are the Romans, and we have details of that, so there is no mystery there.



Quote:
if Christianity found ideas within pagan religion that it considered useful, it had to alter them to conceal their origin.
False again.

Christians were under the gun from Romans, they didn't care about your imaginative pagan influence. They would not sacrifice to the Roman deities and that had them in quite the trouble with Romans. They were tortured and Martyred, and if you read a real history book you would know that instead of hiding, many wanted to become Martyrs for the movement.

Pick up Candida Moss's book and actually read it please. She goes into detail about these topics.


Christians viewed Jesus sacrifice on the cross as the ultimate human sacrifice, they would not sacrifice to Roman deities or even denounce their faith, facing torture in horrific ways. So the last thing they would ever do is compromise their faith or hide it due to your imaginative pagan war.


Quote:
The Lazarus story in John is an excellent example, as is the Queen of Heaven in Revelation.
There is nothing hidden here at all.

There is also debate if Revelations passage refers to Mary.

Quote:
Justin Martyr was a fool.

Of course you will say that, only because it doesn't follow your faith.

Right now, all I see is your faith.
outhouse is offline  
Old 04-16-2013, 11:05 PM   #114
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by outhouse View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Robert Tulip View Post
There was a cultural war between Christianity and pagan religion.
Stop, your repeating a pattern of poor work here.

When? at what time was this war going on? You need to be specific if you want to build anything that will stand up.
The cultural war between Christianity and pagan religion for the sake of discussion may be taken as being concluded at the Council of Constantinople c.381 CE.
'We authorise followers of this law to assume the title of orthodox Christians; but as for the others since, in our judgement, they are foolish madmen, we decree that they shall be branded with the ignominious names of heretics.'

- Emperor Theodosius 381 CE

The question remains when did the cultural war between Christianity and pagan religion commence.


Quote:
When the gospels were being written there was no war going on with pagans.

When were the gospels being written?
Please provide your evidence.



Quote:
Quote:
if Christianity found ideas within pagan religion that it considered useful, it had to alter them to conceal their origin.
False again.

Christians were under the gun from Romans, they didn't care about your imaginative pagan influence.
What about Justin Martyr?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joseph Wheless, "FORGERY IN CHRISTIANITY", 1930

JUSTIN MARTYR: (c. 100-165): Saint, Martyr, a foremost
Christian Apologist. A Gentile ex-Pagan of Samaria, turned
Christian, and supposed to have suffered martyrdom in the reign of
Marcus Aurelius, in whose name he forged a very preposterous
rescript. His principal works, in Greek, are his two Apologies, the
first addressed to the Emperor Antoninus Pius, whose reply he also
forged; the second to "the sacred Senate" of Rome; his Dialogue
with Trypho the Jew, and his Hortatory Address to the Greeks. He
describes himself and fellow Christian Fathers as "we who formerly
used magical arts." (I Apol. ch. xiv.) The burden of his arguments
is Pagan "analogies" of Christianity, the contents of many of his
chapters being indicated by their captions, as "The Demons Imitate
Christian Doctrine
," and "Heathen Analogies to Christian Doctrine,"
in chapters xiv and xv of his First Apology, and elsewhere. His
whole faith in Christ and in Christianity, he declares, is
confirmed by these heathen precedents and analogies: "Be well
assured, then, Trypho, that I am established in the knowledge of
and faith in the Scriptures by those counterfeits which he who is
called the Devil is said to have performed among the Greeks; just
as some were wrought by the Magi in Egypt, and others by the false
prophets in Elijah's days. For when they tell that Bacchus, son of
Jupiter, was begotten by [Jupiter's) intercourse with Semele, and
that he was the discoverer of the vine; and when they relate, that
being torn in pieces, and having died, he rose again, and ascended
to heaven; and when they introduce wine into his mysteries, do I
not perceive that [the devil] has imitated the prophecy announced
by the patriarch Jacob, and recorded by Moses? ... And when he [the
devil] brings forward AEsculapius as the raiser of the dead and
healer of all diseases, may I not say in this matter likewise he
has imitated the prophecies about Christ? ... And when I hear that
Perseus was begotten of a virgin, I understand that the deceiving
serpent counterfeited this also." (Dial, with Trypho, ch. lxix;
ANF. i, 233.)

Father Justin accepts the heathen gods as genuine divine
beings; but says they are only wicked demons who lead men astray
;
and he says that these "evil demons, effecting apparitions of
themselves, both defiled women and corrupted boys." (I Apol. ch. v,
eh. liv, passim.) The devils "having heard it proclaimed through
the prophets that the Christ was to come, ... they put forward many
to be called the sons of Jupiter, under the impression that they
would be able to produce in men the idea that the things which were
said in regard to Christ were more marvelous tales, like the things
which were said by the poets.


Quote:
They would not sacrifice to the Roman deities and that had them in quite the trouble with Romans. They were tortured and Martyred, and if you read a real history book you would know that instead of hiding, many wanted to become Martyrs for the movement.

You have no evidence that the myth of the martyrs was history.

It remains a legendary story started by the authorship of Eusebius.

The saints and martyrs enter history in the later 4th century.



Quote:
Pick up Candida Moss's book and actually read it please. She goes into detail about these topics.


IN EUSEBIUS MOSS TRUSTS.


Quote:
Originally Posted by OH
Right now, all I see is your faith.







εὐδαιμονία | eudaimonia
mountainman is offline  
Old 04-17-2013, 01:28 PM   #115
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Canberra, Australia
Posts: 635
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
Coffee blurt all over my computer screen!
Readers will recall that the cause of Jeffrey's accident was encountering a challenge to his fixed dogma that Isis is not a type for Mary. Traditionally, Christian typology was dogmatically restricted to the Old Testament, with the abundant comparisons between Jesus and figures such as Adam, Jonah and Moses, and between Mary and figures such as Hannah and Eve.

The Lazarus story similarly uses Egyptian sources as types. It is pretty obvious that this would not have been a focus of subsequent Christian reading, given the violent antipathy of the church towards Egypt.

Complaining about making a mess on your computer is not a particularly good refutation of the obvious Egyptian typology of the Lazarus story. And yet that is the best Jeffrey has offered.
Quote:
rank petitio principii... lack of knowledge of ancient languages
Could we call Jeffrey's suggestion to restrict analysis of Isis and Mary to an exclusive language guild a fallacy of relevance, of pomposity, of qualifications, or some other more precise inexactitude? Typology does not require knowledge of original languages, except via those who have done the linguistic scholarship, such as Massey. Assessing the Egyptian sources for the Christ Myth is a matter of comparative mythology, an interdisciplinary field that my studies in philosophy provide a good grounding for. These ideas are accessible in translation.

Jeffrey accuses me of assuming the Isis link. No. What we see here is that he shows no interest in the Egyptian typology of the Christ Myth, but just denies it on emotional grounds.
Robert Tulip is offline  
Old 04-17-2013, 03:19 PM   #116
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Alberta
Posts: 11,885
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
I wonder if it dawned that the magnificat is based on Hannah's prayer on the news that she would give birth to Samuel in 1 Sam 2? We have a model of an angelically announced birth, that of Samuel, for which the mother gives thanks to god. The verbal allusions are usually noted in comparisons (see GoogleBooks). Why does one want to look outside the major acknowledged literary context (the Hebrew bible) for sources of allusion in gLk, when there is already fairly certain sourcing?
Good point here spin, to say that if she, woman proper here, known as the universal Queen of heaven she was already then, and was real for each and every Jew who "walked with God," as we can say (and those were many and many more than the bible lets us know).

So there in nothing new about the archetype itself, but She is unique in her own way as the archetype now in the particular made known as an intrinsic part of this transformation event now archetypal in the actualization of the archetype.

Interesting here is that also Jesus could not identify her by name and called her 'woman' at the royal banquet that was organized on his behalf, and in fact said "who is my mother" to tell us that woman was 'it' but he was not her son as 'insurrectionist' during that transformation stage of life.

Jesus also knew that he needed to die to set the Christ free in him as dual nature during this event.

The name Mary belongs, but I suppose, Josephine would have done it too, since Joseph is the Jew who here was made fully Man, now as the first Christian and so it was the OT that Jesus died to on our behalf in this now public event so that the NT has a efficient cause for it to be.

It therefore now is necessarily true that She will be called Queen of heaven and of Earth and for which Jesus is the way but not the end.

This then would also be the reason why in Egypt she was called Isis, while the Jews did not and could not have a name for her while still waiting for their own messiah. From this follows that a name for her is now a must.
Chili is offline  
Old 04-18-2013, 05:22 AM   #117
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: N/A
Posts: 4,370
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeffrey Gibson View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Robert Tulip View Post
The characters in John's story of Lazarus, Jesus, Mary and Martha are Osiris, Horus, Isis and Nephthys. This is obvious to anyone who is not wearing dogmatic blinkers and can look at the facts dispassionately.
Wow! Coffee blurt all over my computer screen!
It's great, isn't it?!? The bible Mr Tulip has in front of him is interesting indeed. Christians believe that Jesus and his wife Isis/Mary were attacked by his brother Seth/?, who killed Jesus, chopped him into 14 pieces, and scattered the bits up and down the Nile. Mary/Isis then went and looked for the bits, which she found, aside from his willy which (as you will recall from John's gospel) was eaten by a crocodile. She then cast a magic spell to reunite the bits, plus make an, erm, substitute bit, and to reanimate him. After that she had sex with him, in order to get pregnant, then let him die (a moving scene in John 20, wasn't it?). After which Jesus became god of the dead, while his son Horus/? grew up and killed Seth.

Yes, that's what we all learned in Sunday School. It's obvious that's what John's gospel says.

All the best,

Roger Pearse
Roger Pearse is offline  
Old 04-18-2013, 02:27 PM   #118
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Canberra, Australia
Posts: 635
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
This article on the previously mentioned scholar named Assmann seems relevant here. Biblical Blame Shift: Is the Egyptologist Jan Assmann Fueling Anti-Semitism?
Many thanks Toto for sharing this fascinating and relevant material. I have now obtained Assmann’s book The Egyptian Moses. It casts an interesting light from a man whom this critical article opens by saying is “described as the world's leading Egyptologist—a characterization that few these days would dare to dispute.”

I would like to discuss Assmann’s work in detail, but cutting to the chase here, the implication appears to be that his claimed “conscious attempt to ruin the sacred truths by demonstrating that Western monotheism had its origins in pagan practices” is anti-Semitic. This term “ruin” illustrates the intensely polemical nature of the article. You don’t “ruin” a truth by explaining it. Rather, the explanation gives a basis for a deeper understanding, even reverence, for that which is explained. If the previous reverence is shown as needing discussion, then all to the good, for those who are genuinely interested in “sacred truth” rather than just a political tradition.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
From what I have read of Acharya S's purposes and philosophy, this fits her exactly. She embraces a supposedly nature centered astrotheology as a counter to the anti-nature monotheism of the Abrahamic religions.
Yes, except that it is wrong to infer that such natural analysis is somehow “anti-Semitic”, as could be assumed from the article title. The spectre of anti-Semitism is an appalling way of poisoning the well for research on the real relation between Israel and Egypt. Modern science is utterly naturalistic, and therefore “counter to the anti-nature monotheism of the Abrahamic religions” but we hardly say this makes science anti-Semitic.

The a priori rejection by natural scientific thought of alienated supernatural transcendental monotheism should be the start of a dialogue about relation to Biblical thought, as for example in this thread discussion on Isis and Mary. However, the Assmann article title could even be read as implying that all rejection of the supernatural is also ‘fueling anti-Semitism’, when science touches on the ‘sacred truths’ of Semitic tradition.

As Assmann explains, great Jews such as Spinoza and Freud (not to mention Spinoza’s acolyte Einstein) rejected the monotheist tradition. They do not deserve to be called ‘self-hating’ for their dedication to enlightened reason.

I fear that unstated attitudes to Judaism are behind much of the puzzling confusion around the study of the relation between the myths of Israel and Egypt. Philo-Semites do not need to attack scholars who question Jewish beliefs on evidentiary grounds.

Assmann points out that the Enlightenment was intrigued by Egypt. Somehow this fascination has waned, while the popular trope of pharaoh as tyrant continues to be preached as central to the Exodus myth. It would be nice if Assmann acknowledged the work on Exodus by Israel Finkelstein.

It really does not help the analysis to make asinine comments about differences, as though these deflate the similarities. Acharya S recently noted that in his book Egypt, Canaan and Israel in Ancient Times (or via: amazon.co.uk), Egyptologist Dr. Donald B. Redford says “Few students of comparative religion today would dare even to broach the subject [that]… in mythology similarities do exist, if only in broad plot structure and plot roles.” This problem of fear of comparative analysis in scholarship has been mocked here, and yet here we find it raised by a distinguished Egyptologist.
Robert Tulip is offline  
Old 04-18-2013, 02:59 PM   #119
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: seattle, wa
Posts: 9,337
Default

Ummm. Yes you partake of the same anti-Semitism. I don't think you or her hate Jewish people per se. You two hate Jewish culture and the fact that it acts as firewall around Christianity for the idiotic beliefs of the new age cult you belong to. You hate Jewish culture because it says "Keep out"
stephan huller is offline  
Old 04-18-2013, 03:32 PM   #120
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

I think that the term antisemitism should be reserved for the racialist classification of Jews and the belief that they are inherently genetically or culturally inferior. It doesn't make any sense to call every criticism of the Jewish religion antisemitism.
Toto is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 05:32 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.